Masters in Singapore for Indian Students 2026: Fees, Universities, Eligibility & ROI

Last Updated on: July 7, 2026

Masters in Singapore for Indian Students
Masters in Singapore for Indian Students

Thinking about a masters in Singapore for Indian students and worried the fees look scary? They can be. For the AY2026/2027 intake, a 1.5-year Master of Computing at NUS is priced at S$67,144 (approx. INR 49.1 lakh), and here is the part most blogs get wrong: as an international coursework student, you pay that full figure with no government subsidy. This guide walks you and your family through the real 2026 fees, the funding that actually applies, the work rules after you graduate, and an honest INR payback view before you commit. If you are still weighing the destination itself, our study in Singapore hub covers courses, costs and the city end to end.

Written by
Senior Counsellor for the Middle East and Asian countries
Nagesh Danagalla helps Indian students with university selection, admissions, and student visas for Middle East and Asian destinations at AOEC India. A B.Tech and M.Tech graduate of JNTU Hyderabad, he brings destination-specific expertise in admissions and visa documentation.
5 Years, 320 students counselled
Reviewed by
Managing Director
Mr. Kongara Sridhar, Director of AOEC India, has over 12 years of experience in overseas education consulting, admissions, and student visa guidance.
Over 12 years Experience

Key Takeaways

  • A coursework masters runs 1 to 1.5 years; a research masters about 2 years.
  • International coursework masters students pay full, non-subsidised tuition; the MOE Tuition Grant and its 3-year bond do not apply.
  • Priced masters in this guide run roughly S$53,563 to S$85,000 for the full course, from NTU engineering to NUS Business Analytics.
  • Living with on-campus housing adds about S$10,000 to S$16,290 a year, so a one-year masters lands near INR 45 lakh to 75 lakh all-in.
  • SINGA funding is for PhD applicants only, not for coursework or standalone research masters.
  • There is no dedicated post-study work visa; graduates may use an ICA Long-Term Visit Pass to job-hunt, but paid work needs an Employment Pass sponsor.

A masters in Singapore is a postgraduate degree offered mainly by six autonomous universities, taught either as coursework or research. Master of Computing tuition at NUS is priced at S$67,144 for the AY2026/2027 intake, per the NUS School of Computing Fees and Scholarships page (2026). This signals postgraduate study here is premium-priced and privately funded for most students.

So what does an MS in Singapore actually look like once you strip away the brochures? You choose between two tracks, and the choice shapes your timeline, your budget, and your funding options.

  • Coursework masters in Singapore – taught modules, projects, sometimes a capstone. Runs 1 to 1.5 years. This is what most Indian students enrol in.
  • Research masters in Singapore – a supervised thesis over roughly 2 years, closer to a PhD in structure and the only masters route with meaningful stipend funding.

Most Indian applicants chase a coursework masters degree in Singapore in a handful of high-demand fields: Master of Computing, MSc Artificial Intelligence, MSc Data Science, MSc Business Analytics, and MSc Finance or Applied Economics. These sit at the “autonomous universities” (the six public universities that run their own admissions and fees): NUS, NTU, SMU, SUTD, SIT and SUSS.

Where do these names sit globally? According to the QS World University Rankings 2027, NUS is 10th and NTU 12th in the world, with SUTD (Singapore University of Technology and Design) placed 266th. Treat rankings as one signal among many, not the whole story. Private and foreign-campus options such as JCU Singapore, PSB Academy, Kaplan and Curtin Singapore exist too, but we won’t re-catalogue every institution here. For a full campus-by-campus breakdown, see our guide to the universities in Singapore for Indian students.

The most popular masters courses for Indian students in Singapore cluster in computing, data and business fields. NTU runs a Master of Science in Artificial Intelligence, per the NTU MSAI programme page (2026). These technical and analytics degrees track Singapore's finance and technology hiring demand most closely.

If you are weighing a masters degree in Singapore by subject, these nine fields draw the most Indian applicants, each with a representative programme and its host university.

