INR to SGD — today's rate explained
As of 2026-07-08, 1 Indian Rupee equals 0.013576 Singapore Dollar at the mid-market exchange rate. This is the fairest reference rate — the midpoint between what buyers and sellers are paying on global currency markets.
Students, remote workers, and expatriates moving between India and Singapore use this pair to budget tuition, rent, and everyday expenses.
About the INR and SGD
Indian Rupee (INR, ₹): The Indian Rupee is a partially convertible currency managed under a managed-float regime by the Reserve Bank of India. It is the official currency of India.
Singapore Dollar (SGD, S$): The Singapore Dollar is managed against a trade-weighted basket of currencies by the Monetary Authority of Singapore. It is used in Singapore.
What moves the INR/SGD exchange rate?
Exchange rates respond to interest-rate decisions by central banks such as Reserve Bank of India and Monetary Authority of Singapore, inflation data, trade balances, and geopolitical events.
For INR/SGD specifically, shifts in capital flows between India and Singapore, changes in commodity prices, and differences in economic growth rates all contribute to daily rate movements.
INR to SGD — 30-day performance
Over the past 30 days, INR/SGD traded between 0.013457 and 0.013749, with the pair gaining 0.30% overall. The current rate of 0.013576 sits below the 30-day midpoint of 0.013603.
Historical context helps you judge whether today's rate is relatively strong or weak, but past performance does not predict future movements. Always compare the rate you are offered against the mid-market figure shown here.
How to get a better INR to SGD rate
Banks and card providers typically add a 1–4% margin on top of the mid-market rate shown on this page, plus fixed transfer fees. Before exchanging INR for SGD, compare the final amount you will receive — not just the headline rate.
For larger amounts, specialist money-transfer services often beat bank rates. For travel, prepaid multi-currency cards or local ATMs may offer competitive rates depending on your bank's foreign-transaction fees.