COE Prices in Singapore: Latest Results & Trend
Live COE premiums for every category, the 12-month trend, and the full bidding history — updated after each LTA exercise. Plus what rising or falling premiums actually mean for the value of the car you already own.
Latest COE Premiums (Jun 2026 · 2nd bidding)
COE Price History (last 12 months)
| Exercise | Cat A | Cat B | Cat E |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jun 2026 · 2nd bidding | $123,847 ↓ $2,162 | $123,502 ↓ $3,487 | $129,002 ↑ $2 |
| Jun 2026 · 1st bidding | $126,009 ↑ $1,780 | $126,989 ↓ $2,512 | $129,000 ↓ $1,000 |
| May 2026 · 2nd bidding | $124,229 ↓ $561 | $129,501 ↑ $3,265 | $130,000 ↑ $2,300 |
| May 2026 · 1st bidding | $124,790 ↑ $1,780 | $126,236 ↑ $5,235 | $127,700 ↑ $2,698 |
| Apr 2026 · 2nd bidding | $123,010 ↑ $5,010 | $121,001 ↑ $1 | $125,002 ↑ $4,001 |
| Apr 2026 · 1st bidding | $118,000 ↑ $6,110 | $121,000 ↑ $5,432 | $121,001 ↑ $2,882 |
| Mar 2026 · 2nd bidding | $111,890 ↑ $3,670 | $115,568 ↑ $1,566 | $118,119 ↑ $3,229 |
| Mar 2026 · 1st bidding | $108,220 ↑ $1,719 | $114,002 ↑ $9,001 | $114,890 ↑ $2,000 |
| Feb 2026 · 2nd bidding | $106,501 ↓ $3,000 | $105,001 ↓ $16,633 | $112,890 |
| Jan 2026 · 2nd bidding | $109,501 ↑ $7,492 | $121,634 ↑ $2,534 | — |
| Jan 2026 · 1st bidding | $102,009 ↓ $7,492 | $119,100 ↑ $3,998 | — |
| Dec 2025 · 2nd bidding | $109,501 ↑ $4,088 | $115,102 ↓ $8,798 | — |
| Dec 2025 · 1st bidding | $105,413 ↓ $3,587 | $123,900 ↓ $5,990 | — |
| Nov 2025 · 2nd bidding | $109,000 ↓ $1,002 | $129,890 ↑ $14,889 | — |
| Nov 2025 · 1st bidding | $110,002 ↓ $11,998 | $115,001 ↓ $16,888 | — |
| Oct 2025 · 2nd bidding | $122,000 ↓ $6,105 | $131,889 ↓ $9,111 | — |
| Oct 2025 · 1st bidding | $128,105 ↑ $9,102 | $141,000 ↑ $4,110 | — |
| Sep 2025 · 2nd bidding | $119,003 ↑ $11,114 | $136,890 ↑ $9,389 | — |
| Sep 2025 · 1st bidding | $107,889 ↑ $3,365 | $127,501 ↑ $3,101 | — |
| Aug 2025 · 2nd bidding | $104,524 ↑ $2,515 | $124,400 ↑ $902 | — |
| Aug 2025 · 1st bidding | $102,009 ↑ $907 | $123,498 ↑ $4,397 | — |
| Jul 2025 · 2nd bidding | $101,102 unchanged | $119,101 ↓ $499 | — |
| Jul 2025 · 1st bidding | $101,102 ↑ $2,978 | $119,600 ↑ $2,930 | — |
| Jun 2025 · 2nd bidding | $98,124 | $116,670 | — |
Official LTA results, updated after every bidding exercise. Last build: 2026-07-02.
How COE bidding works
LTA runs two open bidding exercises each month — bidding opens at noon on the Monday before the first and third Wednesday, and closes at 4pm on the Wednesday. The premium everyone pays is set by the lowest successful bid. Quota is recalculated every quarter from deregistrations, so supply is fixed in the short run and prices move on demand alone.
What COE prices mean when you're selling
COE is the single biggest driver of used car prices in Singapore. When premiums rise, a used car with COE already attached becomes the cheap alternative to a new car plus a fresh certificate — so your car's market value climbs without you doing anything. When premiums fall, dealers reprice their offers down within days.
If your COE is nearing expiry, the renewal decision hinges on the PQP (a moving average of recent premiums) and the PARF rebate you'd forfeit by renewing — your exact figures are on your OneMotoring vehicle details. Our renew-or-sell guide walks the full math, or read why COE renewal rates predict used prices.
Paper value is your floor. Market value is what you should actually get.
Your PARF and COE rebate is what the car is worth as paper. A buyer pays for the car too — get your live market range free, or the exact number for $15.99, refunded if we're wrong.
Get my free market estimate Get the full reportFrequently Asked Questions
What are the latest COE prices in Singapore?
As at the Jun 2026 · 2nd bidding exercise: Cat A (up to 1,600cc / 130bhp) $123,847, Cat B $123,502, Cat E (open category) $129,002. LTA holds two bidding exercises per month — this page updates after each one.
When is the next COE bidding exercise?
LTA holds two COE bidding exercises every month. Bidding opens at noon on the Monday before the first and third Wednesday, and closes at 4pm on the Wednesday, with results published shortly after. This page updates after every exercise.
What is the difference between Cat A, Cat B and Cat E?
Cat A covers cars up to 1,600cc and 130bhp (electric cars up to 110kW). Cat B covers cars above those limits. Cat E is the open category — usable for any vehicle type, so it typically trades at or slightly above Cat B and is favoured by dealers.
Why do COE prices rise and fall?
Supply is fixed by the quota, which is recalculated quarterly from deregistrations — fewer people scrapping cars means fewer certificates. Demand moves with new-car launches, dealer pre-orders, bank loan curbs and sentiment. Because supply cannot respond to price, even small demand shifts move premiums sharply.
What do COE prices mean for my car's value?
Rising COE premiums lift used car prices — a used car with COE already attached becomes the cheaper alternative to a new car plus a fresh COE. If premiums have been climbing, your existing car is likely worth more than you think. Check your paper value on your OneMotoring vehicle details before taking any dealer quote.
Should I renew my COE or sell the car?
Renewing costs the Prevailing Quota Premium (PQP — a moving average of recent premiums) and permanently forfeits your PARF rebate. Selling before expiry keeps the PARF plus the remaining COE rebate. The right answer depends on your car's depreciation and the PARF you would give up — do the math before the 10-year mark, not at it.