REVIEW · SINGAPORE
Singapore: Pass Save up to 50% – Includes Universal Studios
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Go City Singapore · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Want Singapore in one phone scan? The Singapore All-Inclusive Pass turns a sightseeing sprint into a pick-your-own-plan bundle, with 50+ attractions across Sentosa, Marina Bay, gardens, wildlife, and more. It’s interesting because your entry is set up digitally: you activate once, then scan and go.
I like the way it helps you stack big-ticket stops without constantly buying separate tickets. Two standouts are Universal Studios Singapore and Gardens by the Bay with Flower Dome and Cloud Forest, plus extras tied to Jurassic World. I also like the mix of iconic sights and high-energy activities like Sentosa’s AJ Hackett Sentosa Giant Swing.
One consideration: several of the most popular experiences require reservations, so if you wait until the last minute, you might lose access to your preferred times.
In This Review
- Key things you’ll notice fast
- How the Go City Singapore pass works at the gate
- Price and value: when $198 turns into a smart math problem
- Choosing 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, or 7 days without overstuffing
- Sentosa day plan: Universal Studios plus swing and 4D energy
- Universal Studios Singapore
- Sentosa Cable Car Sky Pass (Round Trip)
- AJ Hackett Sentosa Giant Swing (heart-racing option)
- Sentosa 4D Adventureland
- Gardens by the Bay: Flower Dome, Cloud Forest, and Jurassic World
- Flower Dome and Cloud Forest
- Jurassic World: The Experience connection
- Floral Fantasy: My Little Pony Petals of Friendship
- Mandai wildlife: Night Safari, River Wonders, Zoo, and Bird Paradise
- Night Safari admission
- River Wonders admission
- Singapore Zoo admission
- Bird Paradise admission
- Marina Bay skyline day: SkyPark, ArtScience, and National Gallery
- Marina Bay Sands SkyPark Observation Deck
- ArtScience Museum: Future World Exhibition
- National Gallery Singapore
- Hop-on hop-off, river cruise, and how to use included transport-ish options
- Madame Tussauds, LEGO fun, and other ticketed stops
- Madame Tussauds Singapore (5-in-1 experience)
- LEGOLAND Malaysia Theme Park
- The reservation reality: what to book first
- Logistics that make or break your day
- Who this pass suits best (and who should skip it)
- Should you book the Singapore All-Inclusive Pass?
- FAQ
- How many days is the Singapore All-Inclusive Pass valid?
- When do I activate the pass?
- Do I need my phone for the pass?
- Can I just show the pass at attractions?
- Is transport included in the price?
- Is food included?
- Do I need reservations?
- Are attractions and tours always the same?
- What’s the cancellation policy?
Key things you’ll notice fast

- Phone-friendly entry: your pass is scanned at included attractions and tours
- 2 to 7 day flexibility: choose the length that matches your pace
- Sentosa hit list: Universal Studios Singapore plus Sentosa attractions
- Mandai wildlife options: Night Safari, River Wonders, Singapore Zoo, and Bird Paradise
- Marina Bay classics: SkyPark Observation Deck, ArtScience Museum, and National Gallery
- Popular slots need planning: reserve ahead to protect your schedule
How the Go City Singapore pass works at the gate

This pass is built for speed. Instead of paper tickets and separate purchases, you use a digital pass and guide on your phone, then show it for entry.
Here’s the core rhythm:
- You activate the pass at any included attraction or tour.
- After activation, it runs for the number of (consecutive) days you booked.
- Passes are valid for 1 year from purchase date, but they only start counting after your first attraction visit.
The practical tip that matters: start early in the day after activation. Since the days are consecutive (not a rolling 24 hours), you want daylight hours working for you, not against you.
When you get to a venue, you’ll scan the code from your pass. Some places may still ask you to exchange for tickets, but the workflow is designed to be simple: scan, then follow the venue’s prompts.
Before you go, make sure your smartphone is charged. This is one of those trips where a dead battery can create unnecessary stress.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Singapore.
Price and value: when $198 turns into a smart math problem

On paper, paying a single price for Singapore sounds convenient. In real life, the value kicks in when you hit multiple big, paid attractions during your pass window.
The pass is marketed as saving up to 50%, and that’s believable when your itinerary includes multiple premium stops like:
- Universal Studios Singapore
- Gardens by the Bay (Flower Dome and Cloud Forest)
- Night Safari at Mandai Wildlife Reserve
- Singapore Zoo and River Wonders
- Marina Bay Sands SkyPark Observation Deck
- Plus other ticketed attractions like Madame Tussauds Singapore (5-in-1)
The reviews you’ll find online usually point to the same pattern: people feel the pass is worth it when they plan ahead and book the time-sensitive experiences early. People also tend to lose value when they arrive with a loose plan and end up skipping reservation-based items.
So my advice is simple: treat this pass like a framework for a packed itinerary. If you know you’ll do at least a few major paid attractions in a short window, it’s more likely to pay off.
Choosing 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, or 7 days without overstuffing

