Singapore is in the middle of a genuine reformer Pilates boom — industry assessments rank it the city’s fastest-improving fitness category, even while nearly a third of boutique studios overall have closed. With that popularity comes Singapore-grade pricing, and most studios make you dig through booking apps to find it. So here is the full picture in one place: what every major studio charges, what a realistic month actually costs, and how to pay less — including the option most articles won’t mention because they’re written by studios.
Prices below were checked in June 2026 and are in Singapore dollars. Studios change rates often, so treat these as accurate-when-written and confirm before you buy.
Key takeaway: Expect S$45–60 for a drop-in group reformer class in Singapore, S$42–50 per class on packs, and S$360–440 per month at the twice-weekly frequency that produces real results. Intro offers (as low as S$17 per class) are the cheapest way to sample studios. If the monthly cost is the blocker, a structured mat-based home programme replicates most reformer outcomes for roughly the price of one studio class.
Reformer Pilates in Singapore costs S$45–60 per drop-in group class at most boutique studios. Class packs reduce the per-class rate: KX Pilates charges S$890 for 20 classes (S$44.50 each) or S$2,125 for 50 (S$42.50 each), while budget options like Lab Studios average around S$25 per class and credit-based studios like Tirisula RX can reach S$11–15 per session. Private or clinical one-to-one sessions run S$120–210. A consistent twice-weekly practice costs roughly S$360–440 per month, or S$4,300–5,300 per year. First-timer intro offers are dramatically cheaper — KX offers 5 classes for S$85 — and a structured home alternative using bands and sliders costs about the same as one studio class, one time.
The headline numbers
Three figures tell you most of what you need to know:
- Drop-in group class: S$45–60 at the established boutique chains
- Per-class on a pack: S$42–50 (you commit S$890–2,125 up front for the discount)
- Realistic monthly cost at 2×/week: S$360–440
That last number is the one studios don’t put on the pricing page, and it’s the only one that matters — because reformer, like all resistance training, only changes your body at two or more sessions per week. Pricing a single class is like pricing a single vitamin.
Studio-by-studio: what Singapore studios charge
| Studio | Drop-in / per class | Packs & intro offers |
|---|---|---|
| KX Pilates | S$55 | 5-class intro S$85 · 20 classes S$890 · 50 classes S$2,125 |
| Off Duty Pilates | S$45 | 3 sessions S$90 |
| Strong Pilates | S$45 | 3 sessions S$69 |
| Line Pilates | S$45 | 3 sessions S$150 |
| Jal Yoga (reformer) | S$45–49 | Reformer trial S$29 |
| Wunderbody Pilates | S$40–55 | 3 sessions S$150 |
| Pilates Motiv | S$55 | 3 sessions S$130 |
| The Pilates Works | S$38 | Trial session S$28 |
| BE. Studios | S$33.50–58 | 3-class trial S$142.50 |
| Absolute Pilates | S$19.67–59 | 3-class trial S$59 |
| Lab Studios | ~S$25 | Unlimited 5-day trial S$49 |
| Tirisula RX | S$11–15 (credits) | 2 sessions S$29 · starter pack S$190 |
| The Moving Body | S$60 | Private trial S$75 |
| The VIVA Group (Sentosa) | S$60 | 5 sessions S$250 |
| BodyLove Pilates | S$60–150 | — |
| idō Studio | S$50–165 | — |
| Pilates Flow (clinical, 1-to-1) | S$160–210 | 1-to-1 trial S$60 |
A few patterns worth noticing:
- The S$45–55 cluster is the market. The big names — KX, Strong, Off Duty, Line — all price within S$10 of each other. You are not choosing on price between them; you’re choosing on location, coach quality and class style.
- The budget tier is real but different. Lab Studios and Tirisula get the per-class cost down to S$11–25, usually via credit systems, larger class sizes, or off-peak scheduling. Fine for experienced practitioners; less coaching attention for beginners.
- Clinical work is its own category. One-to-one clinical Pilates (Pilates Flow, BodyLove’s upper range) at S$120–210 per session is physiotherapy-adjacent pricing. If you have a specific condition, this is the studio route that actually addresses it — generic group classes don’t.
What a year actually costs
Run the honest numbers for the standard advice (“come twice a week”):
- Twice weekly at pack rates: 8–9 classes/month × S$44–50 = S$360–440/month → S$4,300–5,300/year
- Once weekly: S$180–220/month → S$2,200–2,600/year — but adaptation at this frequency is minimal; you’re mostly buying a pleasant ritual
- The 50-class pack route: S$2,125 lasts about 6 months at 2×/week
For context, that twice-weekly year costs more than a round-trip to Europe, and about 140 times the price of a structured home programme. That doesn’t make studios bad value — you’re paying for machines, prime-location floor space and a trained coach watching your form — but it should be a deliberate purchase, not a default.
How to pay less for studio reformer
If the studio experience is what you want, four legitimate ways to cut the cost:
- Stack intro offers. KX’s 5-for-S$85, The Pilates Works’ S$28 trial, Jal’s S$29 reformer trial, Tirisula’s 2-for-S$29 and Lab’s S$49 unlimited week add up to well over a month of classes for under S$200 — while you work out which studio you’d actually commit to.
- Go off-peak. Several credit-based studios price 7am and mid-afternoon classes meaningfully below the 6:30pm rush. The 12-month-expiry packs (KX) also beat short-expiry packs that pressure you into rushing classes.
- Buy the big pack only after 10+ classes. The S$890–2,125 packs are where studios make their margin on people who stop attending in month two. Earn confidence in your own consistency first.
- Learn the vocabulary before you pay studio rates. A beginner’s first 4–8 reformer classes are largely spent learning footwork positions, spring etiquette and cueing language — at S$55 each, that’s S$220–440 of orientation. Arriving already fluent in the movement patterns means every class delivers physical benefit from day one. That preparation is exactly what a structured mat-based prep programme is for.
The alternative: reformer-style training without the studio
Here is the part studio-written pricing guides leave out. Most of what the reformer does — graded spring resistance, instability demand, slow eccentric control — can be substantially replicated on a mat with resistance bands and sliders, for posture, deep core strength and mobility outcomes. The full honest cost-benefit analysis is here, and the short version is:
- What transfers well: posture correction, deep stabiliser strength, mobility, the long-lean body composition effect — the reasons most people book reformer in the first place
- What doesn’t: heavy-spring strength work, the instructor’s eye on your form, and the studio atmosphere and accountability — which for some people is genuinely worth the price
- What it costs: S$15–25 of bands and sliders, once, plus a structured programme
In Singapore the arithmetic is starker than almost anywhere else: an 8-week structured home programme costs less than one drop-in class at The Moving Body. If you’re paying S$400+ a month and loving it, keep going — consistency you enjoy beats theory. If the price is what’s stopping you from starting at all, the home route removes that barrier entirely, and you can always graduate to a studio later with the movement vocabulary already in your body.
The bottom line
Reformer Pilates in Singapore costs S$45–60 a class, S$4,300+ a year at meaningful frequency, and the market’s intro offers are generous enough that nobody should ever pay full price for their first month. Decide what you’re actually buying — coaching and atmosphere, or the movement stimulus itself — and pay for that, not for the default.