THE STATUTES OF THE REPUBLIC OF SINGAPORE
IMMIGRATION ACT 1959
                          2020 REVISED EDITION
           This revised edition incorporates all amendments up to and
  including 1 December 2021 and comes into operation on 31 December 2021.
                          Prepared and Published by
                    THE LAW REVISION COMMISSION
                       UNDER THE AUTHORITY OF
               THE REVISED EDITION OF THE LAWS ACT 1983
    Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
                                                                      2020 Ed.
               Immigration Act 1959
                      ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS
                                       PART 1
                                PRELIMINARY
Section
    1.    Short title
    2.    Interpretation
    3.    Appointment and powers of Controller and immigration officers
    4.    Power of Minister to issue directions
                                       PART 2
          ENTRY INTO AND DEPARTURE FROM SINGAPORE
   5.   Entry into and departure from Singapore
   5A. Person entering or leaving Singapore to produce passport, etc.
   5AA. Matters relating to child prevented from leaving or being taken
        out of Singapore
   5B. Facilities at authorised areas
   6.   Control of entry into and departure from Singapore
   6A. Non-citizens born in Singapore
   7.   Right of entry
   8.   Prohibited immigrants
   9.   Power to prohibit or limit entry into Singapore
                                       PART 2A
                 SINGAPORE VISAS FOR NON-CITIZENS
   9A.    Singapore visas
   9B.    Visas essential for travel
   9C.    Effect of Singapore visa
                                       PART 3
                     ENTRY AND RE-ENTRY PERMITS
  10.     Entry permits
  11.     Re-entry permits
                                          1
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Section
  11AA. Validity of re‑entry permit, etc.
  11A. Persons ceasing to be citizens of Singapore
  12.   Endorsement of names of wife and children on permits, passes
        and certificates
  13.   Power to make inquiries
  14.   Controller’s cancellation of and declarations regarding permits
        and certificates
  15.   Unlawful entry or presence in Singapore
                                   PART 4
                    PROCEDURE ON ARRIVAL IN AND
                     DEPARTURE FROM SINGAPORE
   16.   Immigration signal
   17.   Vessel to stop, proceed to immigration or departure anchorage or
         other place when ordered
   18.   Aircraft arriving in or departing from Singapore
   18A. Train arriving in or leaving Singapore
   18B. Vehicles arriving in or leaving Singapore
   19.   Persons not to board or leave vessel until examination completed
   20.   Prohibition on disembarking from or boarding ships without
         permission of immigration officer
   21.   Prohibition of removal of articles before examination
   22.   Provision of passenger and crew information by master, etc., of
         vessel arriving in, leaving or due to leave Singapore
   22A. Provision of passenger and crew information in advance by
         master, etc., of vessel due to arrive in Singapore
   23.   Provision of passenger and crew information by captain, etc., of
         aircraft arriving in, leaving or due to leave Singapore
   23AA. Provision of passenger and crew information in advance by
         captain, etc., of aircraft due to arrive in Singapore
   23A. Provision of passenger and crew information by master, etc., of
         train arriving in, leaving or due to leave Singapore
   23B. Provision of passenger and crew information in advance by
         master, etc., of train due to arrive in Singapore
   24.   Examination of persons arriving by sea
   25.   Examination of persons arriving at authorised airport
   25A. Examination of persons arriving by train
   26.   Examination of persons entering Singapore by land or at place
         other than authorised landing place or airport
   27.   Power to send person to depot for further examination
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3                           Immigration Act 1959                            2020 Ed.
Section
  28.      Interrogation of travellers
  29.      Medical examination
  30.      Immigration officer may give instructions to prevent evasion of
           examination
                                    PART 5
                       REMOVAL FROM SINGAPORE
    31.    Removal of prohibited immigrants from Singapore
    31A.   Power of Controller to remove prohibited immigrants
    32.    Removal of illegal immigrants
    33.    Removal of persons unlawfully remaining in Singapore
    33A.   Removal of persons ceasing to be citizens of Singapore
    34.    Detention of persons ordered to be removed
    35.    Power to arrest person liable to removal
    36.    Unlawful return after removal
                                   PART 5A
               OBLIGATIONS RELATING TO IDENTIFYING
             INFORMATION OR PASSENGER INFORMATION
    36A.   Interpretation of this Part
    36B.   Authorising access to or disclosure of identifying information
           and passenger information
    36C.   Accessing or disclosing identifying information or passenger
           information
                                    PART 6
                              MISCELLANEOUS
    37.    Performance of duties of immigration officers
    38.    Authority of immigration officer to arrest and prosecute
    38A.   Immigration officer to be armed
    39.    Power to summon witnesses, etc.
    39A.   Exclusion of judicial review
    39B.   Opportunity to be heard not required to be given
    40.    Duty of police officers to execute orders
    41.    Restriction on discharge of member of crew
    42.    Signing on or bringing as member of crew any person with intent
           to land contrary to this Act
    43.    Security to prevent unlawful landing
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2020 Ed.                    Immigration Act 1959                          4
Section
  44.      Reports as to persons failing to continue their journey
  45.      Repatriation
  46.      Masters, owners, etc., liable for expenses
  47.      Obligation to afford free passage
  47A.     Seizure of moneys for purposes of repatriation, etc.
  48.      Power to detain vessel
  49.      Power to seize, detain and forfeit vessels below 200 tons or
           vehicles
   50.     Power of interrogation
   51.     Power of search and arrest for offence under Act
   51AA.   Power of search and arrest for offences committed within
           authorised area, etc.
   51AB.   Power to arrest other persons within authorised area, etc.
   51AC.   Power to detain stolen vehicle within authorised area, etc.
   51AD.   Procedure for arrest
   51AE.   Power to search person in immigration depot
   51AF.   Bail and bond
   51A.    Provision of information by Housing and Development Board
   52.     Person registered under Enlistment Act 1970
   53.     [Repealed]
   54.     Counterfoils, etc., to be prima facie evidence
   55.     Regulations
   56.     Power to exempt from provisions of this Act
   57.     Offences
   57A.    Prohibition of immigration offender entering or remaining at
           work place
   57B.    Assisting, encouraging or inducing giving of shelter to
           immigration offenders
   57C.    Marriage of convenience
   57D.    Wearing and possession of uniforms, etc., by others
   58.     General penalty
   58A.    When sentence of caning is prevented from being carried out
   59.     Composition of offences
   60.     Jurisdiction of Courts
   61.     Disposal of fees, rates, fines and forfeitures
   61A.    Amendment of Schedule
   62.     Saving
           The Schedule — Personal identifiers
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
5                          Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
An Act relating to immigration into, and departure from, Singapore.
                                                      [16 September 1963]
