NDP vouchers are the free discount coupons that ride along with National Day every year. Some come tucked into the NDP fun pack, but the bigger stash is the online National Day coupon e-booklet, which you can browse and save even if you never collect a pack. The catch is that not all of them save you money. A fair chunk are priced off an inflated usual price you would never actually pay. This guide separates the coupons that genuinely beat the everyday price from the ones dressed up to look like a deal, shows you exactly where to access the e-booklet for 2026, and explains how to redeem each one.
There is no single "NDP voucher" handed out by the government. The phrase covers two overlapping things. The first is the physical discount booklet that has shipped inside National Day fun packs for years. The second, and the one most people now use, is the online National Day coupon e-booklet, produced by Green Dot Media, a private publisher that has run the National Day Discount Booklet for more than 18 editions.
These are merchant promotions, not cash. A coupon might give you a dollar burger, a percentage off a spa package, or a free side with a minimum spend. They are completely separate from the cash-like government schemes such as your CDC vouchers and the SG60 vouchers, which are real spending credit you load through Singpass.
That distinction matters for your wallet. CDC and SG60 vouchers cut the price of things you were already buying. NDP coupons only save money if the deal beats what you would otherwise pay, and if you would have bought the item anyway. The rest is marketing.
You do not need an NDP ticket or a physical fun pack to use the coupons. Green Dot Media publishes the full National Day coupon collection on its own site, and the deals sit there for anyone to browse. In 2025 the SG60 edition carried more than 100 coupons across food, attractions, fitness, beauty and home appliances. The 2026 collection lives at the same coupons hub on greendotmedia.com.sg.
The physical booklet still exists. Since 2020, Green Dot Media has moved away from inserting it only in parade fun packs and instead distributes print copies more widely, including at NDP heartland celebrations held at locations islandwide. The official NDP fun pack itself goes to ticket holders, and the NDP committee has flagged an NDP 2026 Pack on ndp.gov.sg, though as of June 2026 that page is still marked "coming soon".
If you are chasing the parade fun pack specifically, the NDP ticket ballot is the way in, and it is free. But for the coupons alone, skip all that and go straight to the online e-booklet.
Redemption depends on the coupon type, and getting it wrong is the most common way people miss out. There are three patterns.
For coupons with a promo code, you enter the code at checkout, whether that is the merchant's app, website, or a self-order kiosk in store. For coupons at a physical outlet, you create a free account on the Green Dot Media site, save the coupon to your in-app eWallet, then show it to staff who tap "Redeem" when you order. For straightforward show-and-flash deals, you simply present the coupon screen before you pay.
Save anything you might use to your eWallet rather than screenshotting. A live coupon shows the validity countdown and the redeem button staff need to see, and a screenshot will usually be rejected.
The coupons worth your time share one trait. The dollar figure on the deal is lower than what the item costs on a normal day, not lower than an inflated usual price set up for the promo. The strongest National Day coupons each year tend to cluster around food and attractions, where the everyday price is easy to verify.
From past editions, the patterns that consistently beat the normal price are themed dollar deals (think sixty-cent or low-dollar snacks tied to the SG anniversary), genuine one-for-one food offers you would buy anyway, and entry-price attraction deals such as a heavily reduced family bundle. The table below shows representative deal types and how to judge each one. Treat the figures as illustrative of past editions, since exact merchants and prices change every year.
| Coupon type | Example seen before | Real value test |
|---|---|---|
| Themed dollar snack | $0.60 pastry or off a $6 spend | Cheap absolute price, low risk, only buy if you wanted it |
| Genuine 1-for-1 food | 1-for-1 bubble tea or burger | Strong if you would buy two anyway, weak if it pushes overspend |
| Attraction bundle | Family park bundle at a big discount | Compare against the gate price and any standing online promo |
| Percentage off a service | Up to 60% off a fitness pass or spa package | Check the usual price independently, the % is off the list price |
| Min-spend cashback | Up to $59 off with $300 spend | Only a deal if you were already spending that much |
The biggest weakness in any voucher booklet is the usual price the discount is measured against. A spa coupon that screams "$55, usual price $300" is doing a lot of work with that $300. If the salon never sells that package at $300, the coupon is just its everyday rate with a flag on it.
The fix is a thirty-second habit. Before you redeem a percentage-off or usual-price coupon, search the merchant's own site or a booking platform for the standing price. If the everyday rate is close to the coupon price, the deal is theatre. This is the same discipline that keeps you safe from anchored pricing during any seasonal promotion, where the headline number is designed to make you act fast.
Absolute-price deals are far harder to fake. A sixty-cent snack or a one-for-one drink is what it is. Percentage and usual-price deals are where you slow down and check.
The coupons are the small change of National Day. The actual money is in the government schemes that land around the same time. Every Singaporean household received $500 in CDC vouchers from 11 June 2026, and the SG60 vouchers gave adults $600 and seniors $800, all redeemable through Singpass until they expire on 31 December 2026.
Used well, the two layers combine. You pay for a hawker meal or groceries with CDC vouchers at a participating merchant, and where an NDP coupon also applies at the same outlet, you flash that on top. The CDC and SG60 credit does the heavy lifting on price, the NDP coupon shaves a little more. For the mechanics of claiming the cash-like vouchers, see the CDC vouchers guide and the SG60 voucher redemption steps.
Treat all of this as a planned spend, not found money. If a $500 voucher tempts you into $700 of buying, the scheme cost you $200. Folding these credits into a simple monthly plan with the budget calculator keeps the windfall working for you instead of against you.
If you want the value without the hassle, this is the order that works. It takes about ten minutes and costs nothing.
Most of the value-per-minute here sits in two moves: claiming your cash-like CDC and SG60 vouchers, and skimming the e-booklet only for deals on things you already buy. Everything else is optional.
Yes, the National Day coupons are free to access. You do not need a fun pack or an NDP ticket. The full coupon e-booklet is published online by Green Dot Media on greendotmedia.com.sg, where anyone can browse and save the deals without Singpass.
Green Dot Media hosts the National Day coupon collection on its coupons hub at greendotmedia.com.sg. The 2025 SG60 edition carried more than 100 deals across food, attractions, fitness, beauty and home, and the 2026 collection sits at the same address.
It depends on the coupon. Code deals need the promo code entered at checkout in the merchant's app, website or kiosk. Outlet deals require you to save the coupon to your eWallet on the Green Dot Media site and let staff tap Redeem. Show-and-flash deals just need you to present the live coupon before paying.
No. CDC vouchers ($500 per household in 2026) and SG60 vouchers ($600 for adults, $800 for seniors) are cash-like spending credit you claim through Singpass and spend like money. NDP vouchers are merchant discount coupons that only save you money if the deal beats the everyday price of something you wanted anyway.
Some are, many are not. Absolute-price deals like sixty-cent snacks or genuine one-for-one food offers are real value. Percentage-off and usual-price coupons often measure the discount against an inflated list price, so check the everyday rate yourself before you redeem anything.
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.