I build websites for tuition centres and enrichment businesses across Singapore, which means I spend a lot of time looking under the bonnet of how these schools actually run. When parents in my circle ask me about kids coding classes in Singapore, they usually expect me to rattle off one name. I never do, because the right pick depends entirely on your child: their age, whether they want robotics or pure programming, and whether you are after a fun first taste or a serious path toward DSA and O Level Computing.
Coding has quietly become one of the most popular enrichment categories here, sitting alongside the usual maths and English. But the quality gap between centres is wide. Some run thoughtful, progressive curriculums that grow with your child for years. Others are glorified Scratch playgrounds that lose momentum after a term. I have done my best to separate the two.
This is my personal shortlist of eight coding and tech schools I would genuinely point a friend toward in 2026. I have no commercial tie to any of them, so the ranking is purely on merit: curriculum depth, instructor quality, verified parent reviews, and how clearly each one explains what your child will actually learn.
What I look for in a kids coding class
Before the list, here is the lens I use. These are the things that separate a coding centre I would recommend from one I would quietly skip.
- A progressive curriculum, not a one-term gimmick. The best centres map out a multi-year path: block coding like Scratch for the younger ones, then Python, web languages, and eventually real projects. If a school cannot show you where your child goes after term one, that is a red flag.
- Small class sizes. Coding is hands-on. A 1:6 instructor-to-student ratio (or better) means your child actually gets unstuck when their code breaks, instead of waiting twenty minutes with their hand up.
- Instructors who can teach, not just code. Plenty of people can write Python. Far fewer can hold the attention of a restless eight year old. I look for centres that train their tutors specifically to teach children.
- Verified parent reviews. I weight Google ratings with a decent volume of reviews over polished testimonials on a homepage. A 4.8 or higher across a hundred-plus reviews tells you the experience is consistent, not a lucky day.
- A clear purpose. Some families want pure fun and creativity. Others are building a portfolio for Direct School Admission or prepping for O Level Computing. Know which camp you are in, because the best centre for one is not always the best for the other.
If you are weighing coding against other enrichment options, it is worth reading my broader guide to the best enrichment centres in Singapore first, then circling back here once you have decided coding is the path.
1. Coding Lab
Coding Lab is the name I mention first when a parent wants a serious, structured programme with a track record. It was founded by an MIT graduate who worked in Silicon Valley, and that pedigree shows up in how carefully the curriculum is sequenced. This is not a centre that throws kids at a screen and hopes for the best.
What I respect most is the consistency. Their multi award-winning curriculum is designed by a global team of advisors, and the tutors are picked for both technical skill and a genuine knack for working with children. They run courses for ages 7 to 18, and a notable number of their students have gone on to secure DSA placements in top schools. One detail parents keep mentioning in reviews: a short update after each lesson telling you exactly what your child built that day.
If your child is ready to commit to coding as a long-term pursuit, Coding Lab is the safe, high-quality default.

Website: codinglab.com.sg
Ages: 7 to 18
Google Rating: 4.9 stars (197 reviews)
Best known for: MIT-founded, multi-award curriculum, strong DSA placement track record
2. Saturday Kids
Saturday Kids has a claim few can match: they were Singapore's first coding school for kids, running since 2012. More than a decade in, they have taught over 9,500 students, and the philosophy has stayed refreshingly un-corporate. The tagline is about inspiring kids to create a better future with technology, and they actually mean it.
Their classes for ages 5 to 16 cover programming, electronics, digital art, and design thinking, so it is broader than pure code. What I find genuinely admirable is Code in the Community, their free coding programme for children from less privileged backgrounds. A centre that puts real resources into closing the digital divide tells you something about its values. They also offer a credit note if your child does not enjoy a holiday camp after the first couple of days, which is a rare bit of confidence in the enrichment space.
For parents who want curiosity and creativity over exam-prep intensity, Saturday Kids is my pick.

Website: saturdaykids.com
Location: Bukit Timah Plaza, 1 Jln Anak Bukit, #02-41
Google Rating: 4.9 stars (100+ reviews)
Best known for: Singapore's first kids coding school, creativity-led approach, Code in the Community
3. SG Code Campus
SG Code Campus is the one I point older kids and teens toward when they want coding that connects to the real industry. They bill themselves as a serious code school, and the credentials back it up: they are an Advanced Tier Authorised Training Partner for AWS and part of the Apple Consultants Network. That means a motivated teen can move from beginner Python all the way to genuine cloud computing and certification pathways.
For the 7 to 12 group, they start with the fundamentals through Scratch and micro:bit. From around 13 upward, the syllabus opens into Python, data analytics, machine learning, and cloud. Their students have a strong record in informatics and IT competitions, which is exactly the kind of portfolio signal that helps with Polytechnic Early Admissions and DSA.
If your child has outgrown game-making and wants the skills professionals actually use, this is the most future-focused option on my list.