                                  PART 1
                             PRELIMINARY
Short title
    1. This Act is the Immigration Act 1959.
Interpretation
    2. In this Act, unless the context otherwise requires —
       “advance passenger information” means information relating to
          any passenger required to be furnished to the Controller prior
          to the arrival in Singapore of the vessel, aircraft or train (as
          the case may be) on which the passenger will be travelling to
          Singapore;
       “arrestable offence” and “non‑arrestable offence” have the
          meanings given by section 2(1) of the Criminal Procedure
          Code 2010;
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
       “arrive” means —
              (a) in relation to an aircraft, the aircraft coming to a stop
                  after landing;
              (b) in relation to a vessel or ship, the securing of the
                  vessel or ship for any purposes, including for the
                  embarkation or disembarkation of its passengers or
                  the loading or unloading of its cargo or stores or both;
                  or
              (c) in relation to a train, the train coming to a stop at a
                  train checkpoint;
       “authorised airport”, “authorised landing place”, “authorised
          train checkpoint”, “authorised point of entry”, “authorised
          departing place” and “authorised point of departure” mean,
          respectively, an airport, a landing place, a train checkpoint, a
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2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                                  6
           point of entry, a departing place or a point of departure
           declared as such under section 5;
      “authorised area” means an authorised airport, authorised
         landing place, authorised train checkpoint, authorised point
         of entry, authorised place of embarkation, authorised
         departing place, authorised point of departure or
         immigration control post declared as such under section 5;
      “auxiliary police officer” means a person appointed as such
         under Part 9 of the Police Force Act 2004;
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
      “certificate” means a certificate of status issued under the
         provisions of any regulations made under section 55;
      “Controller” means the Controller of Immigration appointed
        under section 3;
      “Controller of Work Passes” means the Controller of Work
        Passes appointed under section 3 of the Employment of
        Foreign Manpower Act 1990;
      “country” includes a State or territory;
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
      “crew” includes every seaman on a vessel, and every person
         employed in the operation of an aircraft or a train or in any
         service rendered to the crew or passengers of an aircraft in
         flight or a train in motion;
      “Director of Marine” means the Director of Marine appointed
        under section 4(1) of the Merchant Shipping Act 1995 and
        includes the Deputy Director of Marine appointed under that
        subsection and such other officers appointed under
        section 4(3) of that Act as the Director of Marine may
        authorise to carry out any of his or her duties under this Act;
      “document” includes —
              (a) any endorsement;
              (b) any paper or other material where there is writing;
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
7                      Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
          (c) any paper or other material on which there are marks,
              figures, symbols or perforations that are —
                 (i) capable of being given a meaning by persons
                     qualified to interpret them; or
                (ii) capable of being responded to by a computer, a
                     machine or an electronic device;
          (d) any article or material from which information is
              capable of being reproduced with or without the aid
              of any other article or device; or
          (e) any electronic record;
    “electronic record” has the meaning given by section 2(1) of the
       Electronic Transactions Act 2010;
    “employ” means to engage or use the service of any person,
      whether under a contract of service or otherwise, with or
      without remuneration;
    “entry” means —
          (a) in the case of a person arriving by sea, disembarking
              in Singapore from the vessel in which he or she
              arrives;
          (b) in the case of a person arriving by air at an authorised
              airport, leaving the precincts of such airport;
          (c) in the case of a person entering by land and
              proceeding to an immigration control post under
              section 26 or an authorised train checkpoint under
              section 25A, leaving the precincts of such post or
              checkpoint for any purpose other than that of
              departing from Singapore by an approved route;
         (ca) in the case of a child born in Singapore on or after
              15 January 2005 who is not a citizen of Singapore, his
              or her birth in Singapore; and
          (d) in any other case, any entry into Singapore by land,
              sea or air,
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2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                                  8
           but shall not include in any case an entry made for the
           purpose of complying with this Act or an entry, expressly or
           impliedly, sanctioned by an immigration officer for the
           purpose of any enquiry or detention under the provisions of
           this Act;
      “entry permit” means a permit to enter or remain in Singapore
         issued under section 10;
      “harbour” means to give food or shelter, and includes the act of
         assisting a person in any way to evade apprehension;
      “immigration control post” means a post established as such by
         the Controller at a place declared to be an immigration
         control post under section 5;
      “immigration depot” means any place designated by the
         Controller for the examination, inspection or detention of
         persons under this Act or any other written law;
                                                    [Act 13 of 2024 wef 09/04/2024]
      “immigration officer” means any person appointed under
         section 3;
      “immigration signal” means such signal as may be prescribed
         for vessels which arrive in Singapore;
      “leave” means —
              (a) in the case of a person leaving Singapore by sea,
                  embarking in Singapore on a vessel which is about to
                  leave Singapore and remaining on board such vessel
                  at the time of its departure for any place outside
                  Singapore;
              (b) in the case of a person leaving Singapore by air,
                  boarding an aircraft in Singapore which is about to
                  depart from Singapore;
              (c) in the case of a person leaving Singapore by land,
                  boarding and remaining in a train or other vehicle
                  which is about to leave Singapore; and
              (d) in the case of a vessel, an aircraft or a train leaving
                  Singapore by sea, air or land (as the case may be),
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
9                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
               departing from any authorised departing place in
               Singapore by sea, or from any airport or train
               checkpoint in Singapore, for any place outside
               Singapore;
    “master” —
           (a) in relation to a vessel, means any person (except a
               pilot or harbour master) having for the time being
               control or charge thereof;
           (b) in relation to an aircraft, means the captain thereof;
               and
           (c) in relation to a train, means the driver of the train or
               any person having for the time being control or
               charge thereof;
    “non-citizen” means any person who is not a citizen of
       Singapore;
    “occupier”, in relation to any premises or place, includes —
           (a) the person having the charge, management or control
               of either the whole or part of the premises or place,
               either on the person’s own account or as an agent; and
           (b) a contractor who is carrying out building operations
               or construction works at the premises or place on
               behalf of some other person;
    “pass” means a pass issued under the regulations entitling the
       holder thereof to remain, or enter and remain, temporarily in
       Singapore;
    “passenger” means any person carried in a vessel, an aircraft or a
       train, other than the members of the crew;
    “permit” includes an entry permit and a re-entry permit;
    “personal identifier” means any of the identifiers specified in
       the Schedule (including any in digital form);
    “prohibited immigrant” means any person who is a prohibited
       immigrant as defined in section 8;
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2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                                10
      “re-entry permit” means a permit issued under section 11;
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
      “regulations” means regulations made under this Act;
      “seaman” includes the master and any person carried in a vessel
         as a bona fide member of the staff employed in the operation
         or service of the vessel and, if the vessel has articles, entered
         on the articles;
      “Singapore visa” means a Singapore visa granted under Part 2A;
      “stowaway” means a person who is secreted in a vessel, an
         aircraft or a train without the consent of the master or other
         person in charge of the vessel, aircraft or train and includes
         such a person who is arriving in or departing from Singapore
         on board any vessel, aircraft or train without the consent of
         the master or other person in charge of the vessel, aircraft or
         train;
      “through passenger” means any passenger who arrives in
         Singapore by a vessel, an aircraft or a train and who is
         continuing his or her journey in the same vessel, aircraft or
         train to a place outside Singapore;
      “transportation company” means any government, municipality,
         body corporate, or organisation, firm or person carrying or
         providing for the transit of passengers, whether by vessel,
         aircraft, railway, highway or otherwise, and includes any 2 or
         more such transporting companies co‑operating in the
         business of carrying passengers;
      “vehicle” means any vehicle whether mechanically propelled or
         otherwise;
      “vessel” includes any ship or boat or other description of
         floating craft used in navigation, and includes any tackle,
         equipment, book, document, goods, cargo or things carried
         therein or thereon.
                                                                         [18/2012]
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
11                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
Appointment and powers of Controller and immigration
officers
 3.—(1) The Minister may appoint a Controller of Immigration and
such number of immigration officers as the Minister may consider
necessary for the proper carrying out of the provisions of this Act.
 (2) The powers and discretions vested in the Controller under this
Act, and the duties required to be discharged by the Controller may,
subject to section 4 and to such limitations as the Controller may
impose, be exercised and discharged by immigration officers duly
authorised by the Controller to act on the Controller’s behalf.
Power of Minister to issue directions
 4.—(1) The Minister may from time to time give the Controller
directions of a general character, and not inconsistent with the
provisions of this Act, as to the exercise of the powers and discretions
conferred on the Controller by, and the duties required to be
discharged by the Controller under, this Act or any regulations or
orders made under this Act, in relation to all matters which appear to
the Minister to affect the immigration policy of Singapore.
 (2) The Controller must give effect to all directions given under
subsection (1).
                                PART 2
     ENTRY INTO AND DEPARTURE FROM SINGAPORE
Entry into and departure from Singapore
 5.—(1) The Minister may, by notification in the Gazette, prescribe
approved routes and declare such immigration control posts, landing
places, airports, train checkpoints or points of entry, as the Minister
may consider to be necessary for the purposes of this Act, to be
immigration control posts, authorised landing places, authorised
airports, authorised train checkpoints or authorised points of entry, as
the case may be.
 (1A) In declaring under subsection (1) any place to be an
immigration control post, a landing place or an authorised point of
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2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                              12
entry, the Minister may specify that it or any part of the place is to be
an immigration control post, a landing place or an authorised place of
entry generally only for a fixed period or for fixed periods of time in
any day, or only for the separate and exclusive immigration clearance
of a particular person or class of persons.
                                                                       [18/2012]
 (2) A person must not, unless compelled by accident or other
reasonable cause, enter or attempt to enter Singapore except at an
authorised landing place, airport, train checkpoint or point of entry.
 (3) The Minister may, by notification in the Gazette, prescribe
approved routes and declare such immigration control posts, places of
embarkation, authorised airports, authorised train checkpoints,
authorised departing places or authorised points of departure, as
the case may be.
 (3A) In declaring under subsection (3) any place to be an authorised
departing place or an authorised point of departure, the Minister may
specify that it or any part of the place is to be an authorised departing
place or an authorised point of departure generally only for a fixed
period or for fixed periods of time in any day, or only for the separate
and exclusive immigration clearance of a particular person or class of
persons.
