I think it will depend a lot on the car itself. I lived in SG for a little while. A taxi driver once said to me, "hey you know Singapore, its either hot, too hot, or about to rain". That about sums it up. Run about cars are often used as Grab taxis (think pretty much every mini-van and station wagon you've ever heard of, luxury and not so luxury and those weird Honda CR-V things and the odd-looking Toyota mini Rav4 hybrid thing too). They are taxis. You also get Grab premium which is often a nice Audi or a long Merc. Usually though it is a Toyota Alphard. The best car for getting around Singapore is a van with 4 la-z-boys in the back driven by someone else! Ultimate Drivers Car is not really needed although a bloke at work had a Smurf blue m4. For reference, an m4 comp is the better part of $450k SG ++ so you're probably gunna look after it. You can get a membership to Sentosa golf club for that, I know which I'd go for and probably use more. Ha. Anyhoo, I digress, but if you're buying a run about from SG, you can be pretty sure it has been run about. A nicer, bigger, faster, more expensive motor, probably not so much. You can get a special Sunday only drivers permit in SG. That means most of the proper driver's cars go out on Sundays only. Cars in SG are owned for (in practise) max 10 years and they are driven, a lot. A small place it may be but there is lots of motorways and with limits on the numbers of cars on the roads, you can actually drive around - hence the popularity of Grab (SE Asia version of Uber). Most expats, if they buy a car at all, get a car that has a few years to run on its certificate from the govt, then chuck it when they leave SG. So basically, you buy the right to drive the car for the last few years (of its 10) that it is (practically) allowed on the roads. After that it has to be (in reality) scrapped or exported around the world - did you know that SG is the second largest exporter of used cars after Japan. There's a pub quiz answer right there. An incentive for maintenance this is not as you can imagine. So, if you are buying an SG car, IMHO try and get one that is more top end (because it cost shed loads to start with and hopefully someone used the warranty to get it serviced properly) and is more towards the younger age, ie. less than 8 years old at time of import. Also, a more expensive car will have been kept in an underground carpark at a condo / apartment block. They are as dry as it can get in Singapore and typically have areas set aside for car washing. Logic being more expensive car = people can afford to live in a nicer condo that has underground parking.