41,800 Denied Entry to Singapore in 11 Months — Even Visa-Free Travellers Can Be Turned Away

  • Article Release Date: December 22, 2025

Between January and November 2025, 41,800 foreign travellers were refused entry into Singapore. 

This reflects a broader shift: Singapore is moving entry control upstream—from “decision at the counter” to decision before departure.

 

 

What the data shows

41,800 foreigners denied entry (Jan–Nov 2025) 

ICA indicated this figure is ~26% higher than the whole of 2024, and ~46% higher than 2023. 

Key takeaway: Visa-free access is not an entry guarantee—entry remains a case-by-case decision by ICA.

 

Who gets denied entry

ICA focuses on travellers assessed to be ineligible, prohibited, undesirable, or high-risk—including those detected for:

  • Impersonation or multiple identities (biometric mismatches) 
  • Fraudulent / altered travel documents (counter-forgery detection) 
  • Persons-of-Interest (e.g., prior bans, known risks) 
  • Entry requirements issues such as missing/invalid visa requirements or document validity concerns (ICA’s NBD framework explicitly references entry requirements checks). 

 

Why denials are rising: screening is getting smarter (and earlier)

ICA has been upgrading its “new clearance concept” with multiple layers of security, including:

  • Multi-Modal Biometrics System (MMBS) capturing and verifying iris/facial (and where applicable, fingerprints) biometrics 
  • Automated lanes and systems that support more secure, efficient clearance processes 
  • Passport-less clearance rolled out at Changi Airport for Singapore residents (arrivals & departures), and for foreign visitors when departing Singapore, based on facial/iris biometrics 

ICA’s own published statistics report notes automated lanes with counter-forgery and multi-modal biometrics help detect fraudulent passports and repeat impersonation/multiple-identity attempts. 

The direction is clear: ICA is increasingly able to identify issues before arrival—not only at manual counters.

 

The 2026 turning point: No-Boarding Directives (NBD)

From 30 January 2026, ICA will begin issuing No-Boarding Directive (NBD) notices to airlines at Changi and Seletar Airports, to prevent travellers assessed to be prohibited/undesirable or not meeting entry requirements from boarding Singapore-bound flights. 

This is an upstream control model: airlines receive boarding instructions after advance traveller information is screened through ICA systems. 

Initial participating airlines reported for rollout include:

Singapore Airlines, Scoot, Emirates, Turkish Airlines, AirAsia (with more joining later). 

 

What this means for professionals and long-term planners

If Singapore is part of your:

  • Frequent business travel
  • Employment Pass / PR planning
  • Long-term stay or relocation roadmap
  • Complex travel history (e.g., prior refusals, overstays, inconsistent travel patterns)

…then “waiting until immigration” is no longer a strategy. The decision-making process is moving earlier, and the margin for ambiguity is shrinking.

 

How Adepture helps

Adepture supports clients with entry positioning, residency planning, and long-term mobility strategy—designed around policy direction and risk alignment, not assumptions.

Private discussion (confidential)

WhatsApp: +65 9765 3987
Office: +65 6950 5018
Email: consultant@adepture.com.sg