By KakiList Editorial Team·Updated April 2026·Editorial standards
Nutrition and lifestyle services in Singapore split along regulation: AHPC-registered dieticians handle medical nutrition therapy; 'nutritionists' and nutrition coaches are unregulated (anyone can use the title). For medical conditions (diabetes, kidney disease, eating disorders), registered dieticians are the right tier. For general wellness and performance, sports nutritionists with recognised credentials (IOC Diploma, SDS membership) work well. KakiList connects you with 93 verified Nutrition & Lifestyle providers serving the Queenstown area. Queenstown is Singapore's first satellite town with some of the oldest HDB blocks. Many have undergone upgrading but still have aging infrastructure. Whether you live near Queenstown MRT or around Queensway Shopping Centre, IKEA Alexandra, our providers serve all parts of Queenstown. Compare providers, read verified Google reviews, and contact them directly via WhatsApp — no middleman fees or hidden charges.
Queenstown's HDB mix means nutrition & lifestyle providers are usually booked for sports nutrition for performance, weight management programmes, and habit-change coaching. With Queensway Shopping Centre and Queenstown MRT shaping how traffic flows through Queenstown, locally-active providers save time on travel and typically offer faster response than Central-wide teams.
See all 93 Nutrition & Lifestyle providers in Singapore →
Contact providers directly for pricing.
Prices are estimates and may vary based on scope, property type, and urgency. Get exact quotes by requesting free quotes.
For HDB properties in Queenstown, rates track the islandwide average for nutrition & lifestyle. The main cost variables are job complexity and urgency, not location — though providers based outside the Central zone may add a small transport fee.
For medical conditions (diabetes, kidney disease, post-surgery, eating disorders, cancer support): AHPC-registered dietician — qualified to provide medical nutrition therapy. For general wellness, weight management, sports performance: qualified nutritionist or sports nutritionist (IOC Diploma, ACSM-CEP, SDS membership). Unqualified "coaches" pose risks for both categories.
Hospital dietician (subsidised): S\$50-120/session. Private dietician initial: S\$150-280. Follow-up: S\$100-180. Sports nutritionist: S\$150-300/session. Personal training + nutrition: S\$80-200/session. 3-month intensive programmes (eating disorder, diabetes reversal): S\$1,500-5,500.
No — your liver and kidneys detox; no cleanse product adds to that. "Detox" marketing typically sells juice fasts, colonics, or supplement regimens with no evidence base. Some produce initial weight loss through dehydration and calorie restriction, but no genuine detoxification. Evidence-based nutrition doesn't involve detox claims.
Depends on individual circumstances. Keto works for some weight management and specific medical conditions (epilepsy control) but has significant adherence challenges and long-term sustainability questions. Intermittent fasting has modest benefits for metabolic health but similar sustainability issues. Neither is universal — a qualified nutritionist assesses individual fit rather than prescribing uniform approaches.
Coaches pushing specific supplement brands (Herbalife, USANA, Amway) have conflict-of-interest income from sales. Evidence-based nutrition advice doesn't require branded supplements from the coach's company. Dieticians and qualified nutritionists typically don't sell products — advice should come before sales.