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Terris Recommends Dance Studios 12 min read

9 Best Jazz Dance Studios in Singapore (2026)

My honest pick of the best jazz dance classes Singapore has in 2026, across street jazz, lyrical jazz, jazz funk and musical theatre jazz, with prices, locations and who to book.

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Terris

Founder & Lead Strategist

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If you are hunting for the best jazz dance classes Singapore has in 2026, the first thing to sort out is what you actually mean by jazz, because the word covers four quite different things. A high-energy jazz funk class set to a pop track is worlds apart from an emotive lyrical jazz piece, and both are different again from the sharp, theatrical jazz you see on a Broadway stage. So I spent a while researching this properly, cross-referencing each studio against the specific jazz styles they teach, their instructor pedigree, how they grade for beginners, and how their reputation holds up.

What came out of it is this list of nine studios, chosen for being genuinely strong at jazz rather than just listing it on a long menu. A couple are dedicated jazz and performing-arts schools where technique runs deep. Others are big open-class studios where you can drop into a street jazz or jazz funk session tonight. I have ordered them by overall strength as jazz studios, but read the style notes more closely than the ranking, because fit matters far more than position here.

This guide sits under my broader pick of the best dance studios in Singapore, so if you are still deciding between jazz and another genre entirely, start there. Otherwise, here are the nine jazz dance studios in Singapore I would actually recommend to a friend.

01

Street jazz vs lyrical jazz vs jazz funk vs musical theatre jazz

The single most useful thing I can tell you before the list is that jazz splits into four families, and confusing them is how people end up in the wrong class. Street jazz is the urban one. It borrows from hip-hop, sits on commercial and pop music, and is sharp, grounded and high-energy. Jazz funk is its close cousin, often used interchangeably, but leans even more sensual and diva-like, with syncopated musicality and a lot of attitude. If you want the music-video, commercial-choreography feel, these two are your lane.

Lyrical jazz is the emotional, flowing side. It blends ballet lines and turns with jazz expression, usually danced to songs with lyrics that drive the movement, so it is softer, more connected and more technical than street jazz. Musical theatre jazz is the theatrical one, the Bob Fosse and Broadway tradition, all isolations, jazz hands, storytelling and stage projection. It pairs with singing and acting in a way the others do not.

How do you pick? If you want to sweat, feel cool and learn a routine to a current track, go street jazz or jazz funk. If you want to express a song and build cleaner technique, go lyrical. If you love stage and musicals, go musical theatre jazz. Most beginners are happiest starting with street jazz or a general beginner jazz class, then specialising once they know which feeling they are chasing.

Next: 1. Jazz Artistry Movement
02

1. Jazz Artistry Movement

Jazz Artistry Movement is the one studio on this list built entirely around jazz, which is exactly why it leads. While most studios treat jazz as one line on a broad menu, this is a dedicated jazz school that teaches the full spread, Broadway, lyrical, contemporary, jazz funk and street jazz, across graded levels. If jazz is specifically what you want to get good at, learning it somewhere that lives and breathes the genre makes a real difference.

Classes run out of Converge Studios near Dhoby Ghaut, and the structure moves you through proper levels rather than dropping a newcomer into the deep end. What I rate is the breadth within jazz itself: you can start in a foundational jazz class and then branch into the emotive lyrical side or the punchy jazz funk side as you find your taste, all under instructors who specialise in the style. For a focused jazz education rather than a general dance studio, this is my top shout.

Jazz Artistry Movement homepage

Website: jazzartistrymovement.com
Location: Converge Studios, 60A Orchard Road, Dhoby Ghaut
Google Rating: Well reviewed, a dedicated jazz specialist
Best known for: A focused jazz education across Broadway, lyrical, contemporary and jazz funk

Next: 2. O School
03

2. O School

O School is close to an institution in the Singapore dance scene, and its jazz offering is one of the strongest in town. Based at *SCAPE near Orchard, it runs dedicated street jazz and lyrical jazz open classes taught by some of the most respected names locally, so you get both the urban, high-energy side and the softer, expressive side under one roof. The technique and culture here run deep in a way newer studios cannot fake.

What makes it work is that the doors stay genuinely open to beginners while the ceiling stays high for those who want to push. You can drop into a beginner street jazz class without committing to a term, then progress as you improve. If your goal is to actually get good at jazz rather than just have a fun sweat, O School is where I would send you first.