                                                                       [18/2012]
 (4) A person must not, unless compelled by accident or other
reasonable cause, leave or attempt to leave Singapore except at an
authorised place of embarkation, airport, train checkpoint, departing
place or point of departure.
 (5) Any person who contravenes subsection (2) or (4) shall be
guilty of an offence.
 (6) Without affecting subsection (1A) or (3A), where upon the
application of any person (called in this section the applicant), any
place or any part of that place is declared under subsection (1) or (3)
(as the case may be) to be an immigration control post, a landing
place, an authorised point of entry or an authorised departing place or
authorised point of departure for the separate and exclusive
immigration clearance of the applicant, or a particular person or
class of persons associated with the applicant, the Controller may,
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13                       Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
with the approval of the Minister, require the applicant to pay to the
Controller a rate, at such intervals and at such amount or rate as may
be prescribed, for or in connection with immigration clearance
performed by immigration officers at that place or part thereof.
                                                                       [18/2012]
 (7) The number of immigration officers to be deployed at any
immigration control post, landing place, authorised point of entry,
authorised departing place or authorised point of departure mentioned
in subsection (6) is to be determined at the Controller’s discretion.
                                                                       [18/2012]
 (8) In this section, unless the context otherwise requires —
     “immigration clearance”, in relation to any person, includes
        refusing the person entry into Singapore or exit from
        Singapore;
     “separate and exclusive immigration clearance” includes
        immigration clearance carried out only during a particular
        period or periods in a day for a particular person or class of
        persons.
                                                                       [18/2012]
Person entering or leaving Singapore to produce passport, etc.
  5A.—(1) Subject to subsections (1A) and (2), every person,
whether a citizen of Singapore or a non‑citizen, who is arriving in
Singapore (by air, sea or land) from a place outside Singapore, or is
leaving Singapore (by air, sea or land) to a place outside Singapore,
must present to an immigration officer or an automated clearance
system (if available) at the authorised airport, authorised landing
place, authorised train checkpoint, authorised point of entry,
authorised departing place or authorised point of departure, as the
case may be —
      (a) if the person is a citizen of Singapore (whether or not the
          person is also the national of a foreign country) — the
          person’s Singapore passport that is valid, and any other
          prescribed evidence of the person’s identity and Singapore
          citizenship; or
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
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2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                                14
       (b) if the person is a non-citizen —
               (i) the person’s foreign passport or other foreign travel
                   document that is valid, and such other evidence of
                   the person’s identity as the immigration officer or the
                   automated clearance system (as the case may be)
                   may require; and
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
              (ii) where a Singapore visa is required by section 9B,
                   evidence of a Singapore visa that is in effect and is
                   held by the person.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (1A) Despite an automated clearance system being made available
to a person mentioned in subsection (1), the person may be required
by an immigration officer or the automated clearance system to
appear before an immigration officer for immigration clearance.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (1B) To avoid doubt, a person may be required under subsection
(1A) to appear before an immigration officer for immigration
clearance even after the person has used an automated clearance
system for immigration clearance.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (1C) If a person mentioned in subsection (1) is required under
subsection (1A) to appear before an immigration officer for
immigration clearance, the person must present to the immigration
officer —
       (a) in the case of a citizen of Singapore (whether or not the
           person is also the national of a foreign country) — the
           person’s Singapore passport that is valid, and any
           prescribed evidence of the person’s identity and
           Singapore citizenship; or
       (b) in the case of a non‑citizen —
               (i) the person’s foreign passport or other foreign travel
                   document that is valid, and such other evidence of
                   the person’s identity as the immigration officer may
                   require; and
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
15                       Immigration Act 1959                          2020 Ed.
           (ii) where a Singapore visa is required by section 9B,
                evidence of a Singapore visa that is in effect and is
                held by the person.
                                                 [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (2) The immigration officer may waive —
      (a) the requirements of a passport or travel document if the
          person is a citizen of Singapore and in prescribed
          circumstances; or
      (b) the requirements of a passport, travel document or
          Singapore visa in the case of any person entering
          Singapore from a place outside Singapore and holding a
          valid entry permit, re-entry permit or certificate of status
          issued in accordance with this Act.
 (3) Any person who contravenes subsection (1) or (1C) shall be
guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine not
exceeding $2,000 or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6
months or to both.
                                                 [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (4) Subsections (1) and (1A) do not apply to such categories of
persons as the Minister may prescribe.
                                                 [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (5) In this section —
     “automated clearance system” means an automated
        identification processing system for the immigration
        clearance of persons registered in the system;
     “immigration clearance” has the meaning given by section 5(8).
                                                 [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Matters relating to child prevented from leaving or being taken
out of Singapore
 5AA.—(1) Subsection (2) applies when —
      (a) a court order is issued restraining any parent of a child, or
          any other person, from taking the child out of Singapore;
      (b) the Controller is notified of the court order; and
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2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                                16
           (c) pursuant to the court order, an immigration officer prevents
               the child from leaving or being taken out of Singapore.
 (2) An immigration officer may do any one or more of the
following in relation to the child:
       (a) inform a specified person for the child;
       (b) keep the child in an authorised area until any of the
           following persons accompanies the child out of the
           authorised area (but without leaving Singapore):
                 (i) the specified person who is informed under
                     paragraph (a), or a person authorised by that
                     specified person;
                (ii) a police officer;
           (c) if the child is kept in an authorised area under paragraph (b)
               — allow any person travelling with the child to remain
               with the child in the authorised area.
 (3) No liability shall lie personally against any immigration officer
who, acting in good faith and with reasonable care, does or omits to
do anything —
       (a) in compliance or purported compliance with a court order
           mentioned in subsection (1); or
       (b) in the exercise or purported exercise of a power under
           subsection (2).
 (4) In this section, “specified person”, for a child, means —
       (a) the child’s parent; or
       (b) a person who is lawfully appointed by deed or will or by
           the order of a competent court to be the guardian of the
           child.
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Facilities at authorised areas
 5B.—(1) The Minister may, by written notice, require the owner or
occupier of any premises within which an authorised area is or is to be
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
17                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
located (called in this section the relevant owner or occupier), but not
the Government —
      (a) to provide and maintain in the authorised area, at the
          relevant owner’s or occupier’s cost, such facilities and
          resources as the Minister considers necessary for the
          proper, secure and efficient functioning of the authorised
          area, including providing such facilities to the immigration
          officers whose duties require their presence within or at the
          perimeter of the authorised area; or
      (b) to permit the establishment of immigration offices within
          the authorised area.
                                                                     [18/2012]
 (2) The Minister may give to the relevant owner or occupier such
written directions as may be necessary —
      (a) to ensure compliance with the provisions of this Act and
          the regulations; or
      (b) for the proper, secure and efficient functioning of the
          authorised area.
                                                                     [18/2012]
 (3) The relevant owner or occupier must comply with the written
notice or direction served or given to the relevant owner or occupier
under subsection (1) or (2).
                                                                     [18/2012]
 (4) Any relevant owner or occupier who or which fails to comply
with subsection (3) shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on
conviction to a fine of not less than $100,000 and not more than
$200,000 and, in the case of a continuing offence, to a further fine not
exceeding $2,000 for every day or part of a day during which the
offence continues after conviction.
                                                                     [18/2012]
 (5) Where a body corporate is guilty of an offence under
subsection (4) and that offence is proved to have been committed
with the authority, consent or connivance of any director, manager,
secretary or other similar officer of the body corporate or of any
person purporting to act in any such capacity, he or she, as well as the
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                              18
body corporate, shall each be guilty of that offence and shall each be
liable to be proceeded against and punished accordingly.
                                                                         [18/2012]
 (6) In this section, “owner” means any person who has an estate or
interest in the premises and whose permission to enter the premises is
needed by another before that other may enter the premises.
                                                                         [18/2012]
Control of entry into and departure from Singapore
 6.—(1) A person, other than a citizen of Singapore, must not enter
or attempt to enter Singapore unless —
       (a) he or she is in possession of a valid entry permit or re‑entry
           permit lawfully issued to him or her under section 10 or 11;
       (b) his or her name is endorsed upon a valid entry permit or
           re‑entry permit in accordance with section 12, and he or
           she is in the company of the holder of that permit;
           (c) he or she is in possession of a valid pass lawfully issued to
               him or her to enter Singapore; or
       (d) he or she is exempted from this subsection by an order
           made under section 56.
 (2) Every person departing from Singapore, other than a citizen of
Singapore or a person exempted from this subsection by an order
made under section 56, must, if so required by an immigration officer,
complete an embarkation form and submit it for examination by that
officer at the time he or she leaves Singapore.
