Singapore ambulance numbers, explained.
995 for emergencies. 1777 for non-emergency SCDF transport. Private operators for everything in between. Here is the complete reference for which number to call when, how the public and private systems fit together, and what the response times actually mean in practice.
If you are looking for an ambulance right now
Call 995 for any life-threatening emergency. Free, 24-hour, dispatched by Singapore Civil Defence Force. Do not wait, do not look up the right number, do not read the rest of this page first. Call 995, then come back here later if you want to understand how the system works.
The three layers of the Singapore ambulance system
Singapore has three distinct layers of ambulance service. They do different jobs, they cost different amounts, and they are designed for different situations. Confusion between them is the most common reason people end up calling the wrong number at the wrong time.
Layer 1, 995, SCDF Emergency Ambulance
The number: 995
Run by: Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF)
Cost: Free for emergency cases
Available: 24 hours, every day
What it is for: Life-threatening medical emergencies and fire emergencies
What it is not for: Scheduled transfers, non-urgent patient transport, event cover, planned dialysis runs
This is the front-line emergency service for Singapore. If someone is unconscious, in cardiac arrest, having a stroke, has serious trauma, or is in any other life-threatening situation, the right answer is to call 995. SCDF has one of the fastest response systems in the world for built-up urban areas, and the service is free at point of use for emergencies.
Layer 2, 1777, SCDF Non-Emergency Ambulance Service
The number: 1777
Run by: Singapore Civil Defence Force (SCDF)
Cost: Chargeable. Fees published by Ministry of Health.
Available: 24 hours, with scheduling
What it is for: Non-urgent medical transport, hospital transfers, scheduled patient transport
What it is not for: Life-threatening emergencies (call 995 instead) or guaranteed event standby cover (call a private operator)
1777 is the public-sector option for situations that need an ambulance but are not 995-level. The most common use cases are scheduled hospital discharge, transfers between facilities, and patients who need a stretcher or trained crew but are stable. Fees are published by the Ministry of Health.
Layer 3, Private ambulance operators
The number: Varies by operator
Run by: Private companies licensed by SCDF
Cost: Per booking, varies by service type
Available: Scheduled, with pre-booking
What it is for: Pre-booked event standby, marathon cover, construction site standby, film shoots, scheduled non-emergency transport with guaranteed pickup windows, dialysis runs, recurring schedules
What it is not for: Life-threatening emergencies (call 995)
Private operators sit alongside the public network. They provide capacity, specialisation and scheduling that the public system is not designed to deliver. The most common bookings are pre-positioned event medical cover and recurring patient transport schedules where the family or care provider needs a guaranteed pickup window rather than a public dispatch slot.
All private ambulance operators in Singapore must hold an SCDF private ambulance licence. Vehicles must meet equipment standards. Crew must hold appropriate clinical qualifications. We work with our MOH/HCSA-licensed partner operator to deliver these services.
Quick decision table, which number do I call?
| Situation | Call |
|---|---|
| Someone is unconscious, in cardiac arrest, suspected stroke, suspected heart attack, severe bleeding, breathing difficulty, major trauma | 995 |
| Fire, smoke, or any fire emergency | 995 |
| Scheduled hospital discharge, planned transfer between facilities | 1777 or private operator |
| Recurring dialysis transport | Private operator (recurring schedule) |
| Pre-booked event standby (marathon, sports day, concert, corporate event) | Private operator |
| Construction site standby cover | Private operator |
| Film or TV production set medical cover | Private operator |
| Patient is stable but needs a stretcher and a trained crew for transport home | 1777 or private operator |
Other important Singapore emergency numbers
- 995: SCDF fire and emergency medical (also use this for any major medical or fire emergency)
- 999: Singapore Police Force emergency line
- 1777: SCDF Non-Emergency Ambulance Service
- 1800-255-0000: Police hotline (non-emergency)
- +65 6325 9911: Tourist hotline if you need help and you are not familiar with Singapore
How response times actually work in Singapore
Singapore is one of the fastest emergency medical response cities in the world. SCDF publishes response time figures periodically. For built-up areas with good road access, the median response time for life-threatening cases is single-digit minutes from dispatch to on-scene.
The number people miss is that "from dispatch" is not "from when you decided someone was sick". The full chain is:
- Person becomes unwell
- Bystander or colleague decides to call
- Phone is unlocked, 995 is dialled
- Operator answers, takes the address and details
- Dispatch goes out
- Ambulance reaches the scene
- Crew reaches the patient (stairs, lifts, basements, security gates all add time)
- Treatment begins
For most office and street situations in central Singapore the total time is short. For events on Sentosa, in basement carparks, on closed marathon routes, in restricted-access industrial areas, or on construction sites, the realistic time can be significantly longer. This is why event organisers and worksite managers book private standby cover, to remove the dispatch leg of the chain entirely.
The chain of survival
For sudden cardiac arrest, the international standard "chain of survival" defines five links: early recognition and call for help, early CPR, early defibrillation, advanced care, and post-arrest care. The first three links happen before any ambulance arrives. This is why workplaces train staff in CPR and AED use, and why pre-booked medical cover at events shortens the gap to the second and third links from the moment something happens.
Why we wrote this page
We are a private medical services provider in Singapore. We see hundreds of search queries every month from people trying to figure out which number to call, when to use 995 versus 1777, whether private ambulances are licensed, and how the whole system fits together. The information is scattered across SCDF, MOH, hospital websites and private operator marketing pages. None of those tell the full story.
We wrote this page because the right time to learn how the Singapore ambulance system works is not the moment you actually need it. If you found this page in advance of needing the information, that is the goal. If you found it during a situation and you have not already called 995, please call 995 now and read the rest later.