FieldRepresentative masters programmeUniversity
Computing / Computer ScienceMaster of ComputingNUS
Artificial IntelligenceMSc in Artificial Intelligence (MSAI)NTU
Data ScienceMSc in Data Science (MSDS)NTU
Business AnalyticsMSc in Business AnalyticsNUS
Financial TechnologyMSc in Financial TechnologyNTU
FinanceMSc in Financial EngineeringNTU
EngineeringMSc engineering specialisationsNTU
Supply ChainMSc in Supply Chain ManagementNUS
Business / ManagementMBA and MSc in ManagementSMU

Two fast-growing picks are NTU’s MSc in Data Science and NUS’s MSc in Supply Chain Management, both taught as coursework masters (see Sources). Match the field to your target industry before you compare the fees in the next section.

How much does a masters in Singapore cost in 2026?

The cost of a masters in Singapore for international students is the full, non-subsidised tuition, typically S$50,000 to S$85,000 for the whole programme. An SMU MBA is priced at S$82,840 inclusive of GST, per the SMU MBA admissions page (2026). This means postgraduate tuition alone often exceeds INR 40 lakh before living costs.

Here is the real cost of masters in Singapore, pulled from official university fee pages rather than aggregator estimates. Every figure is the full-programme tuition international students actually pay, inclusive of GST where the university states it. For a masters in Singapore for Indian students, this is the sticker price your family should plan around. The table is keyed by programme, not by university, so you can compare like-for-like courses.

ProgrammeUniversityFieldDurationFull-programme fee (GST-incl.)INR equiv.QS 2027 (world)
MSc engineering (AY2026/27)NTUEngineering1 yearS$53,562.60 to S$56,682.18approx. INR 39.1 lakh to 41.4 lakh12
MSc in ManagementSMUManagement18 monthsS$59,950approx. INR 43.80 lakh!ERROR! G3 -> internal error
MSc Financial Technology (AY2026/27)NTUFinTech1 yearS$65,748.80approx. INR 48.04 lakh12
Master of Computing (AY2026/27)NUSComputing1.5 yearsS$67,144approx. INR 49.1 lakh10
MSc Financial EngineeringNTUFinance12 monthsS$69,760approx. INR 50.97 lakh12
MBA (2025/26)SMUBusiness12-18 monthsS$82,840approx. INR 60.5 lakh!ERROR! G7 -> internal error
MSc Business Analytics (AY2026/27)NUSAnalytics12-17 monthsS$85,000approx. INR 62.10 lakh10

For AY2026/2027, NTU’s MSc programmes at the School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering range from S$53,562.60 to S$56,682.18 inclusive of 9% GST (goods and services tax added to the fee), according to NTU’s tuition schedule for MSc programmes. That’s the mid-range for a technical masters in Singapore fees conversation, and it’s before you spend a single dollar on rent. A one-year coursework masters lands roughly INR 45 lakh to 75 lakh all-in once living costs are added, whether you pick NTU’s MSc FinTech or an SMU MBA.

The subsidy myth that costs families lakhs. As of 2026, coursework masters students admitted from AY2020/2021 are not eligible for the Service Obligation Scheme, the mechanism that delivers the MOE (Ministry of Education) tuition subsidy, per the NUS Graduate School Service Obligation page. Many competitor pages still imply masters students get the 40-60% MOE subsidy. They don't. Budget for the full GST-inclusive tuition above, and if a counsellor quotes you a "subsidised masters fee," ask them to show you the official page. You can also compare our full cost of studying in Singapore breakdown before you shortlist.

What will you spend on living costs as a postgraduate in Singapore?

Living costs for a postgraduate in Singapore cover accommodation, food, transport and personal items. NUS estimates non-accommodation expenses at S$6,000 a year, with on-campus accommodation from S$4,000 to S$10,290, per the NUS Office of Admissions Living Costs page (2026). This means budgeting roughly INR 7 lakh to INR 12 lakh a year with campus housing, and more off-campus.

Tuition is the number that shocks families first, but living costs are where the budget quietly balloons. If you plan to study masters in Singapore, this is the line item most parents underestimate.

