A Taxi Singapore feature  ·  Issue No. 01  ·  Est. reading time 12 min

After midnight, Singapore moves on a different network.

A scroll through the late shift of the island's taxis and ride-hailing fleets. What changes when the office towers empty and the queue at Changi keeps forming.

By the editors

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Chapter One  ·  The problem

The night the system changes.

§ 01.01

At around eleven in the evening, something quiet happens to the way Singapore moves. The Downtown Line thins out. The last buses on the longer trunk routes start their final loops. Shopping centres fold into their shutters. And the cars with the little roof lights, the ones most people stop thinking about during the day, become the main way a large slice of the city gets home.

It is easy to forget how much of the island leans on this shift. Airport arrivals do not care about last trains. Hospital shift changes do not care about peak hours. Restaurant closers, cleaners, security crews, airline ground staff, all of them need to get somewhere at an hour when the MRT map goes to sleep.

"Late night dispatch is a different kind of math. You are not moving commuters, you are moving edge cases."
Editorial composite, based on WhatsApp coordinator chatter observed Jan to Mar 2026.

Chapter Two  ·  The journey

Four operators. One airport queue.

A rough look at how the fare for a common late-night run might break down across the operators a traveller actually sees at the rank. These numbers are illustrative, not quoted from any operator's current tariff.

FIG 01  ·  Typical late-night fare range, Changi Terminal 3 to Marina Bay

All values shown are ILLUSTRATIVE for layout purposes only. No operator tariff is represented here. See methodology, below.

ComfortDelGro (metered taxi) S$ n/v
Grab (ride-hailing) S$ n/v
Gojek (ride-hailing) S$ n/v
Tada (ride-hailing) S$ n/v
Lower range
Mid range
Upper range

§ 02.02  ·  The voices, editorial composites

"You can tell the hour by who is calling. Before ten, it is families. After midnight, it is airlines."
Composite, coordinator, Bedok
"The hardest shifts are not the busy ones. They are the ones where you are driving between two places nobody wants to go."
Composite, driver, ten years on the line
"A good fleet is not the biggest one. A good fleet is the one that knows where the queues form at 3 AM."
Composite, dispatcher, CBD

Chapter Three  ·  Where the island pulses

A map of where the cars go, after the trains stop.

Singapore's late-night transport is a constellation, not a grid. A handful of zones keep the network busy. Airports and hospitals do not sleep. The rest is a slow rotation between the places where people leave and the places where people need to be by sunrise.

Zones shown are illustrative. Positions are stylised, not geographic. For a working reference map, see the Taxi Singapore Directory.

FIG 02  ·  Stylised zone map, late-night activity

2330 to 0500

WOODLANDS BUKIT TIMAH ORCHARD CBD MARINA BAY SENTOSA PUNGGOL TAMPINES CHANGI
Heavy late-night activity
Sustained demand
Quieter zones

The climax

This is the kind of story we are trying to tell about Singapore ground transport.

Taxi Singapore is a long form reference site. We write features like this one, we maintain an operator directory, and we publish a quiet weekly dispatch with what changed on the roads that week.

By the editors  ·  Founded by Dominic Ling, Singapore

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