Whether you’re heading to New Zealand for a holiday, studying over there, or just tracking the currency, this guide covers everything you need to know about SGD to NZD rates, the 2026 forecast, and the smartest ways to convert your money.
The Singdollar has edged up against the Kiwi over the past year, so New Zealand is a touch friendlier on the wallet than it was 12 months ago. The catch: the way you pay still decides how much you actually keep, and that’s where most people quietly lose money without realising.
TL;DR: SGD To NZD At A Glance| Key Information | Details |
|---|---|
| Current SGD to NZD rate | 1 SGD = 1.34 NZD (as of 8 Jun 2026) |
| 100 SGD to NZD | Approximately 134 NZD |
| 1,000 SGD to NZD | Approximately 1,336 NZD (~S$1,000) |
| 1-year change | +3.69% (SGD edged up against the Kiwi dollar) |
| 5-year change | +26.33% (SGD much stronger over the long run) |
| NZD trend | Stabilised in 2026 — RBNZ done cutting, firm dairy prices |
| Best exchange method | Multi-currency cards (YouTrip) at the wholesale rate, 0% markup |
| Cash needed in New Zealand? | Minimal. New Zealand is highly cashless, cards work nearly everywhere |
Table of Contents:
Image Credits: Google
Every Singapore Dollar converts to about 1.34 New Zealand Dollars right now. That’s up roughly 3.7% over the past year, so your Sing dollar buys a little more Kiwi than it did 12 months ago, though the move has been gentle rather than dramatic.
Over the past year the rate has mostly traded between about 1.28 and 1.37, so today’s level sits comfortably in the upper half of that band. Zoom out and the picture is firmly in your favour: the SGD is up about 26% against the New Zealand Dollar over five years.
Quick conversions at the current SGD to NZD rate:
The SGD to NZD rate moves daily on the back of central bank decisions, commodity prices, and market sentiment between Singapore and New Zealand.
Where to check live SGD to NZD rates:
The catch: Google’s rate is reference only. What matters is the net rate after fees.
Knowing where the SGD to NZD rate has been helps you judge whether today’s rate is a good one for travel, study, or sending money over.
Image Credits: Google
5-Year SGD to NZD overview (2021–2026):
| Year | Approx. rate range | Key trend |
|---|---|---|
| 2021 | 1.05–1.10 | SGD building strength vs the Kiwi |
| 2022 | 1.08–1.26 | SGD surged as the NZD slid |
| 2023 | 1.20–1.26 | Held near the highs |
| 2024 | 1.20–1.30 | Consolidated around 1.23–1.28 |
| 2025 | 1.29–1.36 | SGD pushed to fresh highs |
| 2026 (to date) | 1.31–1.37 | Range-bound near 1.33–1.34 |
The SGD to NZD rate has crept up from about 1.29 a year ago to 1.34 today, so the Singdollar still has the upper hand, just not by much. Here’s what’s pulling each way.
Where the rate may land: Most views see the SGD to NZD rate holding broadly in the 1.30–1.36 band through the rest of 2026, rather than swinging hard either way. That said, currency calls shift with the news, so treat any number as a guide, not a promise 
The simple version: NZD received = SGD × the exchange rate. The real difference comes from the fees and markups layered on top. Take 100 SGD at today’s mid-market rate of 1 SGD = 1.3358 NZD:
But what you actually pocket depends on how you convert:
| Method | NZD received for 100 SGD |
|---|---|
| YouTrip (0% markup) | ~134 NZD |
| Money changer (1–2%) | ~131–132 NZD |
| Bank (3–4%) | ~128–130 NZD |
| Credit card (FX + fees) | ~129 NZD |
Rates taken as of 8 Jun 2026
Small percentages add up fast, especially on a full trip’s worth of spending.
Getting the best SGD to NZD rate can save you a real chunk of money, whether you’re converting a little or a lot. Here’s how the options stack up.
Multi-currency travel cards (top choice)A card like YouTrip gives you:
For most travellers, this is the cheapest, most convenient way to convert SGD to NZD, and it’s why a multi-currency card wins on rate and fees combined. (Other apps exist, but once you account for weekend surcharges and variable fees, YouTrip’s flat 0% markup is hard to beat.)
Physical money changers offer competitive cash rates, usually better than banks, with a typical markup of around 0.3–1.5% and no transaction fee. Rates vary a fair bit between shops, so compare on CashChanger.co before you go. The downsides: you’re queuing, carrying cash, and locked into the board rate that day. In a cashless country like New Zealand, you won’t need much physical cash anyway.
Convenient if you already bank there, but banks bake in markups of roughly 1–4% over the mid-market rate, plus the odd service fee. Rarely the best rate going.
Standard credit cards hit you with foreign transaction fees of 2–3.5%, plus the risk of Dynamic Currency Conversion (DCC) quietly converting at a worse rate at the till. Fine for emergencies, not for planned spending.
