Singapore Airlines Direct to Singapore Ex DRW $513, PER $532, MEL $633, BNE $702, ADL $709, SYD $787 & More @ Beat That Flight

500

The deal

The next great deal in the string of fantastic Singapore Airlines prices is … Singapore! Many of them direct, sometimes non-direct will show up (or cheaper airlines!) but you can use the filters to select the ones you want.

Along with their deals to:
- Bangkok, Thailand from $542 Return
- Seoul, South Korea from $619 Return
- London from $1215 Return
- Japan from $717 Return
- Hong Kong from $581 Return
- Taipei from $580 return
- India from $709 Return
- Vietnam from $582 return

The Lion City is now the feature sale!

Alternatives

Also consider:
- Scoot Rtn: PER – KL $245, Chennai $377, MEL – Sing $367, Athens $823, SYD – Bali $412, Xi’an $531, Osaka $581 and More

Accommodation

You can search for hotels - regularly find hotels on sale, or The 5 Best Hotels in Singapore for Under AU$150 (As Rated by Guests)

Summary:

Adelaide - Singapore (3 Aug 25 - 9 Jun 26) from $709 return
Brisbane - Singapore (29 Jul 25 - 12 May 26) from $702 return
Cairns - Singapore (27 Aug 25 - 8 Jun 26) from $721 return
Darwin - Singapore (26 Jul 25 - 16 May 26) from $513 return
Melbourne (Tullamarine) - Singapore (19 Aug 25 - 3 Dec 25) from $633 return
Perth - Singapore (27 Jul 25 - 16 May 26) from $532 return
Sydney - Singapore (28 Jul 25 - 15 May 26) from $787 return

Detailed list of dates

I've got large lists of dates and prices that unfortunatealy doesn't fit in ozb's 50k character limit. Click through for the full lists.


You can follow me at Beat That Flight for more deals, error fares, promos and sales, on Facebook, or Messenger.

Also consider having a look at the current best found prices by other users by city - Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Adelaide, Perth, Darwin, Hobart, Cairns, Canberra.

Related Stores

Beat That Flight
Beat That Flight
Third-Party
Singapore Airlines
Singapore Airlines

Comments

    • +12

      Gee, the dates school holidays usually are. Wonder why you won't find any deals then…

      • O Christmas holiday why the hell can’t I ever find a great deal during December!!! Or January!!!

        • +3

          Christmas Day you might get a cheap flight, but absolutely screwed either side. Late January is actually a good time to be departing if you can schedule it.

          • +1

            @liam2040: i was lucky my gf caught an amazing deal with jetstar for a limited time it was 750 one way to cebu Philippines for the 21st of December its a straight trip too 8 hours no stops.

            was lucky to get it they sold out in 30 min of the email going out.

      • +2

        I know people have negged me a lot, but there are a lot of us out there (teachers) that don't earn good money at all, and our only time to travel is school holidays, but we can't because it's too expensive.

        I would love to travel outside school holidays, but logisitically cannot. I'm not asking for the same level of deal, but I managed to go to Japan 18months ago for 1100 return with Qantas, and going 3rd April with Qantas is about $3k last time I checked.

        Just want something that is manageable, as opposed to out of reach.

  • Can you answer some of the questions on your previous post?

      • -4

        Yeah, no shit, but it's always a bit of an empty 'sale' when you can't actually travel at convenient times. It's like the way Qantas conveniently has no award flights at times actual humans might wish to travel to a given destination. Targeted/individualised pricing in the airline industry is a bit more than 'supply and demand', which implies that prices are genuinely set by how many tickets people are buying. This is where we're heading:

        https://www.theverge.com/news/709556/delta-air-lines-ai-tick…

        More like price fixing/misuse of market power than 'supply and demand'.

        • +7

          You're misunderstanding why airlines have sales. Their expenses are almost entirely fixed:

          • They need the same number of staff whether the planes are full or half-full.
          • Many airlines rent their aircraft, so those payments are fixed.
          • The fuel consumption difference between a full aircraft and an empty aircraft is only about 10%.
          • The maintenance costs of an aircraft don't change at all between flying a full aircraft and an empty aircraft.
          • They have to fly to their timetable on all their routes, or they'll get a bad name REALLY quickly and lose customers fast. And probably have to repay a heap of customers.

          So for an airline to make a profit, they want to fly with their aircraft as full as possible - even in the "off" season. That's usually the only reason they have sales like the one in this deal.

          In school holidays, they have no problem filling the seats, so they don't discount then. Mostly, the profits made from busy periods subsidise the times when aircraft run with too few passengers, making those flights unprofitable.

          Airlines don't really make huge profits in comparison to the revenue and expenses they have. There's an old joke everyone in the airline industry knows: "How do you make a small fortune in the airline industry? Start with a large fortune."

    • +11

      You must be new to travel

    • Thx captain obvious

  • Why is Melb to seoul 1400 during sept?

    • Look at when school holidays are (it varies from state to state). Other peak times are around religious dates like Easter and Christmas in Australia, and other religious times in other countries and for many other religions. Also when tourist events happen, like cherry-blossom flowering season in Japan.

      They're peak times, so the airlines won't have any difficulty filling all their seats, so they don't discount at those times. They usually only discount when they can't fill all the seats.

  • OP I travel for decades using Singapore Airlines but something went horribly wrong with them since COVID.

    Their price are above other airlines by more then 20% +…!

    Earlier I used to purchase tickets for $1200 to $1500 now the same route cost me $2200 to $2300 while other airlines for same route cost $1500 to $1700 ..!

    How did it went so bad after COVID or they really don't care anymore thinking we still live COVID time and people way pay crazy prices?

    Their food also went OK to worst now a days and aircraft are old now then what it used to be…!

    • Yes, have shifted to Thai since Covid

    • At least with Qantas with you're given a steady feed of nuts, tim tams, ice creams, booze, and half alright food. Not to mention free seat selection since you 'are' paying for a full service. SQ is just Scoot with fake smiles now

      • Qantas second preferred but problem is Qantas don't go directly to my destination so I have to use their code share flight after first stop making Singapore better choice…but cost even more than Qantas..!

Login or Join to leave a comment