Owning a car in Singapore is expensive enough, so the last thing any driver wants is a fresh scratch down the side of their ride. Some carparks around the island are just built different, in the worst way possible. Tight ramps, blind corners, sudden humps, and pillars that pop up out of nowhere have claimed the bumpers and paintwork of many drivers, from fresh P-plate holders to seasoned uncles.
Ask any group of Singapore drivers to name the worst carpark in Singapore, and you will get a very long list, very fast. This guide rounds up the ones drivers most often warn each other about, with a special shout-out to owners of lowered and stanced cars whose undercarriages live in constant fear of a high hump.
We have grouped them by the kind of trouble they cause, explained why each one is a menace, and added practical tips so you can get in and out with your car in one piece.
Table of Contents
The same names come up again and again, which tells you these are not just cases of bad luck or shaky driving. Some of these carparks really are designed in a way that sets you up to fail.
There are 2 main reasons a carpark ends up on every driver’s blacklist. The first is height. Steep humps, sharp slopes, and sudden crests can scrape the front lip, bumper, or underside of a car, and this hits lowered rides the hardest. Many lowered cars sit so low that the gap under the front bumper is roughly the height of a Coke can, so even a normal-looking hump can shave off some plastic.
Image adapted from: Angie CT via Facebook
The second is width. Narrow ramps, tight 90-degree turns, and pillars in awkward spots leave very little room to move, so one moment of misjudgement ends with a scratch along the door or a kerbed rim.
A lot of the offenders sit in older buildings from the 1960s and 1970s. Cars back then were smaller, and developers squeezed carparks into whatever corner of the building was left over. Fast forward to today, when cars are wider and taller, and you get the mismatch that makes parking a proper headache.
Here is the part that surprises people though. Newer malls are not automatically safe. Some of the carparks drivers complain about most are barely a decade old, which suggests the problem is not just age. Land here is scarce and expensive, so spiral ramps, skinny lanes and confusing layouts turn up even in buildings that opened recently.
These are the ones that make lowered and stanced drivers wince. Take the slopes slow, and when in doubt, park somewhere else.
Screenshot from: Google Maps
The Central is the carpark veteran drivers love to hate, and it is far and away the most complained-about carpark in Singapore. The spiral ramp climbs something like seven levels of tight, continuous turns before you even reach a lot, which is enough to make anyone queasy.
One driver joked that he slaps himself before driving up just to stay awake. Another said he loves it and only gets annoyed when slow cars ruin his run.
Novena Square 2 spins you around a spiral so many times you might feel a little giddy by the time you reach the top, and drivers say they regularly watch cars scrape their way down it. The bigger problem for lowered rides sits just after the drop-off roundabout, where a slope has a reputation for smacking front bumpers. Crawl across it at practically zero speed to be safe.
Screenshot from: Reddit
The wider Robertson Quay area has a reputation among drivers generally, so do not assume the neighbouring buildings are easier. One driver recently scraped his SUV in a basement carpark along Martin Road and could not get out even with two staff members guiding him.
Heartland multi-storey carparks can be just as tricky as the fancy mall ones. This Telok Blangah deck is one that drivers flag for its steep ramps and tight turns between levels. Lowered cars should take the slopes gently, and everyone should mind the walls right after the exit gantry.
Screenshot from: Google Maps
The cluster of older carparks around Bukit Merah Central and the bus interchange goes back decades, and the layout shows its age. One driver summed it up perfectly on a car forum: he made it up half a level, took one look at how narrow the ramps were going up and down, and promptly drove straight back out.
Narrow lanes, tight ramps and heavy foot traffic all come together here, so crawl through and keep an eye out for pedestrians crossing.
Drivers do not mince words about the multi-storey carpark at this hilly Ulu Pandan condo. More than one has called it flat out the narrowest in Singapore, and one veteran reckons that once you have survived Pandan Valley, every other carpark feels easy.
The estate is built into a slope, so the internal roads and ramps rise and dip along with the terrain. Visitors in lowered cars should watch the inclines and the speed humps dotted around the grounds, and everyone should take the ramps at a crawl.