                                                                         [18/2012]
 (3) Any person who contravenes subsection (1) or (2) shall be
guilty of an offence and —
       (a) in the case of an offence under subsection (1), shall on
           conviction be punished with imprisonment for a term not
           exceeding 6 months and shall also be punished with caning
           with not less than 3 strokes, or where by virtue of
           section 325(1)(a) or (b) of the Criminal Procedure Code
           2010 he or she is not punishable with caning, he or she
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
19                       Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
          shall, in lieu of caning, be punished with a fine not
          exceeding $6,000;
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
      (b) in the case of an offence under subsection (2), shall be
          liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $2,000 or to
          imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6 months or to both.
                                                                       [15/2010]
 (4) In any proceedings for an offence under subsection (1), it is
presumed, until the contrary is proved, that the defendant attempted
to enter Singapore in contravention of subsection (1)(c) if the
defendant was found within the waters of the port and it is proved to
the satisfaction of the court that —
      (a) he or she was unable, or refused, to produce when
          requested to do so by a police officer or an immigration
          officer a valid passport or other valid travel document
          issued by the competent authority of any country;
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
      (b) he or she has no visible means of subsistence; or
      (c) he or she had taken precautions to conceal his or her
          identity or presence from any police officer or immigration
          officer.
 (5) In this section, “port” means any place declared to be a port
under section 3 of the Maritime and Port Authority of Singapore
Act 1996.
Non-citizens born in Singapore
 6A.—(1) A child who —
      (a) is born in Singapore on or after 15 January 2005; and
      (b) is not a citizen of Singapore at the time of his or her birth,
is deemed to be issued with a special pass authorising him or her to
remain in Singapore.
  (2) A special pass mentioned in subsection (1) is valid for 42 days
from the date of the birth of the child and may be extended for such
period as the Controller thinks fit.
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                                20
 (3) An application to renew a special pass referred to in
subsection (1) —
       (a) may be made by —
               (i) a specified person for a child mentioned in that
                   subsection; or
              (ii) any person allowed by the Controller to make the
                   application; and
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
       (b) must be in such form as the Controller may determine.
 (4) Upon an application made under subsection (3), the Controller
may extend the special pass or issue the child with such permit or
other pass as the Controller thinks fit.
 (5) Every specified person for a child mentioned in subsection (1)
must ensure that the child does not remain in Singapore —
       (a) after the expiry or cancellation of the special pass for the
           child; or
       (b) if a permit or pass has been issued for the child under
           subsection (4) — after the expiry or cancellation of the
           permit or pass.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (6) Any person who, without reasonable cause, contravenes
subsection (5) shall be guilty of an offence.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (7) In this section, “specified person”, for a child, means —
       (a) in the case of a legitimate child — the father of the child; or
       (b) in the case of any child —
               (i) the mother of the child; or
              (ii) a person who is lawfully appointed by deed or will or
                   by the order of a competent court to be the guardian
                   of the child.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
21                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
Right of entry
 7.—(1) A citizen of Singapore is entitled to enter Singapore without
having obtained a permit or pass in that behalf under this Act.
 (2) The burden of proof that any person is a citizen of Singapore
shall lie upon that person.
Prohibited immigrants
 8.—(1) Any person, not being a citizen of Singapore, who is a
member of any of the prohibited classes as defined in subsection (3)
or who, in the opinion of the Controller, is a member of any of the
prohibited classes, is a prohibited immigrant.
 (2) Subject to any exemption granted under section 56 —
      (a) a prohibited immigrant who is a member of the prohibited
          class defined in subsection (3)(o) must not enter
          Singapore; and
      (b) any other prohibited immigrant must not enter Singapore,
          unless he or she is in possession of a valid pass in that
          behalf issuable to a prohibited immigrant under the
          regulations.
 (3) The following persons are members of the prohibited classes:
      (a) any person who is unable to show that he or she has the
          means of supporting himself or herself and his or her
          dependants (if any) or that he or she has definite
          employment awaiting him or her, or who is likely to
          become a pauper or a charge on the public;
      (b) any person suffering from a contagious or infectious
          disease which makes his or her presence in Singapore
          dangerous to the community;
     (ba) any person suffering from Acquired Immune Deficiency
          Syndrome or infected with the Human Immunodeficiency
          Virus;
      (c) any person desiring to enter Singapore who refuses to
          submit to an examination after being required to do so
          under section 29(1);
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                                22
       (d) any person who —
                 (i) has been convicted in any country of an offence for
                     which a sentence of imprisonment has been passed
                     for any term;
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
                (ii) has not received a free pardon; and
               (iii) by reason of the circumstances connected with that
                     conviction is deemed by the Controller to be an
                     undesirable immigrant;
           (e) any prostitute or any person who is living on or receiving
               or who, prior to entering Singapore, lived on or received
               the proceeds of prostitution;
           (f) any person who procures or attempts to bring into
               Singapore prostitutes or women or girls for the purpose
               of prostitution or other immoral purpose;
       (g) vagrants or habitual beggars;
       (h) any person whose entry into Singapore is, or at the time of
           his or her entry was, unlawful under this Act or any other
           written law for the time being in force;
           (i) any person who believes in or advocates the overthrow by
               force or violence of the Government or of any established
               government or of constituted law or authority or who
               disbelieves in or is opposed to established government, or
               who advocates the assassination of public officials, or who
               advocates or teaches the unlawful destruction of property;
           (j) any person who is a member of or affiliated with any
               organisation entertaining or teaching disbelief in or
               opposition to established government or advocating or
               teaching the duty, necessity or propriety of the unlawful
               assaulting or killing of any officer or officers, either of
               specific individuals or officers generally, of the
               Government or of any established government, because
               of his, her or their official character, or advocating or
               teaching the unlawful destruction of property;
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
23                      Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
      (k) any person who, in consequence of information received
          from any source or from any government through official
          or diplomatic channels, is considered by the Minister to be
          an undesirable immigrant;
      (l) any person who has been removed from any country by the
          competent authority of that country on repatriation for any
          reason whatever and who, by reason of the circumstances
          connected therewith, is considered by the Controller to be
          an undesirable immigrant;
                                                 [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
     (m) any person who, being required by any written law for the
         time being in force to be in possession of valid travel
         documents, is not in possession of those documents or is in
         possession of forged or altered travel documents or travel
         documents which do not fully comply with that written
         law;
      (n) the family and dependants of a prohibited immigrant; and
      (o) any person prohibited by an order made under section 9
          from entering Singapore, unless the person is exempted
          from this paragraph by an order made under section 56.
                                                                      [18/2012]
                                                 [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
  (4) The burden of proof that any person seeking to enter Singapore
is not a prohibited immigrant shall lie upon that person.
 (4A) [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (5) Subject to any exemption granted under section 56, if any
prohibited immigrant enters Singapore otherwise than in accordance
with a valid pass lawfully issued to him or her, he or she shall be
guilty of an offence.
 (6) [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (7) [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
        Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                                24
Power to prohibit or limit entry into Singapore
 9.—(1) The Minister may, by order —
       (a) where the Minister thinks it expedient to do so in the
           interests of public security or public health, or by reason of
           any economic, industrial, social, educational or other
           conditions in Singapore —
               (i) prohibit, either for a stated period or permanently, the
                   arrival in, or entry or re‑entry into, Singapore of any
                   person or class of persons;
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
              (ii) limit the number of persons of any class who may
                   arrive in, or enter or re‑enter, Singapore within any
                   period specified in the order; or
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
             (iii) limit the period during which any person or class of
                   persons entering or re‑entering Singapore may
                   remain therein; or
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
       (b) prohibit the entry into Singapore of passengers brought to
           Singapore by any transportation company which refuses or
           neglects to comply with the provisions of this Act.
  (1A) No order made under subsection (1)(a), except an order made
in the interests of public security or public health, applies to any
person who is outside Singapore at the time when the order is made
and who is in possession of a valid re‑entry permit or pass lawfully
issued to him or her.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (2) An order made under subsection (1) does not apply to a citizen
of Singapore.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (3) Every order made under subsection (1)(a) which relates to a
class of persons, except an order made in the interests of public
security or public health, must be presented to Parliament as soon as
possible after publication in the Gazette and if a resolution is passed
within the next 3 months after the order is so presented disapproving
the order or any part thereof, the order or such part thereof (as the case
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
25                       Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
may be) ceases to have effect but without affecting the validity of
anything previously done thereunder.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (4) Every order made under subsection (1), unless otherwise
expressed therein, comes into force on the date of the making of
the order, and must be published in the Gazette.
