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The Hidden Nature Walks in Singapore Locals Love but Tourists Miss

Forget the crowds at the top attractions – these under-the-radar green spaces are where Singaporeans go to walk, breathe, and disconnect.

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By Singapore Wellness Desk · Published 4 July 2026 at 10:08 am

3 min read

Updated 21 min ago· 4 July 2026 at 4:08 pm

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This article was generated by AI from the linked public sources. The Daily Singapore is independently owned and covers Singapore news free from advertiser or sponsor influence. Read our editorial standards →

The Hidden Nature Walks in Singapore Locals Love but Tourists Miss
Photo: Photo by Nataliya Vaitkevich on Pexels

Every Saturday at dawn, dozens of joggers and dog walkers slip quietly onto the elevated boardwalk of Windsor Nature Park. Here, as the sunlight filters through tangled rattan vines and the air thrums with bird calls, local residents clock their morning exercise in near solitude – far from the selfie-sticks and tour buses that crowd more famous spots like Gardens by the Bay.

It’s a growing trend across Singapore’s urban heartland: with visitors packing places like the Botanic Gardens and Southern Ridges, locals are heading for hidden trails and overlooked green corridors. In a city of nearly six million where outdoor space is at a premium, these untouristed walks offer a sanctuary of calm and an authentic slice of the local outdoor culture.

Secret Paths Off the Beaten Track

Windsor Nature Park, tucked off Venus Drive near Upper Thomson, is just one example. Completed in 2017, its 75-hectare mosaic of marshland, boardwalks, and dense secondary forest forms the lesser-known gateway to the Central Catchment Reserve. Birdwatchers favour the Drongo Trail for glimpses of the vibrant blue-rumped parrot, while fitness buffs weave through the 2.2 km network of shaded loops usually skipped by inbound tour guides. On a recent weekday morning, a group of retirees from the Kebun Baru Community Club was the only crowd in sight.

Another local favourite lies in Punggol, where the Serangoon Reservoir’s North Eastern Riverine Loop trails past lush lalang fields and mangrove swamps. These 26 kilometres of cycling and jogging paths stretch through quiet corners of Sengkang and Buangkok, far from city crowds. Members of the nearby Hougang ActiveSG Gym often incorporate the boardwalk into their morning fitness circuits, a testament to collaboration between the National Parks Board and the People’s Association, which run regular Nordic-walking and gardening workshops here.

Backing Up the Trend

The push to find new green spaces is showing up in the numbers. The National Parks Board (NParks) reported more than 13 million visits to parks islandwide in 2025, an increase of 8% over two years. But the flagship tourist sites – East Coast Park, Botanic Gardens, MacRitchie Reservoir – account for around half those visits. Off-radar paths like Dairy Farm Nature Park’s Wallace Trail or Bukit Brown’s old kampong lanes see just a trickle by comparison, with some weekend group walks attracting under 20 participants. Accessibility also factors in: Windsor’s free carpark and direct bus service (routes 132, 163, 165, 166, 167, 855) mean locals from Ang Mo Kio to Bukit Timah can nip over by public transport and start their walk with ease.

Cost is minimal, too. Access to all public parks and most nature trails is free. As the price of a gym membership in Singapore edges up to S$120 per month at private chains, it’s no surprise that more residents are lacing up their shoes for a hike instead.

How to Get Started

If you’re hunting for fresh air and quiet this weekend, start with the lesser-travelled loops: Windsor Nature Park’s Hanguana Trail, Punggol Waterway’s scenic promenade, or even Bukit Batok Nature Park’s hidden WWII memorial walk. For structured activities, NParks posts up-to-date schedules for fitness sessions, guided walks, and biodiversity talks on its website. Bring water, sunscreen, and insect repellent – and, crucially, leave the city’s pace at the entrance. If you walk quietly, you might spot a Sunda pangolin or a family of otters, just as regulars at Pasir Ris Park’s mangrove boardwalk often do. No tickets, no queues, just Singapore’s green heart beating quietly just a few streets away.

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Published by The Daily Singapore

Covering wellness in Singapore. This article was generated by AI from the linked sources and was not reviewed by a human editor before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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