#1Mount Faber Peak
Mount Faber Peak trades sand for elevation, pairing harbour panoramas with glasshouse, ballroom and alfresco choices for Chinese weddings from intimate to larger formats.
Chinese-wedding-friendly options spanning hilltop panoramas, harbour rooftops, beachfront resorts and a marina, with indoor backups where available.
For waterfront views, compare the view and the usable event space separately:
Confirm seated sightlines, sunset timing, wind and rain backup before booking.
Compare shelter, accessibility and wet-weather transfers alongside the view before choosing.
Here’s a quick comparison of the venues based on capacity, pricing, and reviews.
Waterfront wedding venues in Singapore are not all sand-between-your-toes affairs. Some face the harbour from a rooftop, others sit beside the shore, and a few pair sea views with hotel ballrooms when the clouds start plotting.
This shortlist is limited to Chinese-wedding-friendly venues with a clear water-facing setting or view. Compare where guests actually see the water, whether the key space is sheltered, and what the wet-weather alternative looks like before falling for a sunset photo.
Mount Faber Peak trades sand for elevation, pairing harbour panoramas with glasshouse, ballroom and alfresco choices for Chinese weddings from intimate to larger formats.
Little Island brings a relaxed beachfront atmosphere, craft drinks and customisable spaces, ideal for couples planning a less formal Chinese wedding with room to party.
Sip Society’s open-air rooftop overlooks the harbour and Sentosa, fitting Chinese weddings that want flexible catering and an accessible HarbourFront location.
Shangri-La Rasa Sentosa offers resort shoreline settings, giving couples beach, lawn and ballroom options when scenery matters but weather backup matters too.
Sky Garden Sentosa pairs a rooftop garden with sea and skyline views, best for sunset-minded couples comfortable planning around an outdoor ceremony.
Sofitel Sentosa combines South China Sea views at The Cliff with resort ballrooms, suiting couples who want an alfresco moment and hotel infrastructure.
ONE°15 Marina frames celebrations with marina and superyacht views, a polished option for couples who prefer nautical scenery over a sandy beachfront.
Decide whether you want to be beside the water, above it or simply looking towards it. Then inspect the backup space with equal enthusiasm—the rain plan should feel like a wedding venue, not a punishment room.
If you’re still exploring, these related guides may help narrow your shortlist.
Still want more options? We have over 300 different wedding venues in our full directory, ranked according to their reviews. You can filter by capacity, price, location, and venue type.
Browse all wedding venuesNo. Waterfront can include harbour, marina, river or elevated sea views. A beach venue specifically provides direct shoreline or sand access.
Ask when the backup decision is made, whether the backup space is exclusive, how décor is moved, whether the view remains visible and whether additional charges apply.
EXCLUSIVE WEDDING PROMO!
Book the 2 hour Classic Photobooth and get 1 free hour.
Chinese-wedding-friendly options spanning hilltop panoramas, harbour rooftops, beachfront resorts and a marina, with indoor backups where available.
For waterfront views, compare the view and the usable event space separately:
Confirm seated sightlines, sunset timing, wind and rain backup before booking.
Compare shelter, accessibility and wet-weather transfers alongside the view before choosing.
Here’s a quick comparison of the venues based on capacity, pricing, and reviews.
Waterfront wedding venues in Singapore are not all sand-between-your-toes affairs. Some face the harbour from a rooftop, others sit beside the shore, and a few pair sea views with hotel ballrooms when the clouds start plotting.
This shortlist is limited to Chinese-wedding-friendly venues with a clear water-facing setting or view. Compare where guests actually see the water, whether the key space is sheltered, and what the wet-weather alternative looks like before falling for a sunset photo.
Mount Faber Peak trades sand for elevation, pairing harbour panoramas with glasshouse, ballroom and alfresco choices for Chinese weddings from intimate to larger formats.
Little Island brings a relaxed beachfront atmosphere, craft drinks and customisable spaces, ideal for couples planning a less formal Chinese wedding with room to party.
Sip Society’s open-air rooftop overlooks the harbour and Sentosa, fitting Chinese weddings that want flexible catering and an accessible HarbourFront location.
Shangri-La Rasa Sentosa offers resort shoreline settings, giving couples beach, lawn and ballroom options when scenery matters but weather backup matters too.
Sky Garden Sentosa pairs a rooftop garden with sea and skyline views, best for sunset-minded couples comfortable planning around an outdoor ceremony.
Sofitel Sentosa combines South China Sea views at The Cliff with resort ballrooms, suiting couples who want an alfresco moment and hotel infrastructure.
ONE°15 Marina frames celebrations with marina and superyacht views, a polished option for couples who prefer nautical scenery over a sandy beachfront.
Decide whether you want to be beside the water, above it or simply looking towards it. Then inspect the backup space with equal enthusiasm—the rain plan should feel like a wedding venue, not a punishment room.
If you’re still exploring, these related guides may help narrow your shortlist.
Still want more options? We have over 300 different wedding venues in our full directory, ranked according to their reviews. You can filter by capacity, price, location, and venue type.
Browse all wedding venuesNo. Waterfront can include harbour, marina, river or elevated sea views. A beach venue specifically provides direct shoreline or sand access.
Ask when the backup decision is made, whether the backup space is exclusive, how décor is moved, whether the view remains visible and whether additional charges apply.