REVIEW · SINGAPORE
Singapore Duck Tour
Book on Viator →Operated by Singapore DUCK Tours · Bookable on Viator
Want land and water in one hour? The Singapore Duck Tour is built for quick landmark-gathering, rolling through central sights on a refurbished military amphibious vehicle and then popping into Marina Bay for big waterfront photo moments. You also get guided audio commentary as you go, so you’re not just bouncing past attractions—you’re hearing what they mean.
I especially like the mix of skyline views from the water and the city views from the road. That said, there’s one trade-off to plan for: you should expect a get wet moment during the splashdown, and the vehicle can feel cramped depending on where you sit.
In This Review
- Key Things That Make the Singapore Duck Tour Worth Your Time
- Why This Duck Tour Is a Smart Way to See Singapore in One Shot
- Suntec City Start: Where You Board and How the First Minutes Set the Tone
- Civic District by Land: Fountain of Wealth, Cenotaph, Cricket Club, and the Flyer
- Gardens by the Bay Supertrees and the Helix Bridge DNA Moment
- Splashdown on Marina Bay: Merlion, Marina Bay Sands, and Esplanade Views
- National Gallery Steps and Civilian War Memorial: Seeing Meaning Without a Long Walk
- The Fountain of Wealth Loop: A Silly Tradition With Practical Timing
- Price and Timing: Is $39.56 Good Value for This Kind of Tour?
- Seats, Sound, and the Real-Life Wet Factor (What to Do Before You Board)
- Small-Group Feel and Schedule Notes You Should Know
- Who Should Book This Duck Tour (and Who Might Skip It)
- Should You Book the Singapore Duck Tour?
- FAQ
- What is the duration of the Singapore Duck Tour?
- Where do I meet for the tour?
- What time does the tour run?
- Is hotel pick-up included?
- Does the tour include both land and water?
- How many people are on the tour?
- Is it refundable if I cancel?
Key Things That Make the Singapore Duck Tour Worth Your Time

- Amphibious rides that switch from roads to Marina Bay, giving you two angles on the same icons
- Merlion photos from the water, with the bayfront around you instead of behind glass
- Audio commentary included, helping you connect the dots without extra planning
- Fast-hit landmark loop (Flyer, Gardens by the Bay, Helix Bridge, Esplanade, Civic District stops)
- Small group cap (up to 30), which usually keeps the vibe more manageable
Why This Duck Tour Is a Smart Way to See Singapore in One Shot

This isn’t the kind of tour that asks you to memorize facts all day. It’s designed for momentum. You start at Suntec City and then cover a lot of ground by switching between street cruising and a water ride, so you get variety without a full-day walking plan.
The big value is how it compresses iconic sights into a roughly one-hour loop. You’ll get the modern skyline side of Singapore—Marina Bay, Gardens by the Bay, and the Marina Bay Sands area—plus the older, civic landmarks that tell you where the city’s power centers sit. And because the vehicle is amphibious, the water segment gives you angles that don’t feel like typical bus tourism.
One more practical plus: it runs hourly from 10am–6pm in English, which makes it easier to slot into most itineraries, even if you don’t want an early start.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Singapore.
Suntec City Start: Where You Board and How the First Minutes Set the Tone

Your tour begins at the BIG BUS & DUCK Tourist Hub at Suntec City Tower Two (3 Temasek Blvd, #01-K8). This matters because it’s not buried across town—you can usually build the rest of your day around it.
Once you check in and get seated, the vibe tends to be part sightseeing, part ride. The vehicle is described as a refurbished Vietnam War–era military craft, so expect a sturdier, older feel rather than a smooth, new bus. That’s not automatically bad. It actually helps the experience feel like an event instead of just transportation.
There’s also a useful mindset to bring: your seat location will affect how much you hear and how wet you get later. If you’re sensitive to noise or hate getting rained on, you’ll want to treat the ride like a weather-and-sound experience—not a quiet museum tour.
Civic District by Land: Fountain of Wealth, Cenotaph, Cricket Club, and the Flyer