 (5) Any person who arrives in, enters, re-enters or remains in
Singapore in contravention of any order made under subsection (1)
shall be guilty of an offence and shall on conviction be punished with
imprisonment for a presumptive minimum term of not less than
2 years and not more than 4 years and shall also be liable to a fine not
exceeding $6,000.
                                                                       [15/2019]
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
  (6) Where a person, who has been previously convicted of any
offence which is punishable with imprisonment for a term of not less
than 3 years, commits an offence under subsection (5) by the use of a
passport or other travel document which bears a name different from
that stated in the order made against him or her under subsection (1),
he or she shall on conviction be punished with imprisonment for a
term of not less than 2 years and not more than 5 years and shall also
be liable to a fine not exceeding $10,000 and to caning.
 (7) If a person convicted of an offence under subsection (6) cannot
be caned because section 325(1)(a) or (b) of the Criminal Procedure
Code 2010 applies, the court may, in addition to any other punishment
to which the person is sentenced for that offence, impose a fine not
exceeding $6,000 in lieu of the caning which the court could, but for
that provision, have ordered for that offence.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
                               PART 2A
            SINGAPORE VISAS FOR NON-CITIZENS
Singapore visas
 9A.—(1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, the Controller may
grant a non‑citizen permission, to be known as a Singapore visa, to
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                                26
travel to Singapore (for the purpose of seeking entry under a valid
permit or pass).
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (2) Without limiting subsection (1), a Singapore visa may grant the
holder of the visa permission to travel to Singapore during a specified
period only.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Visas essential for travel
 9B.—(1) Subject to subsection (2), a non‑citizen must not travel to
Singapore (for the purpose of seeking entry under a valid permit or
pass) without a Singapore visa that is in effect.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
  (2) Subsection (1) does not apply to a non‑citizen in relation to
travel to Singapore if the travel is by a non‑citizen who holds and
produces a valid passport from a territory that is approved by the
Minister.
Effect of Singapore visa
 9C.—(1) A Singapore visa that is in effect is not a pass or other
permission for, and does not confer any right on, the holder to enter
Singapore.
 (2) Subject to section 5(2) and any regulations made under
section 55, the holder of a Singapore visa that is in effect must
enter Singapore at an authorised airport, authorised landing place,
authorised train checkpoint or authorised point of entry.
                                  PART 3
                 ENTRY AND RE-ENTRY PERMITS
Entry permits
 10.—(1) Any person seeking to enter Singapore who is not entitled
so to enter as a citizen of Singapore or by virtue of a valid pass to
enter Singapore issued to him or her or seeking to remain in
Singapore after he or she had ceased to be a citizen of Singapore or
after the expiry of such a pass may make application in that behalf in
the manner prescribed to the Controller or to such other person
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
27                       Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
whether within or outside Singapore as the Controller may, from time
to time, appoint for the purpose.
 (2) Upon an application made under subsection (1) and on payment
of the prescribed fee, the Controller may issue to the applicant an
entry permit in the prescribed form and must, if the applicant is
required by section 9B(1) to have a Singapore visa, grant a Singapore
visa under section 9A(1) to the applicant on the production by him or
her of his or her passport or other travel document and on payment of
the prescribed fee, and the visa remains valid until the cancellation of
the entry permit issued to the applicant.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (3) The Controller may —
      (a) at the time of issuing an entry permit under subsection (2),
          impose any condition as the Controller thinks fit; or
      (b) at any time after the issue of an entry permit under
          subsection (2), vary or revoke any condition to which the
          entry permit is subject or impose any condition thereto.
 (3A) To avoid doubt, the power of the Controller to vary, revoke or
impose any condition under subsection (3)(b) may be exercised
whether or not the Controller is entitled to cancel the entry permit
under this Act.
 (4) The Controller must —
      (a) give notice of any variation or revocation of any condition
          of, or imposition of any condition on, an entry permit under
          subsection (3)(b), to the holder of the entry permit; and
      (b) specify in the notice the date on which the variation,
          revocation or imposition of the condition takes effect.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (4A) If the Controller varies, revokes or imposes any condition
under subsection (3)(b) for a class of entry permit holders —
      (a) the Controller may, where the Controller assesses that it is
          not practicable to give notice to each entry permit holder in
          that class under subsection (4), publish the variation,
          revocation or imposition of the condition, and the date
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                                28
            mentioned in subsection (4)(b), on a prescribed website or
            in the Gazette; and
       (b) the requirements of subsection (4) are taken to be satisfied
           upon such publication.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (5) [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (6) Any entry permit issued by the Controller before 15 January
2005 to any person who was in Singapore at the time he or she ceased
to be a citizen of Singapore and who continued to remain in
Singapore is deemed to have been validly issued and continues in
force until it is cancelled.
Re-entry permits
 11.—(1) Any person lawfully resident in Singapore, not being the
holder of a valid pass or a citizen of Singapore, who seeks to leave
Singapore temporarily, or within one month of so leaving Singapore,
may make an application to the Controller in the prescribed manner
for the issue to the person of a re‑entry permit authorising the person
to re‑enter Singapore.
 (2) Upon an application made for a re‑entry permit and on payment
of the prescribed fee, the Controller may issue to the applicant a
re‑entry permit in the prescribed form and must, if the applicant is
required by section 9B(1) to have a Singapore visa, grant a Singapore
visa under section 9A(1) to the applicant on the production by him or
her of his or her passport or other travel document and on payment of
the prescribed fee and the visa remains valid until the expiry or
cancellation of the re‑entry permit issued to the applicant.
                                                                         [18/2012]
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (3) The Controller may —
       (a) at the time of issuing a re‑entry permit under
           subsection (2), impose any condition as the Controller
           thinks fit; or
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
29                       Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
      (b) at any time after the issue of a re‑entry permit under
          subsection (2), vary or revoke any condition to which the
          re‑entry permit is subject or impose any condition thereto.
                                                                       [18/2012]
 (4) To avoid doubt, the power of the Controller to vary, revoke or
impose any condition under subsection (3)(b) may be exercised
whether or not the Controller is entitled to cancel the re‑entry permit
under this Act.
                                                                       [18/2012]
 (5) The Controller must —
      (a) give notice of any variation or revocation of any condition
          of, or imposition of any condition on, a re‑entry permit
          under subsection (3)(b), to the holder of the re‑entry
          permit; and
      (b) specify in the notice the date on which the variation,
          revocation or imposition of the condition takes effect.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (5A) If the Controller varies, revokes or imposes any condition
under subsection (3)(b) for a class of re‑entry permit holders —
      (a) the Controller may, where the Controller assesses that it is
          not practicable to give notice to each re‑entry permit holder
          in that class under subsection (5), publish the variation,
          revocation or imposition of the condition, and the date
          mentioned in subsection (5)(b), on a prescribed website or
          in the Gazette; and
      (b) the requirements of subsection (5) are taken to be satisfied
          upon such publication.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (6) [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Validity of re‑entry permit, etc.
 11AA.—(1) The Controller may, at the time of issuing a re‑entry
permit, specify its validity period.
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                                30
 (2) A person who is issued a re‑entry permit is authorised to re‑enter
Singapore at any one or more times during the validity period of the
re‑entry permit.
 (3) A re‑entry permit issued to a person ceases to be valid when —
       (a) the validity period of the re‑entry permit expires;
       (b) the re‑entry permit is cancelled under this Act; or
           (c) the entry permit issued to that person is cancelled under
               this Act,
whichever occurs first.
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Persons ceasing to be citizens of Singapore
 11A.—(1) Subject to subsection (4) and section 33A(1), any person
in Singapore who, on or after 15 January 2005, ceases to be a citizen
of Singapore must not remain in Singapore for more than 24 hours
after the date on which the person ceases to be a citizen of Singapore
unless the person has been issued with a permit or a pass authorising
the person to remain in Singapore.
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (2) Any person who, on or after 15 January 2005, ceases to be a
citizen of Singapore and who wishes to remain in Singapore may
make an application to the Controller in the prescribed manner for a
permit or a pass authorising the person to remain in Singapore.
 (3) Upon an application made under subsection (2) and on payment
of the prescribed fee, the Controller may issue to the applicant a
permit or a pass authorising the applicant to remain in Singapore.
