Every Singapore Citizen and PR who logged in to MyActiveSG+ between 2 June and 31 December 2025 received a one-off $100 SG60 ActiveSG credit, and new sign-ups got $200. All ActiveSG credits, SG60 or not, were given an automatic extension to 31 December 2026, and you roll the unused balance into 2027 simply by making at least one booking during 2026, even a free one. Spent well, those credits fund a near-free workout plan: gym and pool entry, court and facility bookings, and a slice of programme fees all come out of the same stored wallet inside the MyActiveSG+ app. This guide covers the exact amounts, the real per-entry prices so you can see how far $100 stretches, what the credits do and do not cover, how to keep them from expiring, and a weekly plan built around them.
ActiveSG credits are stored value in your MyActiveSG+ account that you spend on Sport Singapore facilities and programmes. The SG60 top-up added $100 to every eligible member's wallet. Existing members received the $100; brand-new members who signed up during the window were credited $200, the SG60 $100 plus the standard $100 new-member sign-up bonus.
More than 1.78 million members, over 42% of eligible citizens and PRs, claimed the SG60 credit. The catch is on the other side: by early 2026 only around 40% of those who claimed had actually spent any of it. If you claimed and forgot, the money is sitting in your app right now.
Two dates matter. First, all ActiveSG credits were given a one-off automatic extension to 31 December 2026, so nothing lapses before then. Second, to carry your remaining balance into 2027 you must make at least one transaction in 2026. A transaction can be any booking through MyActiveSG+, including a free facility slot. Miss that single booking and whatever is left expires at the end of 2026.
Treat this like any other government handout sitting in a wallet: it is real money you have already been given, so the only mistake is letting it expire. The same logic applies to your CDC vouchers and the GST Voucher cash.
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| SG60 top-up (existing members) | $100 |
| New member total during window | $200 ($100 SG60 + $100 sign-up bonus) |
| Claim deadline (SG60 top-up) | 31 December 2025 (login to MyActiveSG+) |
| Automatic validity extension | 31 December 2026 |
| Roll over to 2027 | Make at least 1 booking in 2026 (free slot counts) |
The headline number means little without the per-entry prices. ActiveSG facilities are already among the cheapest places to train in Singapore, so $100 stretches a long way. These are the published individual rates for citizens and PRs.
Gym entry for a citizen or PR adult is $2.50 per visit; students and seniors pay $1.50. At $2.50 a session, your $100 covers roughly 40 adult gym visits. Pool entry is cheaper still. A normal complex charges adults $1.00 on weekdays and $1.30 on weekends and public holidays; children and seniors pay $0.50 and $0.60. Complexes with special features, such as wave pools or lazy rivers, charge adults $1.50 on weekdays and $2.00 on weekends.
If you train often, a monthly or yearly pass is cheaper than paying per visit, and credits cover those too. An adult peak MyActiveGYM membership is $30 a month or $300 a year; the off-peak plan (weekdays, opening to 4pm) is $15 a month or $80 a year. MyActiveSWIM for an adult is $10 a month for unlimited swims; ActiveSG only lists a yearly swim pass for children ($60) and seniors ($50 at normal pools, $60 for all pools), not for adults. Run the maths against how often you actually go before buying a pass.
| Facility | Adult | Student / Senior | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gym (pay-per-visit) | $2.50 | $1.50 | Per entry |
| Pool, normal complex | $1.00 weekday / $1.30 weekend | $0.50 / $0.60 | Per entry |
| Pool, special-feature complex | $1.50 weekday / $2.00 weekend | $0.80 / $1.00 | Per entry |
| MyActiveGYM peak | $30/mth or $300/yr | $18/mth or $180/yr | All hours, all days |
| MyActiveGYM off-peak | $15/mth or $80/yr | $9/mth or $80/yr | Mon-Fri, open to 4pm |
| MyActiveSWIM, normal pool | $10/mth (adult, no yearly) | $5/mth; $50/yr normal, $60/yr all pools | Unlimited entry; yearly for child/senior only |
Credits behave like cash for facility access and bookings, but only part of a programme fee. Knowing the difference stops you from being surprised at checkout.