The land portion sets up the tour’s main theme: Singapore’s mix of global spectacle and civic order. You’ll drive past the Fountain of Wealth, famous for being listed in the Guinness Book of World Records in the 1990s as the largest fountain in the world. Even if fountains don’t usually hold your attention, this is one of those quick-photo landmarks that gives you a strong visual anchor right away.
As the route moves into the Civic District, you’ll spot war memorial symbolism and classic institutional shapes. You’ll see the Cenotaph war memorial and the Singapore Cricket Club. If you like to understand a city’s layout, this segment helps you notice how Singapore organizes major public spaces alongside modern towers.
Then comes one of the best “wait, that’s huge” moments for first-timers: the Singapore Flyer, at 540 feet (165 meters). Seeing it from the road works well because it frames your next segment. You’re building a mental map: civic area to bay area, then the ride shifts from land icons to waterfront icons.
A small logistics note that can affect what you expect: the land tour has no access to City Hall, Padang, the National Gallery, or the War Memorial. Practically, that means you’ll likely see them from the outside rather than going in.
Gardens by the Bay Supertrees and the Helix Bridge DNA Moment

When you start seeing the Gardens by the Bay area on the route, the tour becomes more photo-friendly. The vehicle’s height and movement can make the Supertrees feel even more dramatic than they do from ground level.
You’ll also pass under the Helix Bridge. The tour info calls out the name comes from its resemblance to a strand of DNA. That’s the sort of detail that’s easy to miss if you only glance at it from a distance. From the road, you’ll get quick context that makes your future walk around the area more meaningful.
This part of the tour is also where you learn what the amphibious format really gives you: options. Even if you never plan to take a long detour to these landmarks, you can still get a strong sense of what’s around. Then you can decide later what’s worth extra time.
If you dislike short, fast segments, this is the one you’ll want to embrace. It’s not meant to be a slow stroll. It’s meant to point you in directions.
Splashdown on Marina Bay: Merlion, Marina Bay Sands, and Esplanade Views
The water portion is the headline. This is where the tour becomes a different experience from every other “see the sights” option. The moment the duck vehicle cruises onto the Singapore River meeting Marina Bay, the views open up and you’re no longer boxed in by street corners.
The tour route highlights the Merlion, that iconic mythical creature statue with a fish body and lion head. The best practical part is not the statue itself—it’s the fact that you’ll have a chance to grab photos with the Merlion while it’s framed by water and bayfront buildings. You get a more cinematic setting than the usual land-based photo ops.
You’ll also get waterfront looks at the Marina Bay Sands area and the Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay performing arts venue. From the water, those buildings look bigger and more connected. They stop feeling like separate stops and start feeling like one big bayfront zone.
Two considerations to keep in mind:
- You should plan for getting wet when the vehicle enters the water.
- The vehicle is older and the ride can be bumpy, so sound can be harder. If you’re sensitive to missing audio, you might want to sit where you can hear without straining.
National Gallery Steps and Civilian War Memorial: Seeing Meaning Without a Long Walk
Not every sightseeing stop here is pure wow-factor. The tour also makes room for remembrance. You’ll pass by the Civilian War Memorial, which honors civilians who lost their lives in World War II. It’s the kind of stop that can feel brief, but it adds weight to the tour’s mix of modern glamour and real-world history.
The route also mentions the steps of the National Gallery, connected to a World War II event. Even though the land tour notes say there’s no access to the National Gallery, the value is that you still see the location from the ride. You’re getting bearings.
This works best if you treat the tour like a first pass. You won’t leave with a full deep-dive education in one hour, but you’ll know where to go next if something catches your interest.
The Fountain of Wealth Loop: A Silly Tradition With Practical Timing

Near the end, you’ll go around the world’s largest fountain three times for good luck before heading back to the boarding hub. This is a fun break in the middle of Singapore sightseeing logistics: you’re not just passing by another monument and moving on.
Practically, it also gives you another chance to reposition your photos. You’ll have the fountain in front of you and enough time to get your favorite angle without feeling rushed.
If you’re measuring the tour by energy, this segment helps. It’s not long, but it feels like a moment.
Price and Timing: Is $39.56 Good Value for This Kind of Tour?

