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COE premiums ease across the board
Update 20 Feb: COE results for Feb 2026 2nd bidding exercise sees mostly lower premiums
The latest Certificate of Entitlement (COE) premiums for Feb 2026’s 1st bidding exercise ended at 4:00 PM on 4 Feb 2026 π. Compared with the 2nd bidding exercise of Jan 2026, all categories came down, with the biggest drop seen in Category B (down $10,744) πΈπ.
In Singapore, a COE is required to register a vehicle, and the premium is a major component of the overall cost of owning a car, motorcycle, or commercial vehicle here πΈπ¬. When premiums soften, it can slightly ease the pressure on budgets for buyers, businesses managing fleets, and riders planning for a new or replacement vehicle π.
COE results at a glance π
All figures below are in Singapore dollars (S$). The table summarises how each category moved from the previous exercise:
| Category | Previous COE ($) | New COE ($) | Difference ($) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | Cars β€ 1,600cc & β€ 97kW; EVs β€ 110kW | 109,501 | 106,320 | -3,181 |
| B | Cars > 1,600cc or > 97kW; EVs > 110kW | 121,634 | 110,890 | -10,744 |
| C | Goods Vehicles & Buses | 75,202 | 74,801 | -401 |
| D | Motorcycles | 8,860 | 8,289 | -571 |
| E | Open Category (Excl. Motorcycles) | 120,891 | 116,000 | -4,891 |
What each COE category covers π€
Category A is for cars with engine capacities up to 1,600cc and output not exceeding 97kW (130bhp). It also covers electric vehicles (EVs) up to 110kW (147bhp), which is why many mass-market models and smaller EVs commonly fall under this category πβ‘.
Category B covers cars above 1,600cc or above 97kW, including EVs beyond 110kW. This typically includes larger SUVs, premium marques, higher-performance variants and many higher-powered EVs πβ¨.
Category C is for goods vehicles and buses. Companies often monitor this category closely because changes can affect fleet planning, replacement cycles, and long-term cost projections ππ.
Category D is strictly for motorcycles. Demand can be influenced by commuting patterns, delivery needs, and broader cost considerations in Singapore π΅π.
Category E (Open Category) can be used for any vehicle type (excluding motorcycles). Used for any vehicle except motorcycles, and it often ends up being used mainly for bigger cars; dealers also secure Cat E for flexibility ππ.
How to use these results (practical tips) β
- Compare full cost, not just COE: COE is only one part of the bill. Buyers typically also factor in taxes, insurance, financing, and dealer add-ons before deciding π³π .
- Watch a few exercises: COE premiums can swing between exercises. Some motorists prefer to track movements over a few rounds before committing, especially for big-ticket purchases ππ.
- Businesses can plan procurement: For fleets, even small COE shifts may add up across multiple vehicles, so procurement teams often monitor trends and time replacements carefully π§Ύπ.
Stay updated ππ
Motorists, businesses and riders who want to keep track of COE movements and quotas can refer to these official resources:
- LTA statistics page (quota details, statistics and publications on the vehicle population) ππ.
- OneMotoring COE Open Bidding portal (live bidding information and results during each exercise) π§βπ»π.
With these references, motorists and businesses can track quota updates, follow bidding movements and make more informed decisions on timing a purchase, renewal, or fleet upgrade ππ.

Feb 2026’s 1st COE bidding exercise ended with lower premiums across every category, led by a notable easing in Category B ππΈ. While COE movements can change from one exercise to the next, these results provide a useful snapshot of current bidding sentiment and may offer a little breathing space for buyers, riders, and businesses planning their next move in Singapore π.

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