Wellness services in Singapore cover eight specialisms that most people mix across life stages — counselling, TCM, dental, physiotherapy, nutrition and lifestyle, chiropractic care, rehab and therapy, and holistic wellness. KakiList lists 926 verified wellness providers across all eight, with real Google reviews and direct contact so you can book based on evidence rather than marketing gloss.
Singapore's wellness market is split between highly regulated specialisms (dental, physiotherapy, counselling — all with statutory boards) and less regulated ones (TCM, chiropractic, holistic wellness — where credentials vary by training institute). For any regulated service, verify the practitioner on the relevant public register: dentists on Singapore Dental Council (SDC), physiotherapists on Allied Health Professions Council (AHPC), counsellors on Singapore Association for Counselling (SAC) or APACS. For TCM, the TCMS Practitioners Board maintains a register of qualified practitioners — unregistered TCM operators are common but higher-risk.
Insurance coverage varies widely. Private health insurance and MediShield Life cover registered physiotherapy, dental, and some counselling under specific plans. TCM is rarely covered unless your employer group plan includes it. CHAS subsidies extend to TCM, dental, and some counselling at participating clinics for lower-income Singapore citizens. CareShield Life and Medisave-approved clinics can cover certain rehab procedures post-hospitalisation. Before booking a series of treatments, check whether your insurer or CPF Medisave can offset the cost — many Singaporeans miss claimable amounts simply because they paid out of pocket without asking.
Typical Singapore fees: private counselling S$100–S$250/hour, TCM consultation S$40–S$80, dental check-up S$30–S$60 (subsidised at polyclinics), physiotherapy S$80–S$150 per session. Chiropractic and holistic wellness pricing varies widely, so compare 2–3 providers before committing to a package deal. Browse the eight subcategories below, read real Google reviews from other Singapore patients, and contact practitioners directly.
Starting prices for the most common jobs in each specialism. These are rough indicators — final quotes depend on scope, property type, and urgency.
| Service | Typical Starting Price | Cost Guide |
|---|---|---|
| Counselling | From S$120/session | View breakdown → |
| TCM | From S$40/consult | View breakdown → |
| Dental | From S$30/consult | View breakdown → |
| Physiotherapy | From S$80/session | View breakdown → |
| Nutrition & Lifestyle | From S$100/session | View breakdown → |
| Chiropractic | From S$80/session | View breakdown → |
| Rehab & Therapy | From S$80/session | View breakdown → |
| Holistic | From S$80/session | View breakdown → |
Our curated "Top 10" lists for each specialism — ranked by verified Google reviews, ACRA registration status, and response quality. Updated monthly from live data, not pay-for-play listings.
Jump straight to dental providers in your neighbourhood — the headline service in this category. Each location page lists every other wellness specialism in that area too.
Pick a specific service to see verified providers, typical costs, and the best-rated options in Singapore.
A curated selection of highly-rated providers across wellness, shortlisted from live Google reviews and ACRA verification. For a specific service, use the guides above.
Standard private health insurance and Medishield Life do not cover TCM. Some employer group insurance plans include TCM visits at approved TCMS Board-registered clinics, usually with a per-visit cap. CHAS subsidies cover TCM at participating clinics for lower-income citizens.
Singapore physiotherapists must be registered with the Allied Health Professions Council (AHPC). You can search the public register at healthprofessionals.gov.sg. Look for experience in your specific condition (sports injury, stroke recovery, post-surgical rehab) as specialisations vary widely.
Private counselling sessions range from S\$100-250 per hour. Some counsellors offer sliding-scale fees for students or low-income clients. AIC, SACAC, and CARE Singapore offer subsidised or free counselling for specific groups. Telehealth counselling is typically 10-20% cheaper than in-person.