April in Singapore settles into a steady rhythm: long weekends, late nights, and a calendar that moves easily between culture, wellness, and the occasional offbeat find. From theatre premieres and immersive exhibitions to underground music sets and community-led gatherings, there’s no shortage of events in Singapore this month. Whether you’re looking for high-energy festivals, thoughtful performances, or slower things to do in Singapore that invite you to linger, this list brings together what’s worth stepping out for right now.
Keep Hush x Carhartt WIP: Bass Night at RASA
3 April 2026
RASA, 46 Kim Yam Road, Singapore

UK-based platform Keep Hush returns to Singapore with Carhartt WIP for a night centred on underground bass culture. Known for documenting grassroots club scenes globally, the collective brings its signature raw energy to RASA, spotlighting a lineup of regional and local selectors across UK garage, jungle, dubstep, and beyond. Expect an unfiltered dancefloor: intimate, loud, and community-driven with a focus on sound system culture rather than spectacle. It’s a rare chance to experience a format that sits somewhere between a live broadcast and a club night, rooted in authenticity and shared momentum.
Tickets are available via yourtessera.com
AIA HYROX Singapore 2026
3–5 April 2026
Singapore National Stadium
HYROX returns to Singapore with its largest edition yet, expanding into a three-day race at the National Stadium. The global fitness competition blends endurance and strength across a standardised format: eight 1km runs interspersed with functional workout stations like sled pushes, rowing, and wall balls. Designed to be accessible yet demanding, the event draws everyone from first-timers to seasoned athletes, with categories spanning singles, doubles, relay teams, and adaptive divisions. Beyond the race itself, the weekend leans into community, bringing together participants from across the region in a shared test of stamina and pace.
Strange Weather: Dunia
4 & 10 April 2026

Experimental collective Strange Weather returns with Dunia, a two-night programme that moves between live performance, ritual, and club culture. Drawing artists from across Southeast Asia, East Asia and Europe, the event resists a fixed format. Opening with a communal kenduri and conversation before shifting into layered sound, movement, and late-night sets. The first night leans into live and interdisciplinary performance, while the second expands into a club-driven continuation. Across both, the focus is on process and exchange rather than spectacle, creating a space that feels as much like a gathering as it does a show.
Tickets are available via eventbrite.com
The Christians by Wild Rice
9 April – 2 May 2026
Ngee Ann Kongsi Theatre @ Wild Rice, Funan

Lucas Hnath’s The Christians arrives in Singapore with a premise that feels deceptively simple. A pastor delivers a sermon that shifts the foundation of his megachurch. What follows is a quiet unravelling. Directed by Glen Goei, the production leans into tension over spectacle, unfolding through conversations that question faith, authority, and the fragile dynamics of community. With a live choir woven into the staging and a cast led by Shane Mardjuki and Oon Shu An, the play resists easy conclusions, instead sitting with doubt and the discomfort of belief systems under pressure.
For more information, visit wildrice.com.sg.
GITEX AI Asia 2026
9–10 April 2026
Marina Bay Sands, Singapore

Positioned as one of the region’s largest tech gatherings, GITEX AI Asia returns with a sharp focus on artificial intelligence, quantum computing, and deep tech. The two-day event brings together over 550 companies, 250 global investors, and participants from more than 110 countries, spanning everything from startups to policymakers. Beyond the exhibition floor, the programme leans heavily into conversations around infrastructure, investment, and the future of AI in Asia, reflecting the region’s rapid acceleration in both funding and capability. It’s less a consumer-facing fair, more a snapshot of where technology and capital are converging next.
Visitor passes are available via gitexasia.com
The Vintage Fair 2026 at Journey East
11–12 April 2026
Journey East, 315 Outram Road, #03-02, Singapore

Journey East’s annual Vintage Fair returns as a weekend fixture for collectors and the casually curious alike. The line-up brings together a mix of regional vintage dealers and independent labels, spanning antique jewellery, retro watches, designer bags, and globally sourced homeware. Alongside the browsing, there’s coffee from Pick Me Up and small-batch natural wines to ease the pace. It’s the kind of setting that encourages slow discovery and the quiet satisfaction of finding something unexpected among well-curated racks and tables.
Free admission; bring your own bag for purchases.
Marty Friedman Live in Singapore
14 April 2026
Hard Rock Cafe, 50 Cuscaden Rd
Best known for his tenure with Megadeth, guitarist Marty Friedman returns to Singapore with a solo set that reflects his post-metal evolution. Since relocating to Japan, Friedman has leaned into a more eclectic sound, blending shred guitar with J-pop sensibilities and cinematic arrangements. This show sits somewhere between technical showcase and personal archive, moving through his catalogue with the kind of precision and flair that’s kept him relevant across decades. For longtime fans and curious listeners alike, it’s a rare opportunity to catch a player who’s continually reshaped his own language.
For more information, visit lamcpresents.com.
[title of show] by Sing’theatre
15–25 April 2026
Alliance Française Theatre, 1 Sarkies Road, Singapore
This off-Broadway cult musical arrives in Singapore with a lean, four-person cast and a knowingly self-referential premise. [title of show] follows two writers racing against time to create a musical for a festival and deciding, somewhat ironically, to write about that very process. What unfolds is sharp, conversational, and quietly disarming, moving between humour and vulnerability as it unpacks creative doubt, friendship, and ambition. Directed by Eric Larrea, the local staging keeps things intimate, carried by a cast that leans into timing and chemistry rather than spectacle.
Tickets are available via sistic.com.sg.
Minecraft Experience: Villager Rescue
24 April – 13 September 2026
Green Canvas, Mandai Wildlife Reserve

Making its Asia debut in Singapore, Minecraft Experience: Villager Rescue translates the game’s blocky universe into a physical, story-led adventure. Set across eight interactive rooms, participants move through familiar biomes: gathering resources, solving challenges, and working together to fend off a zombie attack. The experience blends projections, theatrical sets, and motion-tracking gameplay, with each visitor using an interactive device to shape how the journey unfolds. It’s paced for all ages, landing somewhere between immersive theatre and light gaming.
Visit minecraftexperience.com/singapore more details.
The Garden Series @ Curly’s: Pawsitive Poses Dog Adoption Drive
25 April 2026, from 5.30pm
Curly’s, 40C Harding Road, Singapore

Set in the greenery of Dempsey, this weekend session brings together movement and community with a purpose. In partnership with SOSD and Within, the event pairs a beginner-friendly outdoor yoga class with a dog adoption drive featuring over 15 rescue dogs. The pace is intentionally unhurried, part stretch, part social, with space to meet the dogs, speak with volunteers, and understand the adoption process. Whether you’re joining the class or simply dropping by, it’s a considered way to spend an afternoon outdoors while supporting a local cause.
For more information, book your spot via sevenrooms.com
vOilah! France Singapore Festival 2026
25 April – 20 June 2026
Various locations across Singapore

vOilah! returns with a city-wide programme that brings French culture into everyday spaces across Singapore. Organised by the Embassy of France, the festival spans over 26 programmes across performance, visual art, film, gastronomy, and science. Expect everything from theatre and dance collaborations to open-air cinema, exhibitions featuring works from the Louvre, and a lively French food market at VivoCity. More than a showcase, the festival leans into exchange, pairing French and Singaporean artists in works that feel rooted in both contexts. It’s a wide-ranging, accessible way to experience culture across disciplines, whether on stage, in galleries, or out in the city.
For more information, visit www.voilah.sg
This is a developing list of things to do in Singapore this April 2026, and we’ll be updating it throughout the month as new events are announced.