 (4) Subject to section 33A(1), any person who applies for a permit
or a pass under subsection (2) before the expiry of the time specified
in subsection (1) —
       (a) may remain in Singapore pending the determination by the
           Controller of the application; and
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
31                       Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
      (b) subject to subsection (5), must not remain in Singapore for
          more than 24 hours after being informed that the person’s
          application for a permit or pass has been rejected.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (5) Subsection (4)(b) does not prevent a person from entering and
remaining in Singapore if the person is subsequently issued with a
permit or a pass by the Controller authorising the person to enter and
remain in Singapore.
 (6) Any person who, without reasonable cause, contravenes
subsection (1) or (4)(b) shall be guilty of an offence and —
      (a) in the case where he or she remains unlawfully in
          Singapore for a period not exceeding 90 days, shall be
          liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $4,000 or to
          imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6 months or to
          both; or
      (b) in the case where he or she remains unlawfully in
          Singapore for a period exceeding 90 days, shall on
          conviction be punished with imprisonment for a term not
          exceeding 6 months and shall also be punished with caning
          with not less than 3 strokes, or where by virtue of
          section 325(1)(a) or (b) of the Criminal Procedure Code
          2010 he or she is not punishable with caning, he or she
          shall, in lieu of caning, be punished with a fine not
          exceeding $6,000.
                                                                       [15/2010]
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Endorsement of names of wife and children on permits, passes
and certificates
 12. Subject to such conditions as may be prescribed, it is lawful for
the Controller, on application made in that behalf in the prescribed
form by the holder of, or by an applicant for, a permit, pass or
certificate, to endorse upon the permit, pass or certificate issued to
that person the name or names of the wife or child of that person.
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                                32
Power to make inquiries
 13. The Controller may, before the issue of a permit, pass or
certificate under this Act or before making any endorsement thereon
under section 12, make such inquiries or require the production of
such evidence as the Controller may think fit in order to satisfy
himself or herself as to the truth of any statement made in the
application for the permit, pass or certificate.
Controller’s cancellation of and declarations regarding
permits and certificates
 14.—(1) Where the holder of any permit seeks to enter Singapore
accompanied by any child whose name is not endorsed upon that
permit under section 12 and who is not otherwise entitled to enter
Singapore under the provisions of this Act, the Controller may cancel
the permit issued to that person.
 (2) Where, upon the arrival in Singapore of any person to whom a
permit or certificate has been issued, the Controller is satisfied, as a
result of inquiries made under section 24, 25, 25A or 26, or from other
information, that the permit or certificate was issued as a result of any
false representation or concealment of a material fact, the Controller
may cancel the permit or certificate.
 (3) Where at any time during the period of validity of any permit or
certificate, the Controller is satisfied that the holder of the permit or
certificate is a prohibited immigrant, the Controller must cancel the
permit or certificate.
 (4) Where any person has entered or remains in Singapore by virtue
of a permit or certificate, and the Controller is satisfied that —
       (a) any material statement made in or in connection with the
           application for the permit or certificate was false or
           misleading;
       (b) the person is a prohibited immigrant; or
           (c) the holder of the permit or certificate has contravened any
               provision of this Act or the regulations or any condition of
               the permit or certificate,
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
33                       Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
the Controller may cancel the permit or certificate issued to that
person, and may declare at any time after the date of the entry or date
of the issue of the permit or certificate that the presence of that person
in Singapore is unlawful.
 (5) If the Controller cancels a person’s re‑entry permit under
subsection (4)(c) for the contravention of any condition of the
re‑entry permit, the Controller may cancel that person’s entry permit
(whether or not that person has contravened any condition of the entry
permit).
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (5A) If the Controller cancels a person’s permit or certificate under
subsection (2), (3), (4) or (5), or makes a declaration against the
person under subsection (4), the Controller must give notice of the
cancellation or declaration to the person.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (6) [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Unlawful entry or presence in Singapore
 15.—(1) A person must not remain in Singapore after the
cancellation of any permit or certificate, or after the making of a
declaration under section 14(4) or after the expiration or notification
to him or her, in such manner as may be prescribed, of the
cancellation of any pass relating to or issued to him or her unless
he or she is otherwise entitled or authorised to remain in Singapore
under the provisions of this Act or the regulations.
 (2) A person must not remain in Singapore in contravention of
section 62.
 (3) Any person who contravenes, without reasonable cause, this
section shall be guilty of an offence and —
      (a) in the case where he or she remains unlawfully for a period
          not exceeding 90 days, shall be liable on conviction to a
          fine not exceeding $4,000 or to imprisonment for a term
          not exceeding 6 months or to both;
      (b) in the case where he or she remains unlawfully for a period
          exceeding 90 days, shall on conviction be punished with
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                                34
            imprisonment for a term not exceeding 6 months and shall
            also be punished with caning with not less than 3 strokes,
            or where by virtue of section 325(1)(a) or (b) of the
            Criminal Procedure Code 2010 he or she is not punishable
            with caning, he or she shall, in lieu of caning, be punished
            with a fine not exceeding $6,000.
                                                                         [15/2010]
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
                                  PART 4
                PROCEDURE ON ARRIVAL IN AND
                 DEPARTURE FROM SINGAPORE
Immigration signal
  16.—(1) The master of every vessel which arrives in or is about to
leave Singapore must hoist the prescribed immigration signal and
must exhibit that signal until authorised by an immigration officer to
haul it down.
 (2) The master of a vessel who contravenes subsection (1) shall be
guilty of an offence.
Vessel to stop, proceed to immigration or departure anchorage
or other place when ordered
 17.—(1) The Controller may, by notification in the Gazette, declare
any place within the limits of any port to be an immigration
anchorage, either for vessels generally or for vessels of a class
specified in the notification.
                                                                         [18/2012]
  (2) The master of every vessel which arrives at or is about to leave a
port where an immigration anchorage, either for vessels generally or
for vessels of a class to which that vessel belongs, has been declared
must, subject to any directions given under subsection (4),
immediately navigate the vessel to that anchorage and must remain
there until an immigration officer gives him or her permission to
leave.
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
35                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
 (3) The master of every vessel which arrives in or is about to leave
Singapore must, if ordered to do so by a police officer or an
immigration officer, stop, anchor or tie up the vessel at such place as
may be ordered, and must remain there until a police officer or an
immigration officer gives him or her permission to leave.
                                                                     [18/2012]
 (4) The master of a vessel who contravenes or, without reasonable
cause, fails to comply with this section or any order made or
directions given thereunder shall be guilty of an offence.
Aircraft arriving in or departing from Singapore
 18.—(1) The captain of every aircraft which arrives in or leaves
Singapore must land the aircraft at, or fly the aircraft away from, an
authorised airport.
 (2) The captain of an aircraft who, without reasonable cause,
contravenes subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence.
Train arriving in or leaving Singapore
 18A.—(1) The master of every train which arrives in or leaves
Singapore must stop the train at, or drive the train away from, an
authorised train checkpoint.
 (2) The master of a train who, without reasonable cause,
contravenes subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence.
Vehicles arriving in or leaving Singapore
 18B.—(1) The driver of a vehicle who wishes to drive into
Singapore must stop the vehicle at an authorised place of
embarkation, an authorised point of entry or an immigration
control post upon arrival in Singapore.
 (2) The driver of a vehicle who wishes to drive out of Singapore
must stop the vehicle at an authorised departing place, an authorised
point of departure or an immigration control post before leaving
Singapore.
 (3) The driver of a vehicle who, without reasonable cause,
contravenes subsection (1) or (2) shall be guilty of an offence.
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                        36
Persons not to board or leave vessel until examination
completed
 19.—(1) Except under and in accordance with any authority
granted by an immigration officer, no person other than —
       (a) the pilot;
       (b) any Government officer boarding the vessel on duty;
           (c) the owner, charterer or agent of the vessel; or
       (d) a consular officer or an accredited representative of the
           country to which the vessel belongs,
is to leave or board a vessel arriving in Singapore nor may any person
(other than the crew of a vessel carrying any such person) approach
within 200 metres of the vessel, until the vessel has been examined by
an immigration officer and the immigration signal has been hauled
down, or board a vessel departing from Singapore after it has been
examined by an immigration officer just before its departure.
 (2) Any person who contravenes subsection (1) shall be guilty of an
offence and every such person leaving a vessel in contravention of
subsection (1) must, if so required by an immigration officer, return
immediately to the vessel and remain thereon and the master of the
vessel is bound to re‑embark that person.