These carparks are scratch magnets for everyone, and pure stress for newer drivers. Fold in your mirrors and take your time.
Image credit: Paul Ciprian via Google Maps
People’s Park Complex is basically the grandfather of tricky Singapore carparks. It’s ironic that it’s on this list considering it’s also one of the most photographed carparks in Singapore.
As one of the oldest malls in the country, it was built when cars were tiny, so the entrance and exit are narrow, the up and down lanes are squeezed together on a slope, and the lots are so tight that reversing out feels like a puzzle. Newer drivers, take a deep breath before you attempt this one.
Tucked above the shops, the carpark at International Plaza sits on the 4th to 8th floors of this old Tanjong Pagar tower. Getting up there means threading through tight lanes designed for much smaller vehicles. It is a regular fixture on drivers’ lists of the tightest carparks in town.
Orchard Building’s carpark plays out like the crank and S-course from your driving test, except the walls are real. At the bottom of the ramp, you swing a sharp 90-degree turn to the left, with no blind spot mirror to help you spot oncoming cars. Drivers often end up doing 3-point turns just to get between levels without banging a wall.
Screenshot from: Google Maps
Fortune Centre, next to the Kwan Im temple in Bugis, greets you with narrow slopes that spiral up four or five storeys before you even reach a lot. It is a real challenge for beginners, and not the cheapest place to park either, so plenty of drivers give it a miss. Not so fortunate after all.
Craig Place at 20 Craig Road is a sneaky one, and that is exactly what makes it dangerous. The entrance and the drive up the multi-storey deck are perfectly manageable, aside from having to give way to oncoming cars at the curved bits of the slopes. So you relax. Big mistake.
The killer is the final lap.
Just before the exit gantry, there is a tight turning corner with a sharp pillar jutting out on your right. In a longer or wider car, this turns into a genuinely nasty decision: sacrifice your left front bumper corner, or your right side driver door. The 3rd option, and the correct one, is to slow down completely and inch through it step by step until you are clear.
Consider The Pinnacle @ Duxton instead, which drivers rate for its decent-sized lots. Tanjong Pagar Plaza and the Mondrian Singapore Duxton are other options nearby, along with a few surrounding open-air carparks.
Screenshot from: Google Maps
Eastpoint Mall in Simei is a solid heartland mall, but the above-ground carpark is the one drivers warn about. It is full of 90-degree turns, most of the deck sits on a slope gradient, and because plenty of drivers do not bother turning within the lines, near misses are common. The exit gets singled out as especially narrow.
Screenshot from: Google Maps
Tampines Mart is a small neighbourhood mall, and its compact carpark reflects that. The ramps are the main problem, and drivers are blunt about it: bring an MPV here and good luck to you. Tight turns and limited space mean you cannot switch off while hunting for a lot, especially during peak grocery hours when everyone is circling for the same spot.
Image credit: Zero In via Google Maps
Beach Centre is another older building where the carpark feels like it was squeezed in as an afterthought. Narrow lanes and tight corners are the main gripes, so slow and steady wins here.
ESR BizPark @ Chai Chee is a business park along Chai Chee Road, and plenty of drivers only discover its carpark quirks when they come down for the food court or the Harvey Norman outlet. Older drivers may still know it as Viva Business Park or Technopark, so do not get confused if you see those names in forum posts.
Block 750D is the one to watch. Drivers say the walls up there are covered in battle scars from cars that came before you, and the building management has put up signs warning about the tight turns, which tells you everything. Try going up to level 2A and back down, and you will see what they mean.
This sums up the sentiment of most drivers who have had the unfortunate experience of parking here.
Screenshot from: Google Maps
OUE Downtown Gallery sits at 6A Shenton Way, right in the thick of the CBD, and its carparks are a classic case of prime land, meaning tight parking. There is a basement carpark and a multi-storey carpark, and getting in is its own small adventure, since the entrance is via Maxwell Link, reached from Shenton Way through McCallum Street or from Maxwell Road.
Once you are in, expect snug lanes and corners that set off your front car sensors every 2 seconds. Lunch crowds make it worse because everyone is circling at the same time. Come on a weekend or in the evening, and it is a lot calmer, plus parking is cheaper.
