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Terris Recommends Dance Studios 12 min read

9 Best Breakdance Classes in Singapore (2026)

My honest pick of the best breakdance classes Singapore has in 2026, from dedicated bboy specialists to studio courses, with prices, locations and who to book for breaking.

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Terris

Founder & Lead Strategist

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If you are looking for the best breakdance classes Singapore has in 2026, the first thing worth knowing is that breaking is its own world. It is not the same as a hip-hop choreography class where you learn an eight-count routine to a pop song. Breaking, or bboying, is the original street dance born in the Bronx in the 1970s, it is now an Olympic sport after its debut in Paris 2024, and learning it properly means training foundations, floorwork and real physical conditioning under someone who actually breaks. So I spent time mapping out who genuinely teaches breaking here, not just who lists it on a menu.

The Singapore scene is small but unusually deep, built over more than twenty years by crews and a handful of dedicated coaches rather than big franchises. That shapes this list. Some entries are polished studios with graded courses, others are crews and collectives that run real classes and have produced competitive bboys and bgirls. I weighed each on how seriously it teaches breaking specifically, the pedigree of the people running it, how it treats genuine beginners, and how reachable it is.

This sits inside my wider Terris Recommends dance series. If you are still deciding what style to learn, start with my guide to the best dance studios in Singapore, then use this guide once you know it is breaking you want. Below are the nine places I would actually send a friend who wants to learn to break.

01

Why breaking deserves a specialist class

Breaking earned a different kind of respect when it became an Olympic sport at Paris 2024. Bboys and bgirls now compete the way gymnasts and athletes do, judged on technique, musicality, originality and execution. That matters for how you should learn it, because breaking is built on four distinct elements and a general dance class rarely touches more than one. Toprock is the upright dancing you do on your feet to open a round. Footwork, also called downrock, is the fast intricate floor movement on your hands and feet. Freezes are the controlled poses that punctuate a set, often balanced on a hand, a head or a shoulder. Powermoves are the spins everyone films, the windmills, flares and headspins, and they are the last thing you should chase, not the first.

This is why a breaking specialist beats a general hip-hop class almost every time. A choreography teacher will give you a fun routine and a sweat, but a breaking coach drills the unglamorous foundations and the conditioning that makes the moves possible. Breaking is genuinely demanding on the wrists, shoulders, core and back, so the good coaches spend real time on strength and on protecting your joints before anyone attempts a freeze. Just as important is the culture. Breaking lives in crews, cyphers and battles, and a proper class plugs you into that, teaching you to read the music, take your turn in the circle, and build your own style rather than copy a video.

So when you read the list below, weigh who actually breaks and competes, not who has the slickest website. A small crew session with a real bboy at the front of the room will usually take you further than a big studio that treats breaking as one tile on a grid of genres.

Next: 1. Singapore Bboy Class (Leftside Sessions)
02

1. Singapore Bboy Class (Leftside Sessions)

Singapore Bboy Class, run under the Leftside Sessions banner, is the one I would point most beginners to first, simply because breaking is the entire point of the place rather than a side offering. It has been running since 2009 with the explicit aim of teaching not just the moves but the culture, the discipline and the mindset behind bboying. Classes are open to beginners through intermediate dancers, and the teaching leans on experienced bboys with serious time in the scene, including instructors connected to long-standing local and regional crews.

What I like is how focused it is. You are learning foundations, footwork, freezes and the roots of the dance from people who genuinely break, in a small-group setting where you get attention rather than being one of thirty in a choreography line. They run evening weekday sessions and even a breaking-specific conditioning idea they call BreakHIIT, and they stay connected through an active community on Telegram and YouTube. If you want to actually become a bboy or bgirl rather than just try a fun class once, this is my top shout.