Website: sgcodecampus.com
Location: International Plaza, 10 Anson Road, #36-06 (Tanjong Pagar); also Paya Lebar
Ages: 7 to 18
Best known for: AWS and Apple training partner, real-world cloud and data science pathways for teens
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4. Computhink Academy
Computhink runs one of the few genuinely progressive 10-year coding roadmaps I have seen in Singapore, and that long arc is the reason it sits high on my list. A child can start with Minecraft coding, Scratch, and robotics, then climb through Python, HTML, CSS, and JavaScript, and eventually land in O Level Computing tuition. You enrol once and never have to hunt for the next step.
The reviews tell a consistent story: parents rate them 4.9 stars across more than a hundred Google reviews, with a recurring theme of structure and steady progress rather than novelty for its own sake. The curriculum is updated regularly, which matters in a field that shifts fast. Their base at Toa Payoh Central makes them convenient for a lot of central and northern families.
For parents who want a single centre that can carry a child from primary fun all the way to a real exam-grade outcome, Computhink is hard to beat.

Website: computhink.com.sg
Location: 6 Toa Payoh Central, Singapore 319191
Google Rating: 4.9 stars (100+ reviews)
Best known for: 10-year progressive roadmap from Scratch to O Level Computing
5. Empire Code
Empire Code is an MOE-registered coding and robotics centre that has been nurturing young coders since 2016, and it is the one I suggest when a family wants the full STEM spread under one roof. They serve a wide age band, from 4 right up to 19, and their instructors are Microsoft-certified, which is a reassuring signal of teaching standards.
The curriculum is broad: Scratch, Python, JavaScript, AI, Minecraft, and dedicated DSA portfolio preparation. That last part is worth flagging. If you are eyeing Direct School Admission or the Polytechnic Early Admissions Exercise, Empire Code explicitly helps kids build a portfolio of projects to show for it, which is exactly what those admissions panels want to see. They run campuses at Novena and River Valley, both easy to reach.
For an MOE-registered all-rounder that covers coding, robotics, and AI together, Empire Code earns its spot.

Website: empirecode.co
Location: Novena and River Valley campuses
Google Rating: 4.8 stars
Best known for: MOE-registered, Microsoft-certified instructors, DSA portfolio preparation
6. Nullspace Robotics
If your child is more excited by building physical robots than by lines of code on a screen, Nullspace Robotics is where I would send them. Established back in 2008, they are the pioneer of robotics enrichment in Singapore, and over 5,700 students have come through their programmes. That longevity in a fad-prone category counts for a lot.
Their classes for ages 5 to 16 are unapologetically hands-on. Younger children start with LEGO robotics, then progress to electronics and Arduino systems for the older ones, so the difficulty scales naturally as your child grows. The instructor-to-student ratio averages around 1:4, which is among the tightest on this list and means real attention per child. They also hold the STEM.org Accredited Educational Experience trustmark, an independent quality check I am glad to see.
For tactile, engineering-minded kids who learn best by building something they can hold, Nullspace is the standout.

Website: sg.nullspace.co
Location: Rochester Mall, 35 Rochester Drive, #03-07; also Kallang and Tampines
Google Rating: 4.8 stars
Best known for: Robotics pioneer since 2008, hands-on LEGO to Arduino, 1:4 ratio
7. OhmsKids
OhmsKids is my pick for the youngest learners and for parents who want substance behind the fun. It is founded by Benjamin Ohms, a German aerospace engineer, and that background shows: the classes weave real-world physics and maths into coding and robotics, rather than treating them as separate worlds. The focus is on problem-solving and critical thinking, not just getting a sprite to move.
They specialise in ages 4 to 10, with a research-driven, fun-first curriculum, highly qualified teachers, and deliberately small classes. Parents consistently praise how well-organised the sessions are, with no time wasted and something new learned each lesson. They offer a generous 10-day free coding trial, so you can test the fit before committing a cent, plus holiday robotics camps.
For a young child taking their very first steps into coding, OhmsKids combines genuine rigour with a light touch.

