Apple no longer sells the iPhone 11 new in Singapore, so in 2026 your only realistic option is a used or refurbished unit. Prices start from roughly S$249 for a 64GB model in good condition and climb to around S$340 for a 128GB unit in near-new shape, depending on the seller and warranty. The 11 Pro and 11 Pro Max command more. The phone launched here at S$1,149 in September 2019, so a refurbished buy today is a 75% discount on a device that still runs the current iOS. Whether that is smart money depends on the battery, the warranty and how long you plan to keep it. The numbers below are dated and sourced so you can decide.
Apple delisted the iPhone 11 from its Singapore store after the iPhone SE and later models replaced it, so there is no brand-new retail price to quote in 2026. Every legitimate listing you will find is refurbished, certified pre-owned or second-hand. That is not a downgrade in itself: a properly graded refurbished unit is tested, data-wiped and warranted, and the iPhone 11 still receives iOS updates as of mid-2026.
The spread between sellers is wide because grading language is not standardised. One shop's "Good" is another's "Very Good". The figures below are pulled directly from each seller's live listings as of June 2026 for the base 64GB model, which is the most common configuration on the resale market.
| Seller | Condition tier | Price (SGD) | Warranty |
|---|---|---|---|
| GW Mobile | From (entry grade) | From S$249 | Varies by listing |
| Allo Allo | Good | S$260 | 24 months |
| Allo Allo | Very Good | S$280 | 24 months |
| Allo Allo | Like New | S$290 | 24 months |
| Reebelo | Very Good | S$311 | 3 months incl. battery |
| CompAsia | Refurbished | Listing-dependent | 3 months (extendable 12 or 24) |
The label on the listing changes both the price and the risk. Knowing the difference is the single biggest lever on whether you overpay.
A private resale on Carousell can be the cheapest route, but you carry every risk yourself: no warranty, no battery guarantee, and no recourse if the unit was previously reported lost or stolen. A graded refurbished unit from a registered shop costs more but bundles testing and a return window.
On a phone this age, battery condition matters more than a scratch on the back glass. An iPhone shows degradation once maximum capacity drops below 80%, and a 2019-era cell that has never been replaced may already be there. Always ask the seller for the exact maximum-capacity reading in Settings, not a vague "battery is good".
Sellers handle this differently. Reebelo guarantees a tested battery suited to normal use with its 3-month cover including the battery. Allo Allo offers an "Optimal Battery" graded above 80% with a 6-month defect guarantee, plus a paid "New Battery" upgrade option. If a listing is silent on capacity, treat a battery swap as a future cost: an out-of-warranty iPhone 11 battery replacement at Apple in Singapore runs around S$129 as of June 2026.
The iPhone 11 launched in Singapore at S$1,149 for the 64GB model on 20 September 2019, with the 11 Pro from S$1,649 and the 11 Pro Max from S$1,799. Buying a 64GB unit today at around S$260 to S$311 is roughly a 73% to 77% discount on that original price for a device that still runs current software.
The smarter comparison is cost per year of use. If you pay S$280 and keep the phone two more years, that is S$140 a year before a possible battery swap. A budget Android at S$300 to S$400 new might last the same span but ships with a slower processor and a shorter update runway. The iPhone 11's A13 Bionic chip still handles everyday apps comfortably in 2026, which is why it holds resale value better than most phones its age. If you are weighing a refurbished flagship against a cheap new handset, our guide to the best cheap phones in Singapore runs the same per-year maths across both camps.
Build the purchase into your monthly plan rather than treating it as a one-off. A quick pass through the personal budget calculator tells you whether a S$280 outlay plus a possible S$129 battery is comfortable this month or better spread out. Remember that the sticker price already includes 9% GST, so what you see is what you pay.
All three share the same A13 Bionic chip and the same iOS support timeline, so day-to-day speed is near identical. The Pro models add an OLED screen, a telephoto lens and longer battery life, which is why they still cost more on the resale market.
| Model | Launch price (Sep 2019, from) | Display | Rear cameras | Resale premium today |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| iPhone 11 | S$1,149 | 6.1" LCD | Dual (wide + ultra-wide) | Cheapest |
| iPhone 11 Pro | S$1,649 | 5.8" OLED | Triple (adds telephoto) | Higher |
| iPhone 11 Pro Max | S$1,799 | 6.5" OLED | Triple (adds telephoto) | Highest |
Stick to sellers that publish a condition grade, a battery policy and a warranty in writing. The longer the warranty, the more of the unit's remaining-life risk the seller is absorbing, which is worth paying a small premium for on a phone this old.
If something does go wrong after the warranty lapses, an out-of-warranty repair can cost a meaningful share of what you paid for the phone. Reading our note on AppleCare and extended warranty in Singapore before you buy helps you decide whether paying for longer cover is worth it on a second-hand unit.
For a budget-conscious buyer, yes. At roughly S$249 to S$340 refurbished it runs current iOS smoothly on the A13 chip, but check the battery health first because a worn 2019 cell may need a replacement costing around S$129.
No. Apple delisted the iPhone 11 from its Singapore store, so every legitimate listing you find in 2026 is refurbished, certified pre-owned or second-hand. There is no official new-unit retail price anymore.
As of June 2026, a 64GB iPhone 11 in good condition starts from about S$249 to S$260, with very-good and like-new grades around S$280 to S$311 depending on the seller and the warranty length included.
Yes. The iPhone 11 received iOS 18 in September 2024 and continues to get updates as of mid-2026, which is a key reason it holds value better than most Android phones of the same age.
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.