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How much does skin cancer cost in Singapore?

$929 - $4,473
Ward C (subsidised) · 1 day average stay

Skin Cancer costs $929 - $4,473 in a subsidised Ward C bed at a Singapore public hospital. In a private ward, the same treatment costs $1,125 – $8,755 — roughly 2.0x more. This is the 25th to 75th percentile range from MOH Bill Size Benchmark data for January–December 2023. Costs are after government subsidies but before MediShield Life or private insurance.

Subsidised cost (Ward C)
$929 - $4,473
Private ward cost
$1,125 – $8,755
Average hospital stay
1 days
Data source
MOH Bill Size Benchmarks, Jan–Dec 2023
Last updated
2026-03-30
Source: MOH Bill Size Benchmarks, Jan–Dec 2023 · moh.gov.sg

Cost by ward class

All Singapore public hospitals offer four ward classes. Subsidised wards (C and B2) are significantly cheaper.

Ward Low High Note
Ward C (subsidised) $929 $4,473 8-9 beds, after subsidies
Ward B2 (subsidised) $469 $2,939 6 beds, after subsidies
Private $1,125 $8,755 Single room

A Private ward costs roughly 2.0x more than a subsidised Ward C for this condition.

Key facts

  • Average hospital stay: 1 days
  • Average Medisave balance ($31,000) covers this 7x in Ward C
  • 68% of Singaporeans have an Integrated Shield Plan that covers most of this

Frequently asked questions

Based on MOH data, skin cancer costs $929 - $4,473 in a subsidised Ward C bed. This is the 25th to 75th percentile range, after government subsidies but before MediShield Life or private insurance payouts.

Ward C costs $929 – $4,473 while a Private ward costs $1,125 – $8,755 — roughly 2.0x more. Ward C is subsidised with 8-9 beds per room. Private is a single room without subsidies.

The average hospital stay for skin cancer is 1 days. Actual length varies based on severity, complications, and recovery.

MediShield Life covers hospitalisation for skin cancer in subsidised wards (B2 and C) at public hospitals. Coverage depends on your claim limits and deductible. An Integrated Shield Plan provides higher coverage for B1 and Private wards.

Understand your coverage