Market Intelligence

Car make popularity, fuel type adoption, and engine capacity trends from LTA registration data.

Top 10 Car Makes (Last 12 Months)

Rank Make Registrations
1 BYD 8,606
2 TESLA 2,240
3 TOYOTA 1,764
4 HONDA 1,560
5 B.M.W. 996
6 CHERY 913
7 M.G. 841
8 ZEEKR 814
9 GAC 804
10 XPENG 705

Fuel Type Breakdown (Last 12 Months Registrations)

Electric

66.5%

16,394 cars

Petrol-Electric

22.3%

5,489 cars

Petrol

7.9%

1,948 cars

Petrol-Electric (Plug-In)

3.4%

836 cars

Diesel

0%

1 cars

Vehicle Population by Fuel Type (Last 10 Years)

Data sourced from LTA · Shows total car population by engine/fuel type

Car Population by CC Rating (Last 10 Years)

The 1,600cc threshold separates Cat A and Cat B · Data sourced from LTA

Singapore Car Market Trends

Understanding what Singaporeans are buying — and how the market is shifting — gives valuable context for COE price movements. Registration data reveals demand patterns: which brands dominate, how quickly EV adoption is growing, and where the engine capacity distribution falls relative to the Category A/B threshold.

The transition to electric vehicles is particularly significant for COE dynamics. As more EVs enter the market, many qualify for Category A (based on power output), potentially intensifying competition in that pool. Meanwhile, the declining share of large-engine petrol cars may ease pressure on Category B over time.

For how these demand trends interact with quota supply to determine prices, see the price trends page. For detailed supply-side data including deregistrations and revalidations, visit the supply forecast.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the most popular car brands in Singapore?
The top-selling brands shift over time, but Toyota, Honda, Mercedes-Benz, BMW, and Hyundai consistently rank among the leaders. The chart above shows the latest 12-month registration data by make. Electric-focused brands like Tesla and BYD have been gaining significant share since 2023.
How fast is EV adoption growing in Singapore?
EV registrations have grown rapidly, rising from under 1% of new registrations in 2020 to a significant share today. Government incentives (VES rebates, reduced road tax) and expanding charging infrastructure are accelerating adoption. The fuel type breakdown above shows the current split.
What is the 1,600cc threshold between Category A and B?
Cars with engine capacity at or below 1,600cc and power at or below 97kW (130bhp) qualify for Category A COE. Cars exceeding either limit fall under Category B, which typically has higher COE premiums. The engine size chart above shows how the vehicle population splits across these thresholds.
How does this data affect COE prices?
Registration trends reflect demand pressure on specific categories. If more buyers are choosing larger cars (Cat B), demand in that category increases relative to supply, pushing premiums up. EV adoption is also shifting demand patterns as more EVs qualify for Cat A. Track price impacts on the trends page.

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