The Certificate of Entitlement (COE) represents a right to vehicle ownership and use of the limited road space in Singapore for 10 years. It is a mandatory requirement for all vehicles registering on Singapore roads.
Singapore COE Prices
& Bidding Results
Stay updated with the latest Certificate of Entitlement (COE) premiums, quotas, and historical trends. Essential data for buyers and sellers.
Latest Bidding Results
Exercise 2 (March 2026)Results for March 2026 (Bidding 2)
| Category | Quota Premium | PQP | Quota | Bids Received |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
A
Cat A
Cars up to 1600cc & 130bhp
|
$ 111,890 +$670 | $107,407 | 1,264 | 1,895 |
|
B
Cat B
Cars above 1600cc or 130bhp
|
$ 115,568 +$1,505 | $114,366 | 812 | 1,185 |
|
C
Cat C
Goods Vehicles & Buses
|
$ 78,000 +$2,420 | $75,751 | 290 | 438 |
|
D
Cat D
Motorcycles
|
$ 9,589 -$864 | $8,670 | 546 | 726 |
|
E
Cat E
Open (All except Motorcycles)
|
$ 118,119 -$1,549 | - | 246 | 422 |
Historical Trends
Track the trajectory of COE premiums to make informed buying decisions.
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Common COE Questions
PQP is the moving average of the COE prices in the last 3 months. It is the amount you pay if you choose to renew your COE for your existing vehicle, rather than bidding for a new one.
Yes, for cars, you have the option to renew the COE for either 5 years or 10 years. A 5-year renewal requires you to pay 50% of the Prevailing Quota Premium (PQP). Note that if you choose a 5-year renewal, the vehicle must be deregistered at the end of the 5 years; it cannot be renewed again.
Category E (Open Category) COEs can be used to register any vehicle type (except motorcycles). However, they are almost exclusively used for registering larger cars (Category B) because their prices generally track Category B premiums closely.