Singapore Bboy Class Leftside Sessions homepage

Website: sgbboyclass.com
Location: Central Singapore (current session venue announced via their Telegram)
Reputation: A dedicated breaking specialist running since 2009
Best known for: Pure beginner-to-intermediate breaking with a heavy focus on foundations and culture

Next: 2. Radikal Forze
03

2. Radikal Forze

If Singapore Bboy Class is where I would send a beginner, Radikal Forze is the crew that built the ground they stand on. Founded in 1998, it is the pioneering breaking crew in Singapore, led by Felix Huang, who started dancing under the name ThinkTwice and has shaped the local and regional scene for more than two decades. The crew is also behind Radikal Forze Jam, which grew from a 250-person event in 2008 into one of the largest street dance festivals in the Asia-Pacific, drawing thousands of dancers from dozens of countries.

You do not walk into Radikal Forze the way you book a drop-in class at a studio. It is a crew and a community, and the training that happens around it is the real deal, the kind of high-level breaking and battle culture that produces competitive dancers. For most people the practical doorway is Recognize! Studios, which Felix founded, but Radikal Forze belongs on this list as the authority and the engine room of breaking in Singapore. If you want to understand where the scene came from and where the best dancers gravitate, this is it.

Radikal Forze Jam homepage

Website: radikalforzejam.com
Location: Singapore (community and Radikal Forze Jam hosted at *SCAPE, Orchard Link)
Reputation: The pioneering local crew, founded 1998, behind Asia-Pacific's biggest dance jam
Best known for: Being the authority and competitive heart of Singapore breaking

Next: 3. Recognize! Studios
04

3. Recognize! Studios

Recognize! Studios is the most credible studio doorway into breaking in Singapore, and that is no accident. It was founded in 2010 by Felix Huang of Radikal Forze, so the breaking pedigree runs straight through the place. Recognize calls itself an urban arts catalyst, and breaking sits inside a genuinely deep menu of street styles rather than being a token add-on. Classes are graded across Level 1, Level 2 and Open level, which is exactly the structure a newcomer needs so they are not thrown into an advanced room.

The studio defines breaking properly on its own terms, as the acrobatic Bronx-born form built on footwork, floorwork and spinning, and it has the surrounding ecosystem to back it up, from kids and teens academies to the wider competitive scene that Felix runs. At the time of writing they are between premises and finding a new home, with kids classes continuing through the move, so check their current location before you go. For a dancer who wants to take breaking seriously inside a real studio structure with crew-level credibility behind it, Recognize is the obvious pick.

Recognize! Studios homepage

Website: recognizestudios.com
Location: Central Singapore (relocating in 2026, confirm current address before visiting)
Reputation: Founded 2010 by Radikal Forze's Felix Huang, deep urban-arts credibility
Best known for: Level-graded breaking inside a serious street-dance studio

Next: 4. *SCAPE Street Dance Intensives: Breaking
05

4. *SCAPE Street Dance Intensives: Breaking

*SCAPE has been the physical home of Singapore street dance for years, the place where cyphers happen and where Radikal Forze Jam is hosted, so it makes sense that its own Street Dance Intensives include a dedicated breaking track. What sets this one apart is the calibre of who teaches it. The breaking intensive has been led by bboys like Jeremiah, a SEA Games medallist, and Flurry of Cypher Kings Crew, which means you are learning from people who compete at a national and regional level rather than hobbyists.

This is the pathway I would highlight for a committed teenager or young adult who wants to train breaking with structure and ambition, not just for fun. As a youth development space, *SCAPE is built around nurturing young creatives, and the intensive format gives you focused, progressive coaching rather than a casual drop-in. Sessions run in blocks, so check the current schedule and intake, but for serious, competition-minded breaking instruction at an accessible price, this is one of the strongest options in town.

*SCAPE Street Dance Intensives Breaking homepage

Website: scape.sg
Location: 2 Orchard Link, *SCAPE
Reputation: Run by competitive bboys including a SEA Games medallist
Best known for: Structured, ambition-driven breaking intensives for youth and young adults

Next: 5. EV Dance
06

5. EV Dance

EV Dance is where I would send someone who wants their breaking taught as a proper beginner course rather than a loose drop-in. Running since 2009, it offers a Breaking ABC, an Absolute Beginner Course built as a structured progression rather than a one-off class. The syllabus walks you through foundations, the basic levels and elevations, the roots of breaking and then the early innovation on those basics, with the stated goal of getting you battle-ready rather than just teaching you to copy a move.