What credits fully cover:
For programmes, credits cover a fixed share of the fee and you pay the rest. The offset depends on who you are and what the programme is.
Credits cannot be converted to cash, transferred to another person's wallet for spending, or used outside the ActiveSG and SportSG ecosystem. They are not a private-gym discount. One useful angle for parents is linking your child's MyActiveSG+ account to yours so the household pools its credits and bookings in one place.
Prices tell you how far the money goes; this tells you what the money does. ActiveSG runs far more than gyms and pools, and the credits reach almost all of it. The trick is matching the activity to how the credit pays out: facility hire and entry are settled in full from your wallet, while group classes only take a slice.
Court and field hire is the under-used win. You book the venue, split it with friends, and the whole cost comes off your credits. Badminton, tennis and squash are the obvious picks, but ActiveSG sport centres and the Dual-Use Scheme schools also open up pickleball, beach volleyball, sepak takraw, basketball, soccer pitches and even petanque depending on the venue. A two-hour court split four ways often works out to a dollar or two each, paid from credits.
Classes are where the named, slightly-strange programmes live. ActiveSG lists fitness sessions across Aqua Tabata, Fight-Do, Pilates, Piloxing, trampoline circuits, yoga, Zumba, K-pop dance and pickleball coaching, among others. For a general adult, credits offset up to 30% of the class fee, so a class is something you part-fund rather than ride free. The exception worth knowing: youth and school-holiday programmes (search the keyword SHP60 in the app) get a 60% offset, and senior programmes a full 100%.
If you would rather not pay any cash at all, stick to the full-cover lane: gym entry, pool entry, court and DUS bookings, and Active Health sessions. Save the part-funded classes for when you genuinely want the class, not for stretching the credit. The same buy-the-outcome-not-the-label thinking that keeps an emergency fund in a plain high-yield account, rather than a fancy product, applies here.
| Activity | Examples | Credit cover |
|---|---|---|
| Gym entry | Strength, cardio machines, free weights | 100% |
| Pool entry | Lap swimming, wave pools, lazy rivers | 100% |
| Court and field hire | Badminton, tennis, squash, pickleball, soccer | 100% |
| DUS school venues | Sports halls and fields, weekends | 100% |
| Active Health sessions | Body composition, strength and balance, nutrition | 100% |
| General fitness classes | Aqua Tabata, Fight-Do, Pilates, Zumba, trampoline | Up to 30% |
| Youth / school-holiday programmes | Multi-sport camps (keyword SHP60) | Up to 60% |
| Senior programmes | Senior-tagged classes and clinics | Up to 100% |
Two timing rules decide how cheaply and how easily you actually get in. The first is the peak window. ActiveSG counts peak as 6pm to 10pm on weekdays and 7am to 10pm on weekends and public holidays; non-peak is 7am to 6pm on weekdays. Pay-per-entry gym and pool prices are flat across the day, but the off-peak MyActiveGYM pass (weekdays, opening to 4pm) is half the price of the peak pass and the gyms are quieter, so you wait less for a rack or a machine.
The second rule is the booking quota. Most court sports cap you at two booked slots a day, and soccer pitches at two slots a month, so a household that wants a long weekend session is better off linking accounts and booking across members than trying to stack slots on one login. Slots open on a rolling window ahead of the date and the popular peak courts go fast, so set a reminder rather than deciding on the day.
For the Dual-Use Scheme schools, peak slots run on a ballot you enter ahead of time, while non-peak slots are first-come, first-served. If a specific Saturday court matters, enter the ballot; if you just want to play and do not mind the venue, grab whatever non-peak slot is open.
| Period | Weekdays | Weekends and public holidays |
|---|---|---|
| Peak | 6pm to 10pm | 7am to 10pm |
| Non-peak | 7am to 6pm | Not applicable |
| Court booking limit | 2 slots per day | 2 slots per day |
| Soccer pitch limit | 2 slots per month | 2 slots per month |
If you have not touched your account, start here. Everything runs through MyActiveSG+ and Singpass; there is no separate form.
The steps:
Here is how the money plays out for a citizen adult who wants three sessions a week. The point is to show that $100 can fund several months of training if you stick to pay-per-visit entry rather than premium programmes.
