SINGAPORE: About one in four Singapore residents now has no religious affiliation, up from one in five in 2020.
This upward trend has been continuing for more than a decade, according to numbers on Singapore’s religious diversity tracked by the Department of Statistics (SingStat).
Its latest General Household Survey 2025, released on June 30, showed that 23.9 per cent of residents did not have religious affiliation in 2025, up from 20 per cent in 2020. The figure was 17 per cent in 2010.
The 3.9 percentage point uptick in the non-religious was the most notable change in the data on religion in Singapore.
The survey also noted a general decline in the proportions of those identifying with Buddhism, Taoism, Christianity and Islam among residents aged 15 and above.
The only one bucking the trend was Hinduism, which grew from 5 per cent to 5.4 per cent.
The General Household Survey, published by SingStat between the population censuses, provides a snapshot of Singapore’s population and household trends. The last survey was released in 2015.
Population censuses are carried out every 10 years, with the most recent taking place in 2020.
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