At $39.56 per person, the question isn’t whether it’s cheap. It’s whether it’s efficient. You’re paying for a vehicle experience (land + water) and for a guided format that bundles multiple top landmarks into about an hour.
Here’s what’s included: the duck tour and all taxes. What’s not included: food and drinks, plus no hotel pick-up or drop-off. So you’ll want to plan your day around the meeting point at Suntec City.
For value, the big argument is the number of major stops you cover. If you tried to do this alone with multiple rides and separate stops, you’d likely spend more time than money. And the water photo angles are hard to recreate without adding extra planning.
As for timing, the tour is conducted hourly between 10am and 6pm. That’s a helpful schedule range. It also gives you flexibility if you need to adjust due to rain or other plans.
Seats, Sound, and the Real-Life Wet Factor (What to Do Before You Board)
This is the part I’d call out before you lock anything in. The tour is fun, but the amphibious format has real physical effects.
Based on common on-ride comments, you should prepare for:
- Cramped seating on an older vehicle
- Getting wet during the water entry
- Noise levels that can make audio harder to follow if you’re seated in the wrong spot
- Possible diesel smell on board
So here’s your practical game plan:
- Bring a small towel or wipe-down item if you hate feeling cold or damp.
- Dress in layers you can handle if you get splashed.
- Choose your seat with ears in mind. If audio matters, sit so you can hear clearly rather than only chasing the best view.
The upside is that this is still a standout experience because the water splashdown creates the kind of memory you don’t get from a standard bus tour. Even when you can’t catch every word, the motion and the bay views do the heavy lifting.
Small-Group Feel and Schedule Notes You Should Know
The tour caps at 30 travelers. That tends to keep boarding smoother and helps you feel less like you’re trapped in a crowd.
One more useful detail: the sequence of stops can change, and you’ll be notified in advance if that happens. So if you’re mentally planning your photo shots in a specific order, don’t. Instead, focus on the big themes: land landmarks first, then Marina Bay.
Also, pay attention to a major date note: on 2 Nov 2025 (Sunday), the DUCKtours route will be affected due to road closures for Tour de France Singapore Criterium 2025. The info says the water tour is not affected, while the land tour won’t have access to City Hall, Padang, National Gallery, or War Memorial. If you’re booking around that date, confirm what segment timing looks like.
Who Should Book This Duck Tour (and Who Might Skip It)
This is a strong fit if you want:
- A fast way to see Marina Bay landmarks without a lot of planning
- A mix of land and water in one outing
- A ride that’s fun for a broad range of ages
It may be less ideal if you:
- Need a quiet experience where you can clearly hear commentary the whole time
- Hate feeling cramped or bumpy
- Want a fully dry, comfort-first sightseeing style
Think of it as a half-day mood booster. Not a slow, deep study. It’s made for getting your bearings fast and grabbing a few unforgettable angles along the way.
Should You Book the Singapore Duck Tour?
I’d book it if you’re the kind of person who likes efficiency and wants at least one “only-in-this-city” experience. The land-to-water switch is the whole point, and the chance to see the Merlion and bayfront from the water is the standout payoff.
Skip it only if your top priority is comfort and quiet, or if you’re extremely sensitive to wet weather and loud ride noise. Otherwise, the $39.56 price tag makes sense for an hour that hits a lot of the headline icons.
If you’re visiting Singapore for the first time, this tour is a solid way to build a mental map before you decide what to explore on foot next.
FAQ
What is the duration of the Singapore Duck Tour?
The tour lasts about 1 hour (approx.).
Where do I meet for the tour?
You start at Singapore DUCKtours 3 Temasek Blvd, #01-K8 Suntec City Tower Two, Singapore 038983. The activity ends back at the meeting point.
What time does the tour run?
Tours run in English hourly from 10am to 6pm.
Is hotel pick-up included?
No. Hotel pick-up and drop-off are not included.
Does the tour include both land and water?
Yes. You travel by land and then splash into the water for the Marina Bay portion.
How many people are on the tour?
The tour has a maximum of 30 travelers.
Is it refundable if I cancel?
No. This experience is non-refundable and cannot be changed for any reason.
