The beginner courses run as a block of weekly lessons, which is the right format for breaking because the skills compound and you need repetition to build them safely. The breaking is taught by an instructor with real bboy background, and EV keeps the whole thing approachable for nervous first-timers. With studios near Farrer Park and Bencoolen, it is also genuinely central. If the idea of walking into a freestyle cypher terrifies you and you want a clear, supportive starting structure, EV Dance is my pick.

EV Dance homepage

Website: evdance.com.sg
Location: 291 Serangoon Road (Farrer Park) and 261 Waterloo Street (Bencoolen)
Reputation: Established 2009, known for structured absolute-beginner courses
Best known for: A graded Breaking ABC course that takes total beginners step by step

Next: 6. O School
07

6. O School

O School is one of the institutions of Singapore street dance, and while it is best known as a hip-hop and choreography powerhouse, it earns a place here for two reasons. First, the foundation it gives you carries straight into breaking. Its 8-week Foundation Course is designed for true beginners and builds the rhythm, body control and stamina that every breaker needs before the floorwork makes sense. Second, the culture in the building is the real street-dance scene, so you are surrounded by serious dancers from the moment you walk in.

If you are completely new to street dance and not yet sure breaking is for you, starting at O School is a smart, low-risk move. You build a base, soak up the culture, and figure out whether you want to commit to the floor. From there it is an easy step into one of the dedicated breaking specialists higher up this list. For a beginner who wants a respected, well-run studio to find their feet in street dance generally, O School is a dependable starting block.

O School homepage

Website: oschool.com.sg
Location: Central Singapore (confirm current studio location when booking)
Reputation: A long-standing pillar of the local street-dance scene
Best known for: A beginner foundation course and deep street-dance culture to build a base

Next: 7. ACTFA Dance School
08

7. ACTFA Dance School

ACTFA is the most accessible way onto this list, and that has real value when you are starting out. It runs a basic BBoy class pitched squarely at people who have watched bboys and bgirls and thought, I want to try that, with the explicit aim of building strength, agility and groove from scratch. There is nothing intimidating about the entry point, which is exactly what a lot of first-timers need before they will commit to a dedicated crew session.

The other draw is structure and price clarity. ACTFA sells its classes in clear packages, from a five-week starter through three-month and annual options, with the per-class cost dropping the longer you commit, and it operates across multiple locations including Little India, Bukit Panjang and Bukit Merah. That makes a regular weekly breaking habit realistic without trekking into the city centre every time. For a budget-conscious beginner who wants a no-pressure introduction to bboying, ACTFA does the job well.

ACTFA Dance School hip hop homepage

Website: actfa.com
Location: Little India, Bukit Panjang and Bukit Merah Central
Reputation: Accessible, package-based classes across several locations
Best known for: A basic BBoy class and clear-priced packages for budget-conscious beginners

Next: 8. Artistate Dance Academy
09

8. Artistate Dance Academy

Artistate is the one I would steer parents toward if it is a child or teenager who wants to break. Based at Selegie, it runs breaking inside its street dance programmes and its kids and teens academy, with a curriculum designed around self-directed, passionate young dancers rather than adults dropping in after work. It also delivers school enrichment and CCA programmes aligned with MOE values, so it is set up to handle younger learners properly, with the structure and pastoral care that implies.

For a young person, that environment matters. Breaking demands physical conditioning and patience, and a programme built specifically for youth, with peers at the same stage and a syllabus that paces progress, keeps a kid engaged far longer than dropping them into an adult session would. If you want your child to learn breaking somewhere structured, central and used to teaching young dancers, Artistate is the natural fit.