S$6,000/yr

Living, excluding accommodation NUS, 2026

S$4,000-10,290

On-campus accommodation/yr NUS, 2026

S$45 + S$60

Student's Pass fees (one-off) ICA, 2026

As of 2026, NUS estimates non-accommodation living at S$6,000 a year (approx. INR 4.38 lakh) for meals, transport, books and personal spending, with on-campus accommodation adding S$4,000 to S$10,290 (approx. INR 2.92 lakh to INR 7.52 lakh); private off-campus rent typically costs more. NUS publishes this as an undergraduate estimate, so postgraduate and off-campus budgets can run higher. Add the one-off Student’s Pass charges when you arrive: as of 2026, the Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA, Singapore’s border and visa agency) levies a S$45 processing fee (approx. INR 3,288), a S$60 issuance fee (approx. INR 4,384), and a S$30 multiple-journey visa fee where it applies, per ICA’s Student’s Pass issuance page.

Run the maths for postgraduate study in Singapore across one year: tuition of S$50,000 to S$85,000 plus living costs of roughly S$10,000 to S$16,290 with campus housing lands you between INR 45 lakh and INR 75 lakh all-in, before any private-rent premium. That’s the honest all-year total your family should plan around, not the tuition figure alone.

What are the eligibility and entry requirements for a masters in Singapore?

Masters eligibility in Singapore is the set of academic and test requirements for admission, which usually includes a relevant bachelor's degree, English proficiency, and often an aptitude test. The SMU MBA requires a minimum of 2 years post-degree work experience plus a GMAT, GRE or SMU Admissions Test, per the SMU MBA admissions page (2026). This means entry is competitive and varies sharply by programme type.

Wondering whether your CGPA and board background clear the bar? Masters in Singapore eligibility is programme-specific, but the core checklist is consistent across the autonomous universities.

  • Bachelor’s degree in a related field, usually with a strong CGPA or a good second-class honours equivalent.
  • GRE or GMAT for many MSc and MBA programmes, though several technical masters waive it for strong profiles.
  • English proficiency via IELTS, TOEFL or PTE if your prior degree wasn’t taught in English.
  • Work experience for MBA routes, and increasingly valued for a management-focused MSc in Singapore.

For the 2026 intake, the SMU MBA sets a minimum of 2 years post-degree work experience and accepts the GMAT, GRE or the SMU Admissions Test, per SMU’s MBA admissions page. Not sure which test your target programme wants? Our guide to the requirements to study in Singapore maps GRE, GMAT and English tests to the courses that require them, so you sit the right one first time.

How do Indian students fund a masters in Singapore?

Funding a masters in Singapore combines self-financing, education loans, and a narrow set of awards. The SINGA award pays a monthly stipend of S$2,000, rising to S$2,500 after the PhD qualifying exam, per the SMU SINGA programme page (2026). This means large stipends exist only for PhD candidates, not coursework or standalone research masters students.

Here’s the reality check most families need before they hunt for scholarships for masters in Singapore: the big, fully funded awards are aimed at research, not taught degrees. Let’s separate what applies to you.

SINGA (Singapore International Graduate Award)
 
S$2,000/mo stipend (rising to S$2,500 after the PhD qualifying exam), plus a one-time S$1,500 airfare grant and S$1,000 settling-in allowance; tuition covered up to four years. PhD applicants only.
MOE Tuition Grant
 
International recipients serve a 3-year bond with a Singapore employer after graduation. Its scope is primarily diploma and undergraduate; coursework masters admitted from AY2020/21 are excluded.
Self-funding + education loan
 
The default route for taught masters: family savings plus an education loan from HDFC Credila, Avanse, SBI or a public-sector bank against collateral or income.

PhD applicants with strong research profiles can apply for SINGA, funded through A*STAR (the Agency for Science, Technology and Research) and the universities. It is not a funding route for coursework masters or a standalone research masters in Singapore. As of 2026, SINGA adds a one-time airfare grant of up to S$1,500 (approx. INR 1.10 lakh) and a settling-in allowance of S$1,000 (approx. INR 73,060), per SMU’s SINGA page. If you’re doing a taught masters, none of this is on the table.