Here’s what you’ll pay to spend 1,000 NZD (~S$749) in New Zealand across different methods:
| Card | SGD to NZD rate (8 Jun 2026) | Fees | SGD charged for 1,000 NZD |
|---|---|---|---|
| YouTrip | 1 SGD = 1.3358 NZD | S$0 | S$748.61 ![]() |
| Bank Cards | 1 SGD = 1.2891 NZD | up to 3.5% | S$775.73 |
| Revolut | 1 SGD = 1.3355 NZD | S$0 (1% on weekends) | S$748.78 |
| Wise | 1 SGD = 1.3331 NZD | 0.2% | S$750.13 |
Rates taken as of 8 Jun 2026.
On rate and fees combined, YouTrip comes out cheapest, so you hand over less SGD for the same Kiwi dollars. The gap looks small per transaction, but a bank card could cost you around S$27 more on a single 1,000 NZD spend, and that stacks up fast across a whole trip.
YouTrip is one of Singapore’s most popular multi-currency cards for converting SGD to NZD at a competitive rate. Here’s why it works:
In a nutshell, YouTrip works to “unpinch” your wallet so you’re not bleeding money on exchange margins. Locking in NZD takes about a minute:
Here’s how to exchange SGD to NZD on YouTrip:
do the work
Your YouTrip prepaid Mastercard works seamlessly across New Zealand:
Honestly, not much. New Zealand is one of the most cashless countries going, and cards or contactless are accepted almost everywhere. Still, it’s worth keeping a little cash for:
When you do need notes, withdraw them from an ATM in New Zealand with YouTrip rather than changing cash before you fly. Money changers and banks back home build a markup into their cash rate, so you quietly lose a few percent before you’ve spent a cent.
Pulling NZD from an ATM gets you the wholesale rate instead. Your first S$400 of ATM withdrawals each calendar month is free, then 2% after that, and the allowance resets on the 1st. New Zealand’s major-bank ATMs (ANZ, ASB, BNZ, Westpac, Kiwibank) generally don’t add their own fee, though some independent or retail ATMs may charge a small one.
ATM fees are subject to change; verify on screen before withdrawal.
As of 8 June 2026, the SGD to NZD exchange rate is approximately 1 SGD = 1.34 NZD. Rates move daily with market conditions.
The rate has crept up from about 1.29 a year ago to 1.34 now, but the move has been gentle. The New Zealand dollar has steadied as the RBNZ finished its cutting cycle (holding the OCR at 2.25%) and firm dairy prices supported the economy.
Most forecasts expect the rate to hold broadly in the 1.30–1.36 range through the rest of 2026, though currency calls shift with global news, so treat any figure as a guide rather than a guarantee.
The Sing dollar buys a little more Kiwi than it did a year ago and far more than five years ago, so New Zealand stays relatively affordable for Singaporeans. Watch the chart and convert on days the SGD looks firmer, and for big amounts, change in portions to average out the swings.
The RBNZ has wrapped up its rate cuts, holding the Official Cash Rate at 2.25% and signalling possible hikes later in 2026, while dairy and meat export prices have held firm. Together, those put a floor under the Kiwi, so it’s no longer sliding the way it was in 2025.
For most travellers, a multi-currency card like YouTrip. It uses the wholesale Mastercard rate with no markup and no fees, which typically beats banks, money changers, and credit cards once you account for what each one quietly adds on.
Very little. New Zealand is highly cashless, so a card covers almost everything. Keep a small amount for markets, rural spots, and remote South Island stops, and withdraw it from a New Zealand ATM with YouTrip rather than changing cash at home, where money changers and banks tack on a markup over the mid-market rate. An ATM withdrawal gives you the wholesale rate instead.
YouTrip Exchange Rates |
SGD To JPY |
SGD To MYR |
SGD to THB |
SGD to USD |
SGD to EUR |
SGD to CNY |
SGD To KRW |
SGD to IDR |
SGD To AUD |
SGD To VND |
SGD to NZD |
SGD To TWD |
SGD to HKD |
SGD to GBP |
SGD to CHF
The Singdollar still has the edge over the Kiwi, but smart spending is what actually keeps it in your pocket. Know today’s rate, keep half an eye on the forecast, and let a fee-free multi-currency card like YouTrip convert your SGD to NZD at the wholesale rate, so more of your money ends up where it belongs: your holiday.
Then, head over to our YouTrip Perks page for exclusive offers and promotions — we promise you won’t regret it. Join our Telegram (@YouTripSG) and Community Group (@YouTripSquad) for travel tips, event invites, and more!
Happy travels!
*All currency conversion rates are accurate to the nearest 10 cents on 11 Mar 2025. Bank card prices are calculated based on 3.5% foreign currency transaction fee.
The post Best SGD To NZD Exchange Rate In Singapore: Today’s New Zealand Dollar Rate (2026 Guide) appeared first on YouTrip Singapore.