Artistate Dance Academy homepage

Website: artistate.com.sg
Location: 1 Selegie Road, Singapore 188306 (Dhoby Ghaut)
Reputation: Youth-focused academy delivering school CCA and enrichment programmes
Best known for: Breaking for kids and teens in a structured, age-appropriate setting

Next: 9. STEP Studio
10

9. STEP Studio

STEP Studio rounds out the list as a community-minded street-dance studio with a warm reputation, summed up by its own tagline about changing lives through dance. Its teaching roster covers hip-hop and specialised styles like popping and waacking alongside contemporary, and while it is not a pure breaking school, the foundations it builds, the groove, the body isolation, the comfort improvising to music, all feed directly into breaking once you progress to the floor.

I include it for the dancer who values atmosphere as much as syllabus. STEP positions itself as a safe, encouraging space for dancers of all backgrounds, which is exactly where a self-conscious beginner can grow confidence before stepping into a tougher cypher environment. Use it to build your street-dance base and your nerve, then bring that into one of the breaking specialists when you are ready to commit to bboying properly. As a friendly home for street dance generally, it is a solid choice.

STEP Studio homepage

Website: step.sg
Location: Central Singapore (confirm current studio address when booking)
Reputation: A welcoming, community-focused street-dance studio
Best known for: A supportive space to build street-dance foundations and confidence

Next: My breakdance class comparison at a glance
11

My breakdance class comparison at a glance

PlaceBest forLocation
Singapore Bboy ClassPure beginner-to-intermediate breakingCentral (venue via Telegram)
Radikal ForzeThe competitive heart of the sceneSingapore / *SCAPE
Recognize! StudiosLevel-graded breaking in a serious studioCentral (relocating)
*SCAPE SDI: BreakingAmbitious, competition-minded youth*SCAPE, Orchard Link
EV DanceStructured beginner Breaking ABC courseFarrer Park and Bencoolen
O SchoolFoundation base before the floorCentral Singapore
ACTFA Dance SchoolBudget-friendly, no-pressure introLittle India, Bukit Panjang, Bukit Merah
Artistate Dance AcademyBreaking for kids and teensSelegie, Dhoby Ghaut
STEP StudioFriendly community street-dance baseCentral Singapore
Next: How much do breakdance classes cost in Singapore?
12

How much do breakdance classes cost in Singapore?

Class typeTypical price (S$)
Single drop-in open classS$15 to S$28
Beginner breaking course (8 weeks)S$160 to S$220
Term or monthly packageS$90 to S$180
Structured breaking intensive (per term)S$200 to S$400
Kids breaking enrichment (per term)S$300 to S$600
Private 1-to-1 breaking coaching (per hour)S$60 to S$120

Treat these as 2026 ballpark figures rather than quotes. The cheapest way in is a single open class, often around S$15 to S$25, which lets you test whether breaking is for you with no commitment. A structured beginner course usually works out better value per session and, more importantly, teaches you in the right order. Private coaching costs the most but is worth it once you are chasing a specific move like a freeze or a windmill safely. Many places offer a discounted trial, so always ask about a first-timer rate before buying a full package.

Next: What I look for in a breakdance class
13

What I look for in a breakdance class

  1. A coach who genuinely breaks. Breaking is too specific to learn from a general choreography teacher. I want an instructor with real bboy or bgirl experience, ideally one who battles or competes, because they teach the dance the way it is meant to move.
  2. Foundations before powermoves. The best classes drill toprock, footwork and freezes properly before anyone attempts a windmill. If a class promises to teach you headspins in week one, that is a red flag, not a selling point.
  3. Conditioning and safe progression. Breaking is hard on wrists, shoulders and the spine. Good coaches build strength and protect your joints, and they grade classes so a beginner is not flailing in an advanced room.
  4. A connection to the scene. Breaking lives in crews, cyphers and battles. A class plugged into the real community will pull you into that culture, which is where you actually grow as a dancer.
  5. A trial or beginner-marked class. The best places let you sample a session and clearly label which class is for newcomers, so you start at the right level rather than guessing.

It is also worth knowing that breaking now sits inside a real arts ecosystem here, not just on the street. Bodies like the National Arts Council support street and urban dance in Singapore, which is part of why the local scene punches above its weight and why events like Radikal Forze Jam can draw world-class dancers. That backing filters down into the quality of teaching you can find if you look for the right room.