The pass lets you choose 2 to 7 days, which is great because Singapore is easy to overplan. The city is compact, but you can burn hours quickly with lines, transit, and “just one more stop” syndrome.
A smart way to choose:
- 2 days: Use it for “greatest hits.” Pick Universal/Sentosa plus a second cluster like Gardens + Marina Bay.
- 3 to 4 days: Add wildlife days (Mandai) and one museum-heavy day.
- 5 to 7 days: This is where you can slow down, add extras, and repeat neighborhoods without rushing.
One more detail that trips people up: the pass days count as consecutive days after activation. That’s why you want a plan that starts strong, not one where your best attractions are scattered across the calendar.
Sentosa day plan: Universal Studios plus swing and 4D energy

If your Singapore trip has one “must,” it’s often Sentosa—and this pass supports that hard.
Universal Studios Singapore
Universal Studios Singapore is the headline on Sentosa. If you’re doing it, protect your day. Plan to arrive with enough time to get through the big rides and shows without racing between neighborhoods.
What I like about this setup for you: you don’t have to decide in advance whether the rest of Sentosa is “worth buying tickets.” The pass means you can group Sentosa activities into one efficient day.
Sentosa Cable Car Sky Pass (Round Trip)
Also included is the Singapore Cable Car Sky Pass (Round Trip). Even if you don’t love heights, the payoff is the view and the fact that it cuts time compared with more ground-based routes.
AJ Hackett Sentosa Giant Swing (heart-racing option)
The highlights call out AJ Hackett Sentosa Giant Swing for a major adrenaline hit. If that’s on your list, treat it like a scheduled event, not a “maybe later” stop. It’s the kind of activity where nerves and timing matter.
Sentosa 4D Adventureland
This is the kind of attraction that works well if you have a family mix or you want a break from walking. It also helps you fill the gaps between bigger ticket items.
Sentosa reality check: your best results come from clustering. Don’t spread Sentosa across multiple days unless you’re staying longer.
Gardens by the Bay: Flower Dome, Cloud Forest, and Jurassic World
If Singapore has a “breathe here” zone, it’s Gardens by the Bay. With this pass, you get Flower Dome & Cloud Forest, plus access tied to Jurassic World: The Experience.
Flower Dome and Cloud Forest
These aren’t quick checkmarks. The two areas feel different, and both reward slow wandering. This is especially true if you like photography or you just want a break from heat and crowds.
Jurassic World: The Experience connection
The Jurassic World element can add a pop of story and photo opportunities, so it works for both theme-park fans and casual visitors. You don’t have to know every detail to enjoy it—you mainly get a fun theme layered onto the architecture and gardens.
Floral Fantasy: My Little Pony Petals of Friendship
Another included add-on is Floral Fantasy with My Little Pony Petals of Friendship. If you’re traveling with kids (or you just like playful photo moments), this can be a good way to keep the day from feeling too serious.
Best move: go earlier rather than later. Even with indoor sections, you’ll spend less time sweating and more time walking at a comfortable pace.
Mandai wildlife: Night Safari, River Wonders, Zoo, and Bird Paradise

This is one of the biggest strengths of the pass: you can build a full “wildlife day” without constantly buying add-ons.
Night Safari admission
Night Safari is included, and it’s a big deal because it flips the timing. If you’re doing it, don’t stack your busiest daytime attractions right next to it. Build in a lighter schedule before your evening entry.
River Wonders admission
River Wonders is also included at Mandai. It’s a great daytime pairing with animals and habitats, and it helps you cover more of Mandai in one outing instead of making separate trips.
Singapore Zoo admission
Singapore Zoo is part of the package too. If you like animals but also like “classic zoo day” structure, this is the one.
Bird Paradise admission
Bird Paradise rounds out the set, so you’re not choosing only one wildlife vibe. You can lean into birds, rivers, and nighttime safari depending on your mood and energy.
Planning tip: Mandai is a cluster. Think of it as one base, not five separate attractions. You’ll feel smarter and less rushed when you commit to the area.
Marina Bay skyline day: SkyPark, ArtScience, and National Gallery

Marina Bay is where Singapore’s modern face shows up. This pass covers several of the most photographed, “walkable landmark” options.
Marina Bay Sands SkyPark Observation Deck
This gives you that big view moment. It’s the kind of stop that helps you understand the city layout, especially if you’re new to Singapore.
ArtScience Museum: Future World Exhibition
The ArtScience Museum is included with Future World Exhibition. Even if you’re not a hardcore museum person, this is often a good time filler because it’s structured and visually driven.
National Gallery Singapore
Also included is National Gallery Singapore. This adds a calmer, indoor cultural stop to balance out the theme-park and wildlife days.
How to sequence it: pair the SkyPark with one indoor stop (ArtScience or National Gallery) so you’re not stuck doing only sun or only walking. You’ll also avoid feeling like you rushed the view.
Hop-on hop-off, river cruise, and how to use included transport-ish options

