Advertisement
Singapore
This Week in AsiaLifestyle & Culture

Clubbing without the cost: Singapore’s Gen Z vibes to ‘cheaper’ daytime raves

Amid challenges in nightlife revival post-pandemic, young people in Singapore and across Asia are opting for affordable alternatives to intoxication and all-nighters

Reading Time:3 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
1
People gather at Beans&Beats, a daytime party collective in Singapore. Sober partying movements similar to Singapore’s are taking shape across Asia. Photo: Beans&Beats
Kimberly LimandNicole Cheahin Singapore
In Singapore, a new kind of party is taking off – fuelled by caffeine instead of alcohol and ending before dark – in a shift observers say reflects a broader trend among Gen Z Asians seeking healthier, cheaper and more mindful ways to socialise.

Across the region, from matcha-fuelled morning raves to curated mocktail events and sober bars in cities like Bangkok and Tokyo, a quiet shift is under way. While fully alcohol-free nightlife remains niche, wellness-oriented alternatives are gaining ground – and Singapore appears to be at the forefront.

At the heart of the city state’s movement is Beans&Beats, a daytime party collective created in 2024 by three 20-somethings who wanted to preserve the energy of clubbing without the hangover or high cost.

Advertisement

“When you go out to a nightlife event, you would have to spend at least about S$100 [US$78] – you’d have to go for pre-game, go into the club itself, then maybe even supper, then the killer is really the Grab [ride] back,” said Matteo Lie, 21, one of the co-founders.

People gather at Beans&Beats, a daytime party collective in Singapore. Parties at the venue end early enough for attendees to get home via public transport. Photo: Beans&Beats
People gather at Beans&Beats, a daytime party collective in Singapore. Parties at the venue end early enough for attendees to get home via public transport. Photo: Beans&Beats

To address this, Lie and fellow co-founders Ethan Lee and Aden Low decided to keep ticket prices between S$15 and S$20 and shut the music off by 7pm – early enough for attendees to get home via public transport.

Advertisement
Advertisement
Select Voice
Choose your listening speed
Get through articles 2x faster
1.25x
250 WPM
Slow
Average
Fast
1.25x