Next: How I put this list together
14

How I put this list together

Let me be straight about what this is. I am not a bboy, and I am not ranking these places on my own breaking ability, which is roughly zero. What I do is build and study websites for businesses across Singapore, including those in the arts and lifestyle space, so I spend a lot of time looking at how these schools and crews present themselves, how honestly they describe their classes and levels, and how their reputation holds up across the wider scene and reviews.

So this ranking weighs how seriously each place teaches breaking specifically, the pedigree of the people running it, how well it serves genuine beginners, and how reachable and transparent it is, rather than my own dance skill. It is a 2026 snapshot, and breaking in Singapore is a moving, crew-driven scene, so schedules, venues and even who is teaching can change. Confirm directly before you commit, and I will keep revisiting this guide as the scene shifts and new coaches earn a place.

Next: Is breakdancing hard to learn as a beginner?
15

Is breakdancing hard to learn as a beginner?

It is challenging but absolutely learnable, and you do not need any dance background to start. The early stages are mostly about coordination and rhythm rather than the spectacular spins you see online, so a good beginner class spends weeks on toprock and basic footwork before anyone goes upside down. The honest truth is that breaking rewards consistency more than natural talent. Most people who show up weekly and drill the foundations are doing recognisable footwork and simple freezes within a few months. The powermoves take much longer and that is normal, so judge your progress on clean basics, not on whether you can windmill yet.

Next: Do I need to be strong to start breaking?
16

Do I need to be strong to start breaking?

You do not need to be strong to start, but breaking will build the strength as you go, and good classes train it deliberately. A lot of breaking happens on your hands, so wrist, shoulder and core strength matter more than big muscles, and reputable coaches warm those areas up and condition them progressively to avoid injury. If you are starting from zero fitness, expect the first few weeks to feel demanding in your forearms and core. That is the dance getting you in shape rather than a sign you are not built for it. The key is a coach who scales the conditioning to your level rather than throwing you straight into advanced floorwork.

Next: What age can kids start breakdancing?
17

What age can kids start breakdancing?

Children can start breaking from around six or seven, which is why several places on this list, Artistate and ACTFA in particular, run dedicated kids and teens programmes. At that age it is less about powermoves and more about coordination, rhythm, body awareness and fun, taught in a safe, age-appropriate way. Younger kids can absolutely enjoy it too, but the structured curriculum and conditioning really click from primary-school age upward. If your child is keen, look for a programme built specifically for their age group rather than dropping them into an adult class, because the pacing and supervision are completely different.

Next: What should I wear to a breakdance class?
18

What should I wear to a breakdance class?

Keep it simple and comfortable. Loose or stretchy clothing you can move freely in is ideal, a t-shirt and joggers or track pants work perfectly, and avoid anything too tight or too baggy that will catch on the floor. Footwear matters more than people expect: wear clean, flat-soled trainers with good grip, because you need traction for footwork and a stable base for freezes. Many breakers keep a dedicated pair of indoor shoes so the soles stay clean and grippy. Bring a water bottle, consider wrist support once you start floorwork, and skip jewellery or anything that digs in when you are down on the ground.

That is my run-down of the best breakdance classes Singapore has in 2026. If you want a single starting point, Singapore Bboy Class is the specialist I would book first for pure breaking, Recognize! Studios is the most credible studio doorway thanks to its Radikal Forze pedigree, and EV Dance is the gentlest structured on-ramp if a freestyle cypher feels intimidating. For kids, Artistate, and for the competitively ambitious, the *SCAPE intensives.

Breaking is a small, deep and genuinely welcoming scene here, so the best thing you can do is just show up to a beginner class and start drilling foundations. Once you have found your feet, this guide sits inside my wider Terris Recommends dance series, so take a look at my guide to the best dance studios in Singapore if you want to branch into other styles too.

One last note from my side of the fence. I build websites for studios, schools and lifestyle businesses across Singapore that turn searches exactly like this one into booked classes. If you run a dance studio or a crew and your site is not pulling its weight, take a look at my web design services or just get a quote and we can talk.

Terris — Founder & Lead Strategist

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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