Prohibition on disembarking from or boarding ships without
permission of immigration officer
 20.—(1) It is the duty of the master and the owner or charterer of
every vessel which arrives in Singapore to prevent any person other
than a person specified in section 19(1)(a), (b), (c) or (d) from
disembarking from or boarding the vessel until the disembarkation or
boarding has been authorised by an immigration officer, and for that
purpose any means reasonably necessary may be used.
 (2) Where any person disembarks from or boards any vessel before
being authorised by an immigration officer in that behalf, that person,
the master and the owner or charterer of the vessel shall each be guilty
of an offence under this section.
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
37                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
 (3) It is no defence to a prosecution under this section that the
master, owner or charterer did not permit or do anything to facilitate
the disembarkation or boarding of the person.
 (4) It is a good defence to a prosecution under this section that the
master, owner or charterer took every reasonable precaution to
prevent the disembarkation or boarding of the person.
 (5) The master of the vessel from which any person has
disembarked before the disembarkation has been authorised by an
immigration officer is bound to re‑embark that person and any master
refusing to re‑embark that person shall be guilty of an offence.
  (6) Any person guilty of an offence under this section shall be liable
on conviction to a fine not exceeding $4,000 or to imprisonment for a
term not exceeding 12 months or to both.
Prohibition of removal of articles before examination
 21.—(1) Except with the authority of an immigration officer, no
article or thing is to be removed or taken from, or put on board, any
vessel until the vessel has been examined by an immigration officer
under section 19.
 (2) Any person who contravenes subsection (1) shall be guilty of an
offence.
Provision of passenger and crew information by master, etc., of
vessel arriving in, leaving or due to leave Singapore
 22.—(1) Subject to section 22A(4), the master, owner, agent or
charterer of every vessel arriving at any authorised landing place for
persons arriving in Singapore by sea from a place outside Singapore
or leaving or due to leave from any authorised departing place for
persons leaving Singapore by sea to a place outside Singapore
must —
      (a) within such time, in such form and manner and containing
          such particulars of the crew as may be prescribed, furnish
          to an immigration officer a complete list of all the crew
          who are or will be on board the vessel at the time of its
          arrival at the authorised landing place or at the time of its
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                              38
              departure from the authorised departing place, as the case
              may be;
       (b) if so required by that immigration officer, produce to that
           immigration officer for inspection and interrogation every
           member of the crew, as directed, either generally or
           specifically, by that immigration officer;
           (c) furnish to that immigration officer such evidence of
               identity of each member of the crew within such time
               and in such form and manner as may be prescribed;
       (d) submit to such search of the vessel as may be necessary to
           establish the presence or absence of other persons on
           board;
           (e) produce the vessel’s papers; and
           (f) before the vessel arrives at the authorised landing place or
               departs from the authorised departing place (as the case
               may be), report the presence on board of any stowaway or
               any unauthorised person or any person proceeding to any
               state or country on the person’s removal from any other
               state or country by the competent authorities of that other
               state or country.
                                                                         [18/2012]
 (2) In the case of vessels carrying passengers, the master, owner,
agent or charterer must, in addition —
       (a) within such time, in such form and manner and containing
           such particulars as may be prescribed, furnish a complete
           list of all passengers who are or will be on board the vessel
           at the time of its arrival at the authorised landing place or
           departure from the authorised departing place, as the case
           may be;
       (b) furnish in relation to every passenger disembarking in or
           embarking from Singapore such particulars in such form
           and manner and within such time as may be prescribed;
           and
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
39                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
      (c) if so required by an immigration officer, produce every
          passenger for inspection and interrogation as directed,
          either generally or specifically, by that immigration officer.
                                                                     [18/2012]
 (3) The master, owner, agent or charterer of a vessel who
contravenes subsection (1) or (2), and any person who hinders or
obstructs any search of a vessel under subsection (1)(d), shall each be
guilty of an offence.
 (4) If any person whose presence has not been reported under
subsection (1)(f) is found on board the vessel, the master, owner,
agent and charterer of the vessel shall each be guilty of an offence and
shall each be liable on conviction to a fine of not less than $5,000 and
not more than $10,000 in respect of each such person.
 (5) In any proceedings under this section, the certificate in writing
of an immigration officer who boarded or examined any particular
vessel to the effect that the vessel carried, on arrival in Singapore, a
total number of seamen corresponding in description to the
particulars on the identification cards furnished under
subsection (1)(c) is conclusive proof that the vessel did on arrival
carry that number of seamen.
Provision of passenger and crew information in advance by
master, etc., of vessel due to arrive in Singapore
 22A.—(1) The master, owner, agent or charterer of every vessel
which is due to arrive at any authorised landing place for persons
arriving in Singapore by sea from a place outside Singapore must,
upon being given reasonable prior notice in writing by the Controller
to comply with this section —
      (a) within such time prior to the arrival of the vessel at the
          authorised landing place, in such form and manner and
          containing such particulars of the crew as may be
          prescribed, furnish to the Controller a complete list of all
          the crew who are or will be on board the vessel at the time
          of its arrival at the authorised landing place;
      (b) within such time prior to the arrival of the vessel at the
          authorised landing place and in such form and manner as
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                              40
               may be prescribed, furnish to the Controller a complete list
               of all passengers who are or will be on board the vessel at
               the time of its arrival at the authorised landing place; and
           (c) furnish to the Controller in relation to every passenger
               disembarking in Singapore, such particulars regarding one
               or both of the following:
                 (i) advance passenger information;
                (ii) information recorded in the passenger reservation
                     system for that vessel,
           (c) within such time prior to the arrival of the vessel at the
               authorised landing place and in such form and manner as
               may be prescribed.
                                                                         [18/2012]
 (2) The Controller may at any time by notice in writing to the
master, owner, agent or charterer of a vessel, revoke the notice given
to that person under subsection (1).
                                                                         [18/2012]
 (3) The master, owner, agent or charterer of a vessel who
contravenes subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence.
                                                                         [18/2012]
 (4) Any master, owner, agent or charterer of a vessel who is
required to comply with this section need not comply with
section 22(1)(a) and (2)(a) and (b) unless so required by an
immigration officer.
                                                                         [18/2012]
Provision of passenger and crew information by captain, etc.,
of aircraft arriving in, leaving or due to leave Singapore
 23.—(1) Subject to section 23AA(4), the captain, owner, agent or
charterer of every aircraft arriving at any airport in Singapore from a
place outside Singapore or leaving or due to leave any airport in
Singapore to a place outside Singapore must —
       (a) within such time, in such form and manner and containing
           such particulars as may be prescribed, furnish to an
           immigration officer a complete list of all passengers who
           are or will be on board the aircraft at the time of its arrival
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
41                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
          at the airport or departure from the airport, as the case may
          be;
      (b) furnish to that officer in relation to every passenger landing
          in or departing from Singapore such particulars in such
          form and manner within such time as may be prescribed;
      (c) within such time, in such form and manner and containing
          such particulars of the crew as may be prescribed, furnish
          to that officer a complete list of all the crew of the aircraft
          who are or will be on board the aircraft at the time of its
          arrival at the airport or departure from the airport, as the
          case may be;
      (d) if so required by an immigration officer, produce every
          member of the crew and every passenger of that aircraft for
          inspection and interrogation as directed, either generally or
          specifically, by the immigration officer;
      (e) submit to such search of the aircraft as may be necessary to
          establish the presence or absence of other persons on
          board; and
       (f) before the aircraft arrives at or departs from the airport (as
           the case may be), report the presence on board of any
           stowaway or any unauthorised person or any person
           proceeding to any state or country on the person’s
           removal from any other state or country by the
           competent authorities of that other state or country.
                                                                     [18/2012]
 (2) The captain, owner, agent or charterer of an aircraft who
contravenes subsection (1), and any person who hinders or obstructs
any search of an aircraft under subsection (1)(e), shall each be guilty
of an offence.
 (3) If any person whose presence has not been reported under
subsection (1)(f) is found on board an aircraft, the captain, owner,
agent and charterer of the aircraft shall each be guilty of an offence
and shall each be liable on conviction to a fine of not less than $5,000
and not more than $10,000 in respect of each such person.
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                              42
 (4) In any proceedings under this section, the certificate in writing
of an immigration officer who boarded or examined any particular
aircraft to the effect that the aircraft carried, on arrival in Singapore, a
total number of crew corresponding in description to the particulars
on the list furnished under subsection (1)(c) is conclusive proof that
the aircraft did on arrival carry that number of crew.
