SINGAPORE – Singapore and South Korea will upgrade an existing free trade agreement (FTA) to ride on strong growth of trade and economic ties between the two countries, said Prime Minister Lawrence Wong.
Speaking at a joint press conference with
visiting South Korean President Lee Jae Myung
on March 2, PM Wong noted that the global trading landscape has evolved significantly over the last two decades, with greater emphasis on supply chain resilience, digital trade and the green transition, making the upgrade of the two-decade-old FTA a timely one.
The FTA came into force in 2006.
South Korean President Lee, who is on a three-day state visit after taking office in June 2025, said that the upgrading of the FTA will fully reflect “evolving trade and economic security dynamics, as well as technological advances”, and advance the two countries’ investment cooperation in a more strategic manner.
South Korea and Singapore are now among each other’s top 10 trading partners.
In 2025, South Korea was Singapore’s seventh-largest trading partner, while Singapore was South Korea’s ninth-largest trading partner.
Singapore’s investments in South Korea have more than doubled since 2020, said PM Wong, with companies like PSA, Singapore Airlines and CapitaLand deepening collaboration with South Korean partners across the fields of logistics, aviation and real estate.
South Korean firms like Hyundai, Lotte Group and Hanwha Ocean are leveraging Singapore as a regional hub to access opportunities across South-east Asia and beyond.
The enhanced FTA aims to strengthen cooperation in areas such as supply chain resilience, the green economy, trade facilitation, and aviation maintenance, repair and overhaul, fostering deeper collaboration and new opportunities for mutual growth.
Mr Lee said that a memorandum of understanding (MOU) on investment partnership signed between the Korea Development Bank and Seviora Holdings, an asset management firm backed by Temasek, will spearhead this investment cooperation.
Singapore and South Korea are also partnering each other to advance green energy ambitions, with a nuclear cooperation agreement currently in the works.
“Singapore is studying the potential of nuclear energy as part of our longer-term energy mix, and we hope to learn from Korea’s expertise and experience,” said PM Wong, who added that he looked forward to the agreement’s swift conclusion.
The projects are built on the strong momentum generated in the four months since South Korea and Singapore elevated ties to a strategic partnership in November 2025, on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of their diplomatic relations.
Singapore and South Korea established diplomatic ties in 1975.
The strategic partnership sets out a road map for deepening and expanding bilateral cooperation in existing and new areas across the five pillars of political, security and public sector cooperation; trade and economic cooperation; sustainability, the green economy and energy transition; advanced technology and research and development; and people-to-people exchange.
Mr Lee said both South Korea and Singapore have, over the past century, demonstrated remarkable potential to rise as