Website: ohmskids.com
Location: Scotts 28, 28 Scotts Road, #20-03 (Newton)
Google Rating: 5.0 stars
Best known for: Ages 4 to 10, engineer-founded, coding tied to real physics and maths
8. Code Ninja
Code Ninja rounds out my list with one of the most thoughtfully designed curriculums I came across, built with syllabus expertise from Singapore's National Institute of Education. That NIE backing is not just a marketing line. It means the learning progression was shaped by people who genuinely understand how children learn here.
The model is competency-based across five levels, and crucially, each child follows a personalised path based on ability rather than age. Their 1:6 teacher-to-student ratio caps class size at six, and all instructors hold Computer Science degrees or higher. They run regular 90-minute workshops in Scratch and Python for ages 9 to 16, with hundreds of mini-projects and a weekly passport that benchmarks progress so you always know where your child stands. Trial classes start from S$49, an easy way to test the waters.
For parents who want a locally grounded, individualised curriculum from a centrally located centre, Code Ninja is well worth a trial.

Website: codeninja.com.sg
Location: 22 Havelock Road, #01-689, Singapore 160022
Ages: 9 to 16 (Primary 3 to Secondary 4)
Best known for: NIE-developed curriculum, personalised competency-based path, 1:6 ratio
Questions parents ask me about coding classes
How much do kids coding classes cost in Singapore?
Most coding enrichment in Singapore runs between S$30 and S$60 per hour, which usually works out to roughly S$400 to S$700 per term depending on session length and class size. Robotics classes often sit at the higher end because of the kit and equipment involved. Many centres, including Code Ninja and OhmsKids, offer trial classes from around S$49 or even a free trial, so you can gauge fit before committing to a full term. Always ask whether materials, robotics kits, and holiday camps are included or charged separately.
What age should my child start coding?
Children can start as young as 4 or 5 with visual, block-based tools and LEGO robotics, which build logic and sequencing without needing reading fluency. OhmsKids and Saturday Kids both cater well to this youngest group. Around age 7 to 9 is the sweet spot for moving into Scratch and structured problem-solving, and from roughly 11 onward, kids are usually ready for text-based languages like Python. There is no need to rush. Starting later with the right centre is far better than starting early somewhere that bores them.
Is coding worth it for DSA or O Level Computing?
Yes, if your child has genuine interest. A strong coding portfolio (apps, games, robotics projects) is exactly what Direct School Admission and Polytechnic Early Admissions panels look for, and centres like Empire Code and SG Code Campus build this deliberately. For the exam route, Computhink offers a clear path into O Level Computing. That said, coding should not be forced purely as an admissions tactic. The kids who build the best portfolios are the ones who actually enjoy it.
Robotics or pure coding: which should I pick?
It depends on how your child likes to learn. Tactile, hands-on kids who love building things tend to thrive with robotics first (Nullspace Robotics is my top pick here), because seeing a physical robot respond to their code is immediately rewarding. Children who are happy on a screen and drawn to games or apps often prefer pure coding from the start. Many centres blend both, so you rarely have to choose permanently. If you are unsure, a robotics trial is usually the easier entry point for a hesitant child.
Need a website for your coding or enrichment centre?
I have built and marketed websites for tuition centres and enrichment businesses across Singapore, so I know how much a parent's first impression rides on your site. When a mum is comparing five coding centres at 11pm, a slow, dated website quietly loses you the enquiry before you ever get to show how good your classes are.
If your centre is not showing up when parents search for coding or enrichment in Singapore, I have written a detailed guide on website and SEO strategy for tuition and enrichment centres that walks through exactly what moves the needle. It pairs well with my broader roundups of the best tuition centres in Singapore and best preschools in Singapore, which show the standard parents now expect online.
If you want to talk about what a new website could do for your enrolment numbers, get in touch for a free consultation, or explore my web design services to see how I work.
There is no single best coding class for every child in Singapore, and any list that pretends otherwise is selling you something. The eight I have recommended here each earn their place for a different reason: Coding Lab and Computhink for serious long-term progression, Saturday Kids and OhmsKids for creativity and the youngest learners, SG Code Campus and Empire Code for teens building toward DSA, and Nullspace for the robot-builders.
My honest advice: shortlist two or three from this list that match your child's age and temperament, then book trial classes at each. Watch how engaged your child is and how clearly the instructors explain things. The centre your child walks out of grinning is almost always the right one. If you are still mapping out your child's wider enrichment plan, my guides to the best Chinese tuition and best maths enrichment in Singapore are good companions to this one.
If this guide helped, keep an eye on the Terris Recommends series, where I share honest picks for the best service providers across Singapore.
Sources & References (3)
Written by
Terris
Founder & Lead Strategist
Terris is a Singapore-based web designer and digital strategist who has spent 8+ years building websites for local businesses. His Terris Recommends series shares personal picks for the best service providers across Singapore, informed by his experience working with businesses across industries.
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