O School homepage

Website: oschool.com.sg
Location: 2 Orchard Link, #04-04 *SCAPE
Google Rating: Well reviewed, a long-standing scene favourite
Best known for: Street jazz and lyrical jazz with deep scene credibility

Next: 3. 5th Avenue School of Dance
04

3. 5th Avenue School of Dance

5th Avenue is the heartland heavyweight for jazz funk and lyrical jazz, and the sheer reach is the draw. Billing itself as one of the biggest street dance schools in Singapore, it runs classes out of a long list of neighbourhood locations from Ang Mo Kio and Bishan to Tampines and Sembawang, which makes a regular weekly jazz class realistic rather than a trek into town.

The curriculum is built around named jazz programmes, JazzFunkAVE and LyricalJazzAVE among them, for both kids and adults, under an artistic director trained in Korea. So you get structured, syllabus-style progression in the two jazz styles most people search for, close to home. If you want consistent jazz funk or lyrical jazz classes near your neighbourhood rather than a one-off city drop-in, 5th Avenue is the practical pick.

5th Avenue School of Dance homepage

Website: 5thavenue.com.sg
Location: Heartland studios including Ang Mo Kio, Bishan, Tampines and Sembawang
Google Rating: Well reviewed, one of the largest street dance schools in Singapore
Best known for: Accessible jazz funk and lyrical jazz programmes across the heartlands

Next: 4. Converge Studios
05

4. Converge Studios

Converge Studios is where I would point most adults who want street jazz and jazz funk on a flexible, drop-in basis. Across two branches at Dhoby Ghaut and Potong Pasir it runs more than fifty open classes a week, with street jazz and jazz funk firmly among the regular genres, taught by a wide faculty of instructors who each specialise in their own style.

What makes it work for beginners is the open structure paired with clearly labelled levels, so you can find a jazz class pitched at genuine newcomers and you are not locked into a term. Single classes start affordably, with multi-class packages bringing the cost down, which makes it easy to try street jazz one week and jazz funk the next before settling. For maximum jazz flexibility in a central location, this is the default all-rounder.

Converge Studios homepage

Website: convergestudios.sg
Location: Dhoby Ghaut (60A Orchard Road) and Potong Pasir (55 Upper Serangoon Road)
Google Rating: Strongly reviewed across both branches
Best known for: Flexible drop-in street jazz and jazz funk open classes

Next: 5. All That Jazz Dance Academy
06

5. All That Jazz Dance Academy

All That Jazz is the performing-arts specialist on this list, and as the name suggests, jazz sits at the heart of what it does. Alongside ballet and tap, it teaches jazz, lyrical and musical theatre across several polished studios at Orchard, Dunearn and Katong, with a syllabus-driven approach that builds technique properly over time rather than just teaching a routine.

Where it really stands out is musical theatre jazz, the theatrical, Broadway-flavoured side that most urban studios do not touch. If you love stage, storytelling and the Fosse tradition, or you want your child on a structured performing-arts pathway, this is the strongest fit here. The trade-off is that it leans more academy than casual drop-in, so it suits dancers who want to commit and progress.

All That Jazz Dance Academy homepage

Website: allthatjazz.com.sg
Location: Forum (583 Orchard Road), Dunearn Road and i12 Katong
Google Rating: Well reviewed, an established performing-arts academy
Best known for: Technical jazz, lyrical and musical theatre jazz in a syllabus setting

Next: 6. The Dance Place
07

6. The Dance Place

The Dance Place earns its spot for covering the widest spread of jazz styles in one school, and for doing it across both kids and adults. Based at Forum on Orchard Road, its menu includes jazz, lyrical and musical theatre jazz alongside its other genres, so whether you want the flowing lyrical side or the theatrical Broadway side, you can find it without changing studios.

The detail I rate is that they arrange a complimentary trial class first to place each student at the correct level, which is exactly the kind of care that stops a beginner ending up in the wrong room. For households juggling multiple ages and jazz styles, or an adult who wants to sample lyrical and musical theatre jazz before committing, The Dance Place is the most flexible family-friendly option here.

The Dance Place homepage

Website: thedanceplace.net
Location: 583 Orchard Road, #08-02/03 Forum
Google Rating: Well reviewed, strong with families
Best known for: Jazz, lyrical and musical theatre jazz for kids and adults

Next: 7. Actfa School of Dance
08

7. Actfa School of Dance

Actfa is the studio I would send an adult who wants to learn lyrical jazz and contemporary technique properly, without a kids-academy feel. Based near Little India MRT, its beginner lyrical jazz and contemporary classes are pitched squarely at adults and cover the fundamentals, footwork, floorwork, leaps and turns, so you build a real foundation rather than just copying choreography.