So how do most families actually pay? Self-funding plus an education loan. When you and your family sit down to run the numbers, the education loan usually carries most of the tuition, and the collateral conversation matters more than the scholarship search. Our guide to scholarships to study in Singapore lays out which awards are realistic and where a loan has to fill the gap.

Can you work and stay in Singapore after your masters?

Singapore offers no dedicated post-study work visa; graduates convert to an Employment Pass once sponsored by an employer. As of 2026, the Employment Pass qualifying salary starts at S$5,600 for younger applicants and rises with age, with financial services starting at S$6,200, per the Ministry of Manpower Employment Pass eligibility page. Staying on depends on securing a qualifying graduate role.

This is the part most students misunderstand, so let’s be blunt about post-study work in Singapore after masters. There is no automatic two-year stay-back like the UK or Australia. Your route to staying is an employer-sponsored pass.

That said, you’re not shut out the day you graduate. As of 2026, graduates from eligible Institutes of Higher Learning (NUS, NTU, SMU and SUTD) may apply for an ICA Long-Term Visit Pass to seek employment. Read that carefully: the Long-Term Visit Pass is a stay-to-job-hunt pass, not a work pass. You can hold it while interviewing, but actual paid work still needs an Employment Pass or S Pass sponsor.

Singapore post-study options: LTVP, EP and S Pass

S$5,600/mo

EP qualifying salary (2026) MOM, 2026

S$6,000/mo

EP qualifying salary from 2027 MOM, 2027

INR 4.09L

S$5,600 per month in rupees At S$1 ≈ ₹73.06

  • Long-Term Visit Pass (LTVP) – lets eligible graduates stay on to job-hunt. It is a short-duration pass and not a work pass, so you cannot start paid work on it; it only bridges the gap while you secure an Employment Pass or S Pass offer.
  • Employment Pass (EP) – the employer-sponsored pass for professionals, scored through the COMPASS points system (a points test on salary, qualifications, diversity and local hiring). As of 2026, the qualifying salary is S$5,600 a month (approx. INR 4.09 lakh) for most sectors and S$6,200 (approx. INR 4.53 lakh) for financial services; from 1 January 2027 these rise to S$6,000 (approx. INR 4.38 lakh) and S$6,600 (approx. INR 4.82 lakh).
  • S Pass – the employer-sponsored pass for mid-skilled roles that sit below the Employment Pass tier.

Over the years, a stable job on one of these passes can open a permanent residency (PR) pathway. If your target is the permanent residency route, plan your first role around clearing the Employment Pass bar comfortably, not just scraping it.

Is a masters in Singapore worth it? An INR payback view

The ROI of a masters in Singapore weighs graduate earnings against the degree's total INR cost. In 2024, the median gross monthly salary of fresh NUS graduates was S$4,600, per the NUS Joint Autonomous Universities Graduate Employment Survey 2024. This benchmark helps families frame a payback period against a roughly INR 45-75 lakh outlay for a one-year taught masters.

Let’s do the honest sum on a masters in Singapore for Indian students, because the “is it worth it” question deserves numbers, not vibes. Take a one-year taught masters at roughly INR 45 lakh to INR 75 lakh all-in, with 1.5-year programmes and private rent pushing it higher. Against that, use the graduate salary benchmark below, with one caveat: it’s a fresh-graduate cohort figure, mostly undergraduate, not a masters-specific median. Treat it as a floor to reason from, not a promise.

S$4,600/mo

NUS fresh-graduate median salary NUS JAUGES, 2024

INR 3.36L

That salary in rupees At S$1 ≈ ₹73.06

88.1%

Employed within six months NUS JAUGES, 2024

In 2024, 88.1 per cent of NUS fresh graduates in the labour force were employed within six months of their final exams, per the same survey. Pair that S$4,600 monthly benchmark with a disciplined budget, and a graduate earning near it can service a typical education loan over a few years once living costs are met. Parents reading this: the figure that matters for your loan decision isn’t the sticker fee, it’s whether the expected salary clears the EMI plus Singapore’s rent. That’s the stress-test to run before you accept an offer.