A balanced week might be two gym sessions and one swim:
| Habit | Weekly cost | Weeks $100 lasts |
|---|---|---|
| 1 gym + nothing else | $2.50 | ~40 weeks |
| 2 gym + 1 swim | $6.00 | ~16 weeks |
| 3 gym + 2 swim | ~$9.50 | ~10 weeks |
| Daily mix (gym + pool) | ~$15+ | ~6-7 weeks |
For most people the money case for ActiveSG over a commercial gym is hard to argue with. A typical private gym membership in Singapore runs $80 to $200-plus a month. An off-peak ActiveSG gym pass is $80 for the whole year, and a peak pass is $300 a year. Even at peak, you are paying about a quarter of a mid-tier commercial chain.
The trade-off is amenities and atmosphere. Private gyms offer newer machines, classes, towels, air-conditioning across the floor and a particular crowd. ActiveSG gyms are functional rather than fancy. If your training is squats, dumbbells, cardio machines and laps, ActiveSG covers it for a fraction of the cost. If you want boutique classes, branded equipment or a specific community, you are paying for that experience, not the exercise.
The savings are the interesting part. If you switch from a $120-a-month private gym to a $300-a-year ActiveSG peak pass, you free up roughly $1,140 a year. Redirected into investments rather than spent, that is a meaningful sum over time. See what regular contributions compound to with the compound interest calculator, and slot the saving into a plan with the personal budget calculator. Fitness is one of the easier line items to cut without cutting the activity itself, since the cheaper option here is genuinely good enough.
All ActiveSG credits, including the SG60 $100 top-up, were given a one-off automatic extension to 31 December 2026. To carry your remaining balance into 2027, make at least one booking in 2026. Even a free facility slot counts as the qualifying transaction.
Existing members received a one-off $100 SG60 top-up. New members who signed up during the window received $200 in total, made up of the $100 SG60 credit and the standard $100 new-member sign-up bonus.
Credits fully cover gym and pool entry, gym and swim passes, court and facility bookings, Dual-Use Scheme school facility bookings, and Active Health programmes. For general fitness programmes they cover up to 30% of the fee; youth programmes 60%; senior programmes 100%.
Adult citizen and PR gym entry is $2.50 per visit, so $100 covers about 40 gym sessions. Pool entry is cheaper at $1.00 on a weekday, so swimming makes the credits last even longer.
No. Credits are stored value usable only within ActiveSG and SportSG facilities and programmes. They cannot be withdrawn as cash or transferred to another person to spend, though parents can link a child's account to pool a household's credits.
Yes. Since 1 November 2025, credits work for all play slots under the Dual-Use Scheme at over 370 school sports halls and fields, available on Saturday afternoons and evenings and on Sundays.
Once you go more than about six times a month, a pass wins. An off-peak gym pass is $80 a year and a peak pass is $300 a year, both payable with credits, versus $2.50 per pay-as-you-go visit. Adult swimmers can buy a $10-a-month MyActiveSWIM pass; ActiveSG only lists a yearly swim pass for children ($60) and seniors ($50 to $60), not for adults.
Gym, lap swimming, and court or field hire for badminton, tennis, squash, pickleball, soccer and more are all fully paid from credits. Group fitness classes such as Aqua Tabata, Fight-Do, Pilates, Zumba and trampoline circuits are part-funded: credits offset up to 30% for general adults, 60% for youth and school-holiday programmes, and 100% for senior programmes.
Peak is 6pm to 10pm on weekdays and 7am to 10pm on weekends and public holidays. Non-peak is 7am to 6pm on weekdays. Pay-per-entry prices are the same all day, but the off-peak MyActiveGYM pass costs half the peak pass and the gyms are less crowded during non-peak hours.
Singapore citizens aged 65 and above enter ActiveSG gyms and public pools free of charge. That means seniors can keep their credits for programmes instead, where the senior fee offset is now a full 100%, so an eligible senior can join those classes without paying any cash.
This is general financial information for Singapore, not personal financial advice. Figures change — verify current rates against the official sources above before acting. See our full disclaimer.