The blend it teaches is the classic lyrical one: the elegant lines, spins and flexibility of ballet fused with the expressive body movement of modern dance. For an adult beginner who finds street jazz a bit too high-energy and wants something more flowing and technical, Actfa is a focused, no-frills place to start. The central location near Little India also makes it easy to reach after work.

Actfa School of Dance homepage

Website: actfa.com
Location: 47A Chander Road, near Little India MRT
Google Rating: Well reviewed, adult-focused teaching
Best known for: Adult lyrical jazz and contemporary technique for beginners

Next: 8. Danz People
09

8. Danz People

Danz People is one of the veterans, running since 2008 out of Marina Square, and it has stayed relevant by covering the jazz styles adults most want at a fair price. The curriculum includes jazz and street jazz alongside contemporary and hip-hop, which makes it a strong middle ground between the pure urban studios and the technical academies.

What I like is the breadth and value. Single open classes sit at a friendly price, the studio caters to adults, kids and even special-needs dancers, and the longevity means the teaching is settled rather than experimental. If you want street jazz and contemporary in a central spot without paying a premium, Danz People is a dependable all-rounder that has earned its place over more than fifteen years.

Danz People homepage

Website: danzpeople.com
Location: 6 Raffles Boulevard, Marina Square
Google Rating: Well reviewed, operating since 2008
Best known for: Affordable street jazz and contemporary under one veteran roof

Next: 9. Dance Arts Singapore
10

9. Dance Arts Singapore

Dance Arts Singapore rounds out the list as the heritage technical pick. As one of the oldest dance schools in the country, with close to forty years behind it, its expertise sits in ballet, tap and jazz, which means the jazz it teaches is grounded in real classical technique rather than choreography alone. Based in Bugis opposite Bugis Junction, it is also genuinely central.

The appeal here is pedigree and structure. A school with decades of teaching tends to produce clean, syllabus-based jazz with proper foundations, which suits anyone who values technique and progression over the latest commercial routine. If you want to learn jazz the considered, well-drilled way from an institution that has been doing it for generations, Dance Arts is a credible, central choice.

Dance Arts Singapore homepage

Website: dancearts.com.sg
Location: 520 North Bridge Road, Wisma Alsagoff, Bugis
Google Rating: Well reviewed, close to 40 years established
Best known for: Technically grounded jazz from a heritage ballet and tap school

Next: My jazz studio comparison at a glance
11

My jazz studio comparison at a glance

StudioBest forLocation
Jazz Artistry MovementDedicated jazz across all four stylesConverge Studios, Dhoby Ghaut
O SchoolStreet jazz and lyrical jazz with scene cred*SCAPE, Orchard Link
5th AvenueHeartland jazz funk and lyrical jazzAMK, Bishan, Tampines and more
Converge StudiosFlexible drop-in street jazz and jazz funkDhoby Ghaut and Potong Pasir
All That JazzTechnical and musical theatre jazzOrchard, Dunearn, Katong
The Dance PlaceLyrical and musical theatre jazz, familiesForum, Orchard Road
ActfaAdult lyrical jazz and contemporaryChander Road, Little India
Danz PeopleAffordable street jazz and contemporaryMarina Square
Dance Arts SingaporeTechnically grounded heritage jazzWisma Alsagoff, Bugis
Next: How much do jazz dance classes cost in Singapore?
12

How much do jazz dance classes cost in Singapore?

Class typeTypical price (S$)
Single drop-in jazz open classS$20 to S$30
5-class passS$90 to S$140
10-class passS$170 to S$260
Adult term-based jazz course (per term)S$280 to S$520
Musical theatre / technical jazz course (per term)S$320 to S$600
Kids jazz term-based course (per term)S$300 to S$600
Private 1-to-1 jazz class (per hour)S$80 to S$150

Treat these as 2026 ballpark figures, not quotes. The cheapest way into jazz is a single drop-in open class at a studio like Converge or Danz People, which lets you test street jazz or jazz funk with no commitment. Multi-class passes bring the per-class cost down, while syllabus-based technical and musical theatre jazz courses at academies like All That Jazz sit at the higher end because they build deeper technique over a term. Many studios offer a discounted trial, so always ask about a first-timer rate before buying a full package.