How do you apply for a masters in Singapore, and what is the timeline?

Applying for a masters in Singapore means submitting to a university intake, then securing a Student's Pass through ICA's SOLAR system. As of 2026, ICA processes a Student's Pass within one week, or two weeks if a visa is required, per the ICA Student's Pass for Institutes of Higher Learning page. This means the visa itself is fast once the university admission is confirmed.

Now that you know the cost and the payback, here’s how the calendar actually runs. The main masters in Singapore intakes are the August intake, with a smaller January intake at some programmes. The visa stage is quick; the admission stage is where families lose time.

  1. October to January – shortlist programmes, sit GRE, GMAT or English tests, prepare documents.
  2. November to March – submit university applications for the August intake; earlier is safer for scholarships and hostel spots.
  3. April to June – accept your offer; the university registers you in SOLAR (the ICA online student application portal).
  4. June to July – complete SOLAR, pay the Student’s Pass fees, and collect the pass on arrival.

Before you file, get your paperwork in one folder so nothing stalls the application. Most autonomous-university masters ask for the same core set of documents from Indian applicants:

  • Academic transcripts (semester-wise mark sheets)
  • Degree certificate, or a provisional certificate if you’re a final-year student
  • Statement of purpose (SOP)
  • Two letters of recommendation (LORs)
  • CV or resume
  • Passport bio page
  • GRE or GMAT score, where the programme requires it
  • IELTS, TOEFL or PTE score, if English-proficiency proof is needed

The ICA assesses financial capacity for the Student’s Pass case-by-case, so there is no single published proof-of-funds figure to quote. Rather than guess a number, get your bank statements and loan sanction letter reviewed against your specific programme cost. Our team maps this in the Singapore student visa guide, and you can also speak with an Ardent Overseas adviser to check your documents before you file.

Ardent Overseas has counselled Indian students on Singapore admissions since 2014, from our Hyderabad and Tirupati offices, running masters shortlists, funding, and pass paperwork with families every intake. See how we verify every fee and rule on our editorial standards page.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Tuition is broadly comparable, but Singapore’s shorter one-year coursework masters can lower your total living-cost exposure versus a longer degree elsewhere. Expect roughly INR 45 lakh to 75 lakh all-in for one year, so it’s premium rather than budget-friendly. The savings come from duration, not from a lower sticker fee.

Yes, within limits. As of 2026, full-time students at the autonomous universities may work up to 16 hours a week during term, per MOM’s work-pass exemption for foreign students. It helps with pocket money but won’t dent your tuition. Treat term-time earnings as a top-up, never a funding plan.

No. Many technical MSc programmes waive the GRE for strong academic profiles, while MBA and several business masters require the GMAT, GRE or an in-house admissions test. Check each programme’s requirement individually, since two courses at the same university can differ. Sitting the wrong test wastes both a fee and a cycle.

For international coursework masters students admitted from AY2020/21, no. The Service Obligation Scheme that delivers the subsidy excludes this group, so you pay the full GST-inclusive tuition. The Tuition Grant’s bond scope sits mainly with diploma and undergraduate study, not taught postgraduate degrees.

Without an Employment Pass sponsor, you cannot start paid work, as Singapore has no automatic post-study stay-back. Eligible graduates can hold a Long-Term Visit Pass to job-hunt, then convert once an offer clears the salary bar. Build a plan B, including roles back in India, before you graduate.

About Ardent Overseas. Operating since 2014 with offices in Hyderabad and Tirupati, our counsellors have guided 2,500+ Indian students through admissions, funding and visa filing across Singapore, the UK, Europe and beyond. We verify every fee and rule against official university and government sources. Read our editorial standards to see how we research and fact-check.

Sources

Official sources first, then reputable third-party.

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