It now costs $106,000 to be allowed to buy a car in the world’s most expensive city for drivers

Catch up with NBC News Clone on today's hot topic: Now Costs 106000 Allowed Buy Car Worlds Expensive City Drivers Rcna118952 - Breaking News | NBC News Clone. Our editorial team reformatted this story for clarity and speed.

Singapore has a 10-year “certificate of entitlement” system, introduced in 1990, to control the number of vehicles in the city-state.
It now costs $106,000 to own a car in the world's most expensive place to drive.
The skyrocketing price of the 10-year “certificate of entitlement” needed to buy a vehicle has put cars firmly out of reach for most middle-class Singaporeans.Ore Huiying / Bloomberg via Getty Images file

To own a car in Singapore, a buyer must bid for a certificate that now costs $106,000, equivalent to four Toyota Camry Hybrids in the U.S., as a post-pandemic recovery has driven up the cost of the city-state’s vehicle quota system to all-time highs.

Singapore has a 10-year “certificate of entitlement” (COE) system, introduced in 1990, to control the number of vehicles in the small country, which is home to 5.9 million people and can be driven across in less than an hour.

The quota, offered through a bidding process, has made it the most expensive city in the world to buy a car, with the COE for a large car more than quadrupling from 2020 prices on Wednesday to a record $106,376.68.

Including COE, registration fees and taxes, a new standard Toyota Camry Hybrid currently costs $183,000 in Singapore, compared with $28,855 in the U.S. The cost of buying that Camry in Singapore is about double the price of a small, government-subsidised flat in the country.

In 2020, when fewer people in Singapore were driving, the price of COEs dropped; a post-Covid increase in economic activity has led to more car purchases while the total number of vehicles on the road is capped at about 950,000. The number of new COEs available depends on how many older cars are deregistered.

The skyrocketing price puts cars firmly out of reach for most middle-class Singaporeans, putting a dent in what sociologist Tan Ern Ser said was the “Singapore Dream” of upward social mobility — having cash, a condominium and a car.

Singaporeans have been battered by persistent inflation and a slowing economy, and some are selling the cars they bought when COE prices were low to make a profit.

“There is a need to lower one’s aspiration from achieving the ‘good life’ to settling with a ‘good enough life,’” Tan said.

Jason Guan, 40, an insurance agent and father of two, said he bought his first car, a Toyota Rush, in 2008.

Now Guan lives without a car, focusing on other perks that Singapore offers for his family.

“As a family man, it doesn’t affect me much as Singapore still has a good and stable education system. In terms of security, it’s still one of the safest countries,” he said.

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