PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 1940804
PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 1940804
Singapore Cybersecurity market size in 2026 is estimated at USD 3.07 billion, growing from 2025 value of USD 2.65 billion with 2031 projections showing USD 6.41 billion, growing at 15.86% CAGR over 2026-2031 and confirming the city-state's status as Southeast Asia's digital command center.

Corporate boards attribute the growth to elevated threat volumes-cybercrime already formed 49.2% of all offences logged in 2023-and to the rising density of hyperscale data-center investments that surpassed 1.4 GW of active or committed IT load by mid-2024. Procurement teams now judge offerings on delivered risk reduction rather than feature counts, with 67% of large enterprises insisting on key-risk indicators in 2024 contracts. A pronounced shift toward converged IT-OT defence reflects automated port terminals and smart factories that prefer one security control plane over siloed stacks. Zero-trust policies, mandated across critical infrastructure, have already trimmed unauthorized-privilege cases at banks by 42% since mid-2023.
Regulators now compel every critical information-infrastructure owner to file a zero-trust roadmap, and 96% had submitted plans by November 2024. Financial institutions responded by micro-segmenting traffic, cutting unauthorized-privilege cases by 42% within one year of go-live. Budget cycles allocate up to 28% of security outlays to identity analytics, underscoring demand for context-aware access controls. Streamlined multi-agency design reviews compressed policy-approval windows to 34 days, halving historical delays and allowing vendors to accelerate revenue recognition. Together, these moves place zero-trust enforcement at the heart of every major tender, giving suppliers that support adaptive trust scoring a decisive edge.
Digital full-bank licensees accumulated SGD 1.8 billion in deposits by end-2024, equal to 4% of Singapore's retail savings pool. Each new entrant channelled roughly 22% of operating expenditure into cybersecurity during its first year, an intensity mirrored by incumbents whose resilience investments grew 36% to SGD 491 million in 2024. Pilot deployments of post-quantum cryptography already protect 12% of domestic interbank traffic. Competitive parity now hinges on rapid threat-intelligence ingestion and automated compliance evidence, redirecting budgets toward managed detection and response platforms rather than standalone appliances. The banking cluster's early adoption curves ripple through payments, wealth management and capital-markets systems, magnifying total addressable demand for the Singapore Cybersecurity market.
Only 530 CREST-certified professionals operated locally in 2024 against demand for 1,200, equating to a 56% gap. Median senior-analyst pay climbed 14% to SGD 117,000, compressing margins for managed security service providers. MSSPs used automation to trim Tier-1 ticket volumes by 35%, yet many still absorb wage inflation by passing through higher seat-licence prices. Persistent scarcity delays large rollouts, elongating go-live timelines and dampening short-term revenue conversion. Unless training pipelines expand materially, talent supply will continue to limit the Singapore Cybersecurity market's ability to scale at the forecast rate.
Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
For complete list of drivers and restraints, kindly check the Table Of Contents.
Services contributed 59.60% to the Singapore Cybersecurity market share in 2025, helped by managed security service revenues of SGD 2.3 billion. Average mean-time-to-detect dropped from eight hours in 2022 to two hours in 2024, proving the return on 24/7 monitoring investments. Providers that integrate cross-border threat-intelligence achieved 92% renewal, outpacing the sector median of 84%. Clients increasingly bundle insurance broking and incident-response retainers with monitoring, creating annuity-like revenue for MSSPs. These factors sustain robust double-digit expansion for the Singapore Cybersecurity market.
Cloud security is on track for a 15.52% CAGR through 2031, riding on 84% enterprise cloud-workload penetration. Updated MAS rules expanded mandatory control objectives from eight to 11, intensifying due-diligence cycles yet enlarging addressable spend. Vendors that pair posture management with auto-remediation now execute 37 policy updates per client each month, triple 2022 volumes. Consumption-based pricing fits well with rapid scale-out during peak e-commerce seasons. As a result, cloud-native solutions will continue to outpace appliance refreshes inside the Singapore Cybersecurity market.
On-premise installations still held 54.30% of the Singapore Cybersecurity market share in 2025, with 71% of financial-sector databases co-located in trusted facilities. Tier-4 floor space reached 660,000 m2, providing large banks and payment networks with latency-controlled environments. Hybrid forensics workflows lowered evidence-processing time by 27%, validating a staged migration path for regulated workloads. Accordingly, most incumbents continue to refresh perimeter hardware even while piloting cloud-first applications.
Cloud deployments promise a 16.93% CAGR, buoyed by an extra 300 MW of hyperscale IT load planned for 2025-2027. Operators meeting the Green Data Centre standard report PUE below 1.3, releasing energy budgets for in-rack security accelerators. New bulk-licence tariffs priced per CPU-second reduced monthly invoice volatility by 18%, easing CFO concerns. Faster provisioning times allow startups to activate SOC infrastructure in hours rather than weeks. These advantages will keep cloud adoption at the forefront of the Singapore Cybersecurity market.
The Singapore Cybersecurity Market Report Segments the Industry Into by Offering (Solutions, and Services), Deployment Mode (Cloud, and On-Premise), End-User Vertical (BFSI, Healthcare, IT and Telecom, Industrial and Defense, Manufacturing, Retail and E-Commerce, Energy and Utilities, Others), and End-User Enterprise Size (Small and Medium Enterprises (SMEs), and Large Enterprises)