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Things To Do in Singapore: May 2026
lifestyle 月度精選 · May 2026

Things To Do in Singapore: May 2026

JT

Jamie Teo

21 April 2026

May in Singapore is what I call the “commitment test” month. It’s hot. It’s humid. It might pour at 3pm for exactly twenty minutes and then clear up like nothing happened. And yet — and this is the part I keep trying to explain to my friends in Melbourne — there is genuinely nowhere else I’d rather be.

The city doesn’t slow down in May. If anything, it leans in. Vesak Day means a long weekend for those who plan ahead. Mother’s Day brings out the best (and most aggressively marketed) restaurant deals of the season. And every performing arts venue worth visiting has dusted off its May lineup with the kind of quiet confidence that says: we know you’ll show up.

The Gardens Are Calling (Yes, Even in the Heat)

Gardens by the Bay remains one of those places that never gets old, no matter how many times you’ve seen the Supertrees lit up at night. May’s the month where you lean into early morning walks — before 9am, when the air is still bearable and the Flower Dome is mercifully cool.

If you haven’t seen Cloud Forest recently, it’s worth a revisit. The misty mountain installation has been quietly refreshed, and the descent walkway hits different when you’re escaping the 34°C chaos outside.

Pro tip from someone who’s learned the hard way: buy your tickets online. The weekend queues for Gardens by the Bay are not a joke.

Performing Arts: Singapore’s Hidden Strength

This is where Singapore genuinely punches above its weight. Esplanade — Theatres on the Bay runs an almost relentless program of concerts, dance, theatre, and free outdoor performances. The free shows on the outdoor stages are a particular underrated gem: you can catch local indie acts, classical ensembles, and experimental theatre without spending a cent, then wander inside for laksa at the Kopitiam downstairs.

May typically sees a strong run of home-grown productions alongside the international touring shows. Don’t sleep on the Singapore Repertory Theatre’s current run if drama is your thing — they’ve been on a serious streak lately.

Museums: Cooler Than You Remember

The National Museum of Singapore has been running Once Upon a Tide: Singapore’s Journey from Settlement to Global City — a deep-dive into 700 years of local history that’s somehow made everyone feel things they didn’t expect. Free for Singapore citizens and PRs. Worth it even if you pay full price.

The Asian Civilisations Museum has a way of making you feel smarter just by walking through it. Their regular programming around Southeast Asian art and culture tends to be excellent, and the riverfront location means you can follow up a visit with a walk along the Singapore River without it feeling like you planned it.

Outdoor Picks for the Brave (or the Well-Sunscreened)

East Coast Park is excellent at dusk — pack a mat, get some takeaway from the nearby hawker centre, and watch the city glow across the water. The Rail Corridor is having a moment with the walking crowd; the Thomson section through the former Bukit Timah railway station is genuinely beautiful in a slightly melancholy way.

For families with young children: Haw Par Villa had a glow-up and is now actually good. The classic 10 Courts of Hell still exists (equal parts educational and traumatising for children under 8), but the overall atmosphere has shifted toward something more approachable. Free entry.

The Practical Bits

  • Vesak Day falls on 12 May 2026 — it’s a public holiday. Expect temples to be busy and some businesses to be closed. If you want to observe the celebrations, Sakaya Muni Buddha Gaya Temple in Little India or Thian Hock Keng in Chinatown are worth the early morning trip.
  • Mother’s Day is 10 May 2026. Book restaurants now if you haven’t already. I am not kidding.
  • Weather: High 33°C, low 26°C. Afternoon thunderstorms are likely roughly 60% of the time. This does not mean you should cancel plans — it means you should bring a light jacket for the air-conditioning and an umbrella for everything else.

The events below are pulled directly from what’s listed and available in Singapore this month. Check back regularly — we add new things as they’re confirmed.

JT

Jamie Teo

Jamie Teo grew up eating char kway teow at Toa Payoh before moving to Melbourne to study journalism. After seven years of convincing Australians that Singapore isn't "just a stopover", she came back and now covers everything worth doing in the city. She will fight you about which hawker centre has the best wonton noodles.

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