This pass includes a Hop-On Hop-Off Big Bus tour and also supports other sightseeing add-ons like a cruise on the Singapore River (as part of the included experiences described).
In practice, a bus tour works best when:
- you use it to get bearings
- you hop off near your next attraction
- you don’t treat it as a full replacement for walking
The value here isn’t just transportation—it’s planning. When you can see major landmarks in one loop, you make better decisions about what to do next.
Madame Tussauds, LEGO fun, and other ticketed stops

Not every included attraction is a landmark. Some are there to keep the schedule varied and keep you from burning out.
Madame Tussauds Singapore (5-in-1 experience)
This is included as a 5-in-1 experience, so you’re not just buying one room. It’s a good option for rainy weather, quick breaks, or if your group enjoys pop-culture humor.
LEGOLAND Malaysia Theme Park
The pass also includes LEGOLAND Malaysia Theme Park. This is a great add if your trip includes kids or if you want a theme-park day that feels different from Universal.
One caution: even if it’s included, you still need to plan your time. Theme parks are time magnets. If you’re doing LEGOLAND, protect a full block in your schedule.
The reservation reality: what to book first
The pass is broad, but the experiences that need reservations can shape your entire trip.
The data is clear: most popular activities require reservations, and you should reserve well in advance.
So here’s what I’d prioritize:
- anything that has a fixed time slot (night-type experiences often do)
- major paid “anchor” attractions you’re excited about
- any special tours you want to join as part of your included lineup
Also note: some attractions and tours can change. The best way to stay current is to check the Go City app instructions and the included digital guide before you go and during planning.
Logistics that make or break your day
A few practical notes that help your pass feel effortless:
- Transport isn’t included: unless an option says otherwise, you’ll need to handle getting between places on your own.
- Food isn’t included: plan meals separately.
- Start early: because your pass days are consecutive after activation.
- Sync the pass: follow the instructions in your booking confirmation to sync with the Go City app.
- Check hours in the app: operating hours can change, especially around holidays.
This pass is set up to reduce ticket friction. It can’t reduce time spent traveling across the city, so your biggest win comes from grouping nearby attractions.
Who this pass suits best (and who should skip it)
This pass is a strong match if:
- you want to pack a lot into 2 to 7 days
- you’re excited about big-ticket anchors like Universal Studios Singapore, Gardens by the Bay, and Mandai wildlife
- you’re willing to do some upfront planning for reservation-based items
- you like the convenience of scanning a code instead of managing multiple paper tickets
It’s less ideal if:
- your travel style is slow and you hate booking time slots
- you don’t plan to use multiple included attractions during your pass window
- you’re likely to skip reservation-required experiences once you see the schedule
Should you book the Singapore All-Inclusive Pass?
If you want maximum sightseeing per day, and you’re targeting several major attractions, I’d book it. The phone-based entry and the sheer breadth of included sights make it easier to build a smart itinerary without constant ticket shopping.
If you want a trip that stays perfectly flexible day to day, you might feel constrained by the reservation pieces. In that case, consider using a lighter plan and confirming which experiences are reservation-heavy before committing.
Either way, the key is to treat the pass like a planning tool. Once you cluster the right neighborhoods (Sentosa, Mandai, Marina Bay), you’ll feel like Singapore is working for you instead of the other way around.
FAQ
How many days is the Singapore All-Inclusive Pass valid?
You can choose a pass for 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, or 7 days. After you activate it, your pass is valid for the number of (consecutive) days you purchased.
When do I activate the pass?
You activate your Singapore All-Inclusive Pass at any included attraction or tour. It becomes activated with your first attraction visit.
Do I need my phone for the pass?
Yes. The pass is designed to be used on your phone, and you should bring a charged smartphone. You can also save the pass to your phone/tablet or print a copy.
Can I just show the pass at attractions?
That’s the idea. You can scan your pass code at the venue to enter, using the digital pass and guide.
Is transport included in the price?
Transport to and from attractions is not included, unless an option specifically states otherwise.
Is food included?
Food and drink are not included, unless stated for a specific experience.
Do I need reservations?
The most popular activities require reservations, so it’s smart to reserve well in advance to avoid missing your preferred time slots.
Are attractions and tours always the same?
They’re subject to change. The Go City app has the most up-to-date line-up, opening times, and how to access included items with your pass.
What’s the cancellation policy?
You get free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.






















