Convert British Pound to Singapore Dollar
GBP to SGD Exchange Rate Calculator


1 British Pound (GBP) = 1.7205 Singapore Dollar (SGD) at the live mid-market rate. That means $100 GBP converts to roughly 172.05 SGD, and $1,000 GBP converts to about 1,720.50 SGD. The GBP/SGD rate refreshes every hour from Frankfurter, which sources data from the European Central Bank reference set. Enter any amount below to convert instantly — free, no sign-up.
90-day GBP/SGD context
Over the past 90 days, GBP/SGD has traded between 1.6976 and 1.7286. The current rate of 1.7205 sits roughly 74% through that range — near the upper end, meaning Singapore Dollar has been weaker than typical against British Pound recently. Versus the rate 90 days ago, British Pound has strengthened by 1.11% against Singapore Dollar.
GBP/SGD Price History
Interactive GBP/SGD exchange rate chart with 7-day, 30-day, and 90-day views.

About British Pound (GBP)
The British Pound Sterling (GBP) is the official currency of the United Kingdom and one of the oldest currencies in continuous use, dating back over 1,200 years. It is issued by the Bank of England and is the fourth-most-traded currency globally.
- •In continuous use since Anglo-Saxon England — older than any major fiat rival
- •Fourth-most-traded currency, ~13% of daily global forex turnover
- •Bank of England sets Bank Rate via its Monetary Policy Committee (MPC)
- •GBP/USD carries the traders' nickname "Cable" from the 19th-century transatlantic telegraph cable
- •The UK left the EU on 31 January 2020; Brexit still shapes GBP volatility around trade headlines

About Singapore Dollar (SGD)
The Singapore Dollar (SGD) is the official currency of Singapore, managed by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) under a unique exchange-rate-based monetary policy framework. Instead of setting interest rates, MAS steers SGD against an undisclosed trade-weighted basket (the S$NEER), making SGD one of the most carefully managed floats in the world.
- •MAS uses the S$NEER (Nominal Effective Exchange Rate) as its primary policy tool, not interest rates
- •Singapore is the world's third-largest forex trading hub
- •Singapore has run a current-account surplus every year since 1988
- •MAS announces policy twice a year (April and October)
- •The S$NEER basket composition is not published but is estimated to heavily weight USD, CNY, and MYR
Frequently Asked Questions
When is GBP/SGD most liquid?
Liquidity is deepest during the Tokyo and Hong Kong sessions (00:00–08:00 UTC) when SGD markets are open. Spreads widen noticeably during the New York afternoon and Asian public holidays.
What is a typical daily range for GBP/SGD?
Daily ranges vary with volatility regimes. Majors like EUR/USD typically move 0.5–1.2% on quiet days and 2–3% on data-release days. Check the 30-day chart above for a sense of the current range.
What economic events move GBP/SGD the most?
The biggest scheduled catalysts are Bank of England MPC meetings, UK CPI, and UK jobs reports and MAS semi-annual policy statements (April/October). Geopolitical headlines and global risk sentiment also produce meaningful moves, especially when one currency is a safe-haven and the other is risk-sensitive.
Is it cheaper to convert GBP to SGD at a bank or online?
Online money-transfer services (Wise, Revolut, Remitly, InstaRem) typically offer rates much closer to the mid-market GBP/SGD than traditional banks. Always compare the total delivered amount, not just the advertised "fee" — many providers embed their margin in the exchange rate itself.
Does the GBP/SGD rate change on weekends?
The interbank forex market closes from Friday 21:00 UTC until Sunday 21:00 UTC, so mid-market GBP/SGD rates don't update during that window. Retail broker spreads often widen at Sunday open as Asian desks reopen, so the first few hours of the new week can carry wider execution costs.
Related Conversions
More on GBP and SGD
Country money guides, key terms, rate history, and articles related to GBP/SGD.
Country guides
Glossary
- Pip (Forex)A pip ("percentage in point") is the smallest standard price increment for a currency pair…
- Spread (Forex)The spread is the difference between the buy (ask) price and the sell (bid) price of a cur…
- EurodollarA eurodollar is a US dollar deposit held in a bank outside the United States — typically i…
Rate history
- GBP/USD historyGBP/USD ("Cable" in forex slang, named for the 19th-century transatlantic telegraph cable) has been one of the most politically-driven major pairs of the last decade
- EUR/GBP historyEUR/GBP is the cross between the UK's and Europe's currencies — a pair dominated by Brexit, ECB-BoE policy divergence, and inter-European trade flows
Articles
- Dollar Dying: USD Hits Lowest Reserve Share Since 1995The dollar's reserve share fell to 56.32% — lowest since 1995. China slashed Treasuries by 47%, BRICS settle 99% in local currencies, gold soaring.
- Indian Rupee Nearing 100/Dollar: Currency Crisis ExplainedThe rupee hit 94.82/USD — an all-time low. Foreign investors pulled $12B, the RBI staged its biggest intervention since 2013, and oil is making it worse.
- The Dollar Just Hit a 4-Month Low — What a Weaker USD Means for YouThe DXY fell to a 4-month low in May 2026 as Powell exited the Fed and Kevin Warsh prepares to take over with a dovish tone. Here is what a weaker US dollar actually means for travel, savings, gold, and investments — and what to do now.
Related Reading
Background on British Pound, Singapore Dollar, and the forces that move GBP/SGD.
Hidden Fees of Sending Money Abroad: Real Costs
Discover the hidden costs of international money transfers. Learn how exchange rate markups, wire fees, and intermediary charges can cost you hundreds.
how-toCheapest Way to Send Money Internationally in 2026 (Fees Compared)
The cheapest way to send money internationally in 2026, compared side-by-side. Wise vs PayPal vs bank wire vs Remitly vs OFX — fees, exchange rate markups, speed, and total cost on a $1,000 transfer.
newsThe Dollar Just Hit a 4-Month Low — What a Weaker USD Means for You
The DXY fell to a 4-month low in May 2026 as Powell exited the Fed and Kevin Warsh prepares to take over with a dovish tone. Here is what a weaker US dollar actually means for travel, savings, gold, and investments — and what to do now.
Exchange rates refresh hourly · Sourced from institutional-grade data providers