Next: What I look for in a jazz dance studio
13

What I look for in a jazz dance studio

  1. Clarity on which jazz they teach. A good studio names the style, street jazz, lyrical, jazz funk or musical theatre jazz, rather than lumping it all under one vague jazz class. That tells you they take the differences seriously.
  2. Classes graded by level. A studio that clearly labels beginner, Level 1 and Level 2 is one where a newcomer will not be lost behind an intermediate routine. This is the single most important thing for anyone starting out.
  3. Instructor pedigree in jazz specifically. Jazz technique is its own discipline, so I look for teachers with real performance, competition or stage experience in the jazz style they teach, not just general dance credits.
  4. The right structure for you. Open drop-in classes suit busy adults sampling street jazz and jazz funk; term-based courses build deeper lyrical and technical jazz. Pick the model that matches your life.
  5. A trial class. The best studios let you try before you commit and place you at the correct level first. If a studio will not let you sample a jazz class, that tells you something.

One more thing worth knowing: dance in Singapore is backed by a real arts ecosystem, and bodies like the National Arts Council support dance education and companies here, which is part of why the standard of jazz and contemporary teaching is genuinely high. It is also why you will find both commercial street jazz studios and more classically grounded performing-arts academies thriving side by side.

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 professional jazz dancer, and I am not ranking these studios on my own technique. 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 places present themselves, how clearly they explain their jazz styles and levels, and how their reputation holds up across reviews.

So this ranking weighs jazz-specific depth, instructor and studio pedigree, how well each place serves beginners, review consistency and pricing transparency, rather than my personal dance ability. It is a 2026 snapshot, and details like schedules, prices and locations can change, so confirm directly with any studio before you book. I revisit and update this guide as the scene shifts and new studios earn a place.

Next: What is the difference between street jazz and lyrical jazz?
15

What is the difference between street jazz and lyrical jazz?

Street jazz is the urban, high-energy side of jazz. It borrows heavily from hip-hop, sits on commercial and pop music, and feels sharp, grounded and cool, the kind of choreography you see in music videos. Lyrical jazz is the opposite end. It fuses ballet lines, turns and flexibility with jazz expression and is usually danced to songs with lyrics that drive the emotion, so it is softer, more flowing and more technically demanding. If you want to feel powerful and learn a commercial routine, go street jazz. If you want to express a song and build cleaner technique, go lyrical.

Next: Is jazz dance good for beginners?
16

Is jazz dance good for beginners?

Yes, jazz is one of the more beginner-friendly dance styles in Singapore, as long as you start in the right class. A beginner street jazz or general jazz class teaches choreography in clear counts and builds coordination, rhythm and confidence without assuming any background. The key is to book a class marked beginner or Level 1 rather than an open or intermediate one, and to pick a studio that grades its classes by level, like O School, Converge or 5th Avenue, so you are learning at a pace that actually suits a newcomer.

Next: Do I need a dance background to start jazz?
17

Do I need a dance background to start jazz?

No. Almost every studio on this list runs jazz classes specifically for complete beginners, and you do not need any prior training to join one. That said, a little ballet helps if you are heading into lyrical or technical jazz, because both lean on lines, turns and control, which is why studios like Actfa and All That Jazz weave foundational technique into their beginner classes. For street jazz and jazz funk, you can walk in with zero experience and pick it up from the first eight-count. Start with a beginner-labelled class and let the technique build from there.

Next: What should I wear to a jazz dance class?
18

What should I wear to a jazz dance class?

Keep it simple and comfortable. Wear fitted activewear you can move and stretch in, a tee or tank with leggings or shorts, so the instructor can see your lines and correct your technique. For street jazz and jazz funk, clean trainers with good grip are the norm, while lyrical and technical jazz are often danced barefoot, in socks or in soft jazz shoes, so check with the studio first. Bring water and arrive a few minutes early for the warm-up, which matters more in jazz than people expect because of all the turns and floorwork.

That is my run-down of the best jazz dance classes Singapore has on offer in 2026. If you want a single safe starting point, Jazz Artistry Movement gives you a dedicated jazz education across every style, while O School and Converge are the easiest places to drop into street jazz and jazz funk tonight. For the more technical and theatrical end, All That Jazz and The Dance Place are where I would go for lyrical and musical theatre jazz.

Remember the right jazz studio depends entirely on which jazz you mean and your level, so decide whether you want street, lyrical, jazz funk or musical theatre jazz first, then pick from the list above. This guide is one spoke of my wider pick of the best dance studios in Singapore, so head there if you want to compare jazz against other genres like hip-hop, K-pop or ballet before you commit.

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 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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