ClassPass pricing in Singapore is not one number, it is a credit ladder. As of June 2026 the entry plan starts around $19 a month for 8 credits and climbs to roughly $315 for 150 credits, with each class burning between 3 and 15 credits depending on the studio, the time slot and how full it is. That dynamic system is exactly why two people on the same plan can pay wildly different amounts per workout. The honest answer to whether ClassPass is worth it depends on a single number you can work out in two minutes: your real cost per class. This guide breaks down every tier, the fees nobody reads until they get charged, and the break-even point where a normal gym membership wins.
ClassPass does not sell you classes, it sells you credits. You pick a monthly plan, get a pot of credits, and spend them booking sessions at partner gyms, yoga and pilates studios, spin and boxing classes, plus spas and recovery venues. A single class costs anywhere from 3 to 15 credits, and the price floats. Off-peak Tuesday-morning yoga might cost 6 credits while the 7pm Friday spin class at the same studio costs 14.
This is the part most pricing pages gloss over. The credit cost shown is dynamic, set by demand, popularity and how close the class is to selling out. ClassPass quietly discounts unsold spots in the hours before a class, so the same booking can swing by several credits depending on when you grab it. Treating credits like cash, where every credit has a fixed dollar value, is the mistake that makes people overpay.
Divide your monthly fee by the credits you get and you land somewhere between roughly $2.10 and $2.40 per credit, with the cheapest per-credit rate on the larger plans. So a 9-credit class effectively costs about $19 to $22 of your subscription, and a 14-credit peak class closer to $30. Run a busy month of premium classes and the real cost per session creeps toward boutique-studio walk-in prices, which defeats the point.
Here are the credit tiers reported for the Singapore market as of June 2026. ClassPass personalises pricing by user and region and tweaks tiers often, so treat these as indicative starting points and confirm the live number in the app before you subscribe. Two recent Singapore breakdowns showed slightly different mid-tier sizing (for example a 25-credit $59 plan in one and a 27-credit $65 plan in another), which is exactly the kind of drift you should expect.
| Plan (credits) | Monthly price (SGD) | Approx. cost per credit | Roughly how many classes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8 credits | ~$19 | ~$2.38 | 1 to 2 classes |
| 25 to 27 credits | ~$59 to $65 | ~$2.36 to $2.41 | 2 to 5 classes |
| 45 credits | ~$99 | ~$2.20 | 3 to 7 classes |
| 65 to 85 credits | ~$139 to $185 | ~$2.14 to $2.18 | 5 to 12 classes |
| 95 to 150 credits | ~$199 to $315 | ~$2.09 to $2.10 | 7 to 20 classes |
Run dry before your cycle resets and you do not have to jump to a bigger plan. ClassPass lets you buy extra credits on the spot, reported around $2.50 to $3 per credit in smaller bundles. That is pricier than your plan rate, so it is a convenience tax, not a saving. If you top up every month, you have outgrown your tier and should size up.
New members in Singapore typically get a one-month free trial loaded with around 45 credits, enough for roughly three to seven classes. The catch is the autopilot: when the trial ends you roll straight onto the paid 45-credit plan at about $99 a month unless you downsize or cancel first. Diarise the trial end date the day you sign up.
Use the trial as a value test, not a freebie grab. Book a realistic month: the classes you would actually attend, at the times you would actually go. If you only managed two sessions in four free weeks, a $99 plan will sit mostly unused, and you are better off paying per class direct or buying a gym membership instead. The trial is the cleanest way to find your true usage before money is on the line.
The headline plan price is rarely your total spend. ClassPass charges for late cancellations and no-shows, and in a small-group boutique class those fees bite.
Per the official ClassPass cancellation policy, you can cancel a reservation up to 12 hours before the start time at no charge, and your credits return to your account automatically. Cancel inside that 12-hour window and the credits come back but a late-cancellation fee applies. Miss the class entirely without cancelling and you pay a missed-reservation fee on top of getting the credits back. Singapore fee bands reported in 2026 sit around $12 to $59 for a late cancel and roughly $17 to $68 for a no-show, scaled to how premium the class is.
Partly, and this is where the value leaks. ClassPass states that purchased credits roll over to your next cycle, capped at the number of credits in that next plan. But all remaining credits, including rolled-over and topped-up ones, are forfeited on the last day of your billing cycle if you cancel or let the plan lapse. Stockpiling credits with the plan to binge later does not work the way people assume.
The practical rule: buy the plan that matches the classes you will realistically take this month, not the optimistic version of yourself. Idle credits are a sunk cost. If you keep a habit of leaving 15 credits on the table each cycle, you are paying for a tier above your actual usage, the classic lifestyle creep of fitness spending.
The maths is simple once you stop guessing. A flat-rate big-box gym in Singapore runs roughly $70 to $120 a month for unlimited entry. On ClassPass, your cost per workout is the credits you spend times your per-credit rate, so a 9-credit class is around $20 and a peak 14-credit class around $30.
Cross those and you get a clean decision line. If you work out 4 or more times a week and you mostly lift or do general gym sessions, an unlimited membership crushes ClassPass on cost. If you attend 4 to 8 boutique classes a month, want variety across studios, or travel and need flexibility, ClassPass usually wins because you would otherwise pay $30 to $45 per boutique drop-in. The swing factor is class type: ClassPass shines for spin, yoga, pilates, reformer and boxing, where direct drop-in prices are brutal.
ClassPass is a convenience product, and convenience has a markup. Before you commit, weigh it against the public options most residents underuse. ActiveSG gives every Singaporean and PR a $100 starter credit for swimming pools, gyms and badminton courts at heavily subsidised rates, which is the single best fitness value on the island. We break the hacks down in our guide to ActiveSG credits and workout hacks.
Whatever you pick, fold it into a written budget so a recurring subscription does not quietly outgrow its usefulness. A quick run through the personal budget calculator shows what a $99 monthly fitness line costs you over a year, which is the framing that keeps lifestyle spending honest. The right answer is the cheapest option that you will actually use four times a week.
As of June 2026, ClassPass Singapore plans run from about $19 a month for 8 credits up to roughly $315 for 150 credits, with popular mid-tiers around $59 to $99. Pricing is personalised and changes often, so confirm the live figure in the app before subscribing.
A single class costs between 3 and 15 credits, set dynamically by the studio, the time slot and demand. Off-peak sessions are cheaper, while sold-out peak classes at premium studios cost the most credits, often 12 to 15 each.
Yes, new members usually get one free month with around 45 credits, enough for roughly three to seven classes. When the trial ends you are automatically enrolled in the paid 45-credit plan at about $99 a month unless you downsize or cancel beforehand.
Cancel 12 or more hours ahead and it is free with credits returned. Cancel within 12 hours and you keep the credits but pay a late-cancel fee, reported around $12 to $59 in Singapore. A no-show adds a missed-reservation fee of roughly $17 to $68.
If you train four or more times a week doing general gym work, an unlimited membership at about $70 to $120 a month is cheaper. ClassPass wins if you take a few boutique classes weekly, want studio variety, or need flexibility without a lock-in contract.
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.