Image credit: Mokkie Mok via Google Maps
Katong Shopping Centre at 865 Mountbatten Road is old-school in every sense, and drivers have flagged its carpark for years. The lots themselves are the main problem. They are so narrow that if a big Continental car parks next to you, your doors are almost guaranteed to cop a knock, either from them or from you.
The building dates back to an era of much smaller cars, and it shows. Park at the end of a row if you can, leave yourself room on both sides, and warn your passengers to open their doors gently. Ask any driver who has been going there for years, and they will tell you the same thing.
Screenshot from: Google Maps
Wisma Atria is one of the most consistently complained-about carparks in Orchard, and the trouble is on the way out. Drivers say there is no way to turn left down the exit ramp without straying into the path of cars coming up, which is a lousy position to be in through no fault of your own.
Certain points on the way down get very narrow too, and there is a slope leading into a sudden tight turn that has caught out plenty of people. Wait for a clear gap rather than trying to thread it while someone is coming up.
Screenshot from: Google Maps
One Raffles Place, formerly OUB Centre, draws serious frustration from CBD drivers, some of whom think the design is bad enough that it should have been redone by now. Expect poor lighting, 90-degree turns at every ramp, pillars jutting into corners, and floor arrows that point you the wrong way. Parking here is not cheap either, which somehow makes the whole experience sting more.
Tong Eng Building in the CBD.
Image credit: Alan Wee via Google Maps
Space stops us listing every offender, so here are the rest in brief. In town, drivers warn about OCBC Centre, Clifford Centre, Tong Eng Building, Mandarin Gallery, Hotel Miramar, Furama Hotel for its ultra sharp ramp, Burlington Square for a 90-degree turn that punishes big SUVs, 111 Somerset where pillars eat into the lots, Cross Street Exchange, Lucky Plaza, Concourse, and Asia Square.
In the heartlands, the recurring names are Queensway Shopping Centre, Beauty World Plaza, Upper Serangoon Shopping Centre, Gek Poh Shopping Centre, Jurong Point’s basement slopes, Elias Mall, Katong Point, Pasir Ris Mall, Heartbeat @ Bedok, West Mall in Bukit Batok, and Tiong Bahru Plaza.
Plenty of HDB decks get named too, including Blk 84A Commonwealth Close, Blk 291 Bukit Batok Street 24, Blk 159A Hougang Street 11, 925 Yishun Central 1, and a few blocks in Bishan and Tampines.
A review left on TTSH’s carpark listing.
Screenshot from: Google Maps
Hospitals deserve their own warning. Tan Tock Seng, NUH Medical Centre, and Gleneagles all get flagged for spirals and sharp turns, which is the last thing you need when you are already stressed about someone’s health.
One clarification worth making. Tanglin Mall is still open, and drivers do complain about it, so do not confuse it with Tanglin Shopping Centre, which has been demolished.
Many old lists still name carparks that no longer exist, so here is a quick reality check. Golden Mile Complex, long feared for its brutal entrance hump, was cleared out in 2023 and is being redeveloped into a project called The Golden Mile, with works expected to run until the late 2020s.
Peace Centre near Selegie Road closed in January 2024 and was demolished shortly after. Tanglin Shopping Centre in Orchard was also vacated and torn down in 2024. Liang Court, whose narrow spiral entry and exit still gets brought up by drivers as a rite of passage, made way for CanningHill Piers a while back.
A little technique goes a long way, whether you drive a lowered ride or you just got your driver’s licence. A few things that help:
Singapore is small, land is tight, and some of our carparks were clearly designed by people who have never had to reverse a Vellfire. Knowing which ones to approach with caution, or avoid altogether, saves you money, time, and a whole lot of heartache.
The good news is that almost every driver has a horror story, which means nobody is judging you for taking the ramp at walking pace. Bookmark this list, send it to the friend who just passed their test, and the next time you are heading somewhere with a dodgy carpark, you can decide whether to brave it or simply park elsewhere. Your bumper will thank you.
Got a carpark horror story or one we missed? Share it with us, and drive safe out there.
Cover image adapted from: Zero In & Mokkie Mok via Google Maps
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