Provision of passenger and crew information in advance by
captain, etc., of aircraft due to arrive in Singapore
 23AA.—(1) The captain, owner, agent or charterer of every aircraft
which is due to arrive at any airport in Singapore from a place outside
Singapore must, upon being given reasonable prior notice in writing
by the Controller to comply with this section —
       (a) within such time prior to the arrival of the aircraft at the
           airport, in such form and manner and containing such
           particulars of the crew as may be prescribed, furnish to the
           Controller a complete list of all the crew of the aircraft who
           are or will be on board the aircraft at the time of its arrival
           at the airport;
       (b) within such time prior to the arrival of the aircraft at the
           airport and in such form and manner as may be prescribed,
           furnish to the Controller a complete list of all passengers
           who are or will be on board the aircraft at the time of its
           arrival at the airport; and
           (c) furnish to the Controller in relation to every passenger
               landing in Singapore, such particulars regarding one or
               both of the following:
                 (i) advance passenger information;
                (ii) information recorded in the passenger reservation
                     system for that aircraft,
           (c) within such time prior to the arrival of the aircraft at the
               airport and in such form and manner as may be prescribed.
                                                                         [18/2012]
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
43                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
 (2) The Controller may at any time by notice in writing to the
captain, owner, agent or charterer of an aircraft, revoke the notice
given to that person under subsection (1).
                                                                     [18/2012]
 (3) The captain, owner, agent or charterer of an aircraft who
contravenes subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence.
                                                                     [18/2012]
 (4) Any captain, owner, agent or charterer of an aircraft who is
required to comply with this section need not comply with
section 23(1)(a), (b) and (c) unless so required by an immigration
officer.
                                                                     [18/2012]
Provision of passenger and crew information by master, etc., of
train arriving in, leaving or due to leave Singapore
  23A.—(1) Subject to section 23B(4), the master, owner, agent or
charterer of every train arriving at any train checkpoint in Singapore
from a place outside Singapore or leaving or due to leave any train
checkpoint in Singapore to a place outside Singapore must, at an
authorised train checkpoint and if required to do so by an immigration
officer —
      (a) within such time, in such form and manner and containing
          such particulars of the crew as may be prescribed, furnish
          to that officer a complete list of all the crew who are or will
          be on board the train at the time of its arrival at the train
          checkpoint or departure from the train checkpoint, as the
          case may be;
      (b) if so required by that immigration officer, produce to that
          immigration officer for inspection and interrogation every
          member of the crew as directed, either generally or
          specifically, by that immigration officer;
      (c) submit to such search of the train as may be necessary to
          establish the presence or absence of other persons on
          board; and
      (d) upon the arrival of the train at or before the departure of the
          train from the train checkpoint (as the case may be), report
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                              44
               the presence on board of any stowaway or any
               unauthorised person or any person proceeding to any
               state or country on the person’s removal from any other
               state or country by the competent authorities of that other
               state or country.
                                                                         [18/2012]
 (2) In the case of a train carrying passengers, the master must, in
addition —
       (a) within such time, in such form and manner and containing
           such particulars as may be prescribed, furnish a complete
           list of all passengers who are or will be on board the train at
           the time of its arrival at the train checkpoint or departure
           from the train checkpoint, as the case may be;
       (b) furnish in relation to every passenger disembarking in or
           embarking from Singapore such particulars in such form
           and manner within such time as may be prescribed; and
           (c) if so required by an immigration officer, produce every
               passenger for inspection and interrogation as directed,
               either generally or specifically, by that immigration officer.
                                                                         [18/2012]
 (3) The master, owner, agent or charterer of a train who contravenes
subsection (1) or (2), and any person who hinders or obstructs any
search of a train under subsection (1)(c), shall each be guilty of an
offence.
 (4) If any person whose presence has not been reported under
subsection (1)(d) is found on board the train, the master, owner, agent
and charterer of the train shall each be guilty of an offence and shall
each be liable on conviction to a fine of not less than $5,000 and not
more than $10,000 in respect of each such person.
  (5) In any proceedings under this section, the certificate in writing
of an immigration officer who boarded or examined any particular
train to the effect that the train carried, on arrival in Singapore, a total
number of crew corresponding in description to the particulars on the
list furnished under subsection (1)(a) is conclusive proof that the train
did on arrival carry that number of crew.
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
45                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
Provision of passenger and crew information in advance by
master, etc., of train due to arrive in Singapore
 23B.—(1) The master, owner, agent or charterer of every train
which is due to arrive at any train checkpoint in Singapore from a
place outside Singapore must, upon being given reasonable prior
notice in writing by the Controller to comply with this section —
      (a) within such time prior to the arrival of the train at the train
          checkpoint, in such form and manner and containing such
          particulars of the crew as may be prescribed, furnish to the
          Controller a complete list of all the crew who are or will be
          on board the train at the time of its arrival at the train
          checkpoint;
      (b) within such time prior to the arrival of the train at the train
          checkpoint and in such form and manner as may be
          prescribed, furnish to the Controller a complete list of all
          passengers who are or will be on board the train at the time
          of its arrival at the train checkpoint; and
      (c) furnish to the Controller in relation to every passenger
          disembarking in Singapore, such particulars regarding one
          or both of the following:
             (i) advance passenger information;
            (ii) information recorded in the passenger reservation
                 system for that train,
      (c) within such time prior to the arrival of the train at the train
          checkpoint and in such form and manner as may be
          prescribed.
                                                                     [18/2012]
 (2) The Controller may at any time by notice in writing to the
master, owner, agent or charterer of a train, revoke the notice given to
that person under subsection (1).
                                                                     [18/2012]
 (3) The master, owner, agent or charterer of a train who contravenes
subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence.
                                                                     [18/2012]
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                                46
 (4) Any master, owner, agent or charterer of a train who is required
to comply with this section need not comply with section 23A(1)(a)
and (2)(a) and (b) unless so required by an immigration officer.
                                                                         [18/2012]
Examination of persons arriving by sea
 24.—(1) Every person arriving by sea in Singapore, whether or not
he or she enters Singapore, must appear before an immigration officer
at such time and place as that officer may direct.
                                                                         [18/2012]
 (1A) A person who appears before an immigration officer under
subsection (1) must furnish such particulars about the person, in such
form or manner, as that officer may require.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (2) The immigration officer, after such examination as he or she
may consider necessary, must inform any person whom the
immigration officer considers to be prohibited from entering
Singapore under the provisions of this Act or any regulations or
orders made under this Act of his or her finding.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (2A) The person mentioned in subsection (2) —
       (a) if still on board the vessel that conveyed the person to
           Singapore — must not disembark in Singapore; or
       (b) if the person has disembarked for the purposes of the
           examination mentioned in that subsection — must
           immediately comply with any direction given by an
           immigration officer under subsection (2B).
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (2B) An immigration officer may direct the person mentioned in
subsection (2A)(b) to —
       (a) re‑embark, and remain on, the vessel that the person
           disembarked from;
       (b) embark, and remain on, another vessel specified by the
           immigration officer; or
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
47                       Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
      (c) proceed to, and remain in, an immigration depot or a place
          designated by the Controller, until arrangements are made
          for the person to leave Singapore, and leave Singapore in
          accordance with those arrangements.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
  (3) The master, operator, owner, agent or charterer of the vessel
must likewise immediately be informed in writing by the immigration
officer of his or her finding and the master, operator, owner, agent or
charterer must not permit the person to disembark in Singapore, or, if
the person has disembarked, whether for the purpose of examination
or otherwise, is bound to re‑embark the person and remove the person
from Singapore by the same or such other vessel, to the person’s place
of embarkation, the country of the person’s birth or citizenship or
such other destination, as that immigration officer may direct.
                                                                       [18/2012]
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (4) Any person who —
      (a) refuses or neglects to appear before an immigration officer
          as required by subsection (1) or who leaves the place of
          examination without or otherwise than in accordance with
          the authorisation of that officer;
      (b) contravenes subsection (1A) or (2A)(a) or (b); or
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
      (c) being the master, operator, owner, agent or charterer of a
          vessel, permits any person to disembark in Singapore or
          refuses to re‑embark any person, or refuses or neglects to
          remove the person from Singapore in accordance with
          subsection (3), after being informed by an immigration
          officer that the person is prohibited from entering
          Singapore or that the person has refused or neglected to
          appear before an immigration officer as required by
          subsection (1) or that the person had left the place of
          examination without or otherwise than in accordance with
          the authorisation of that officer,
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                                48
shall each be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a
fine not exceeding $4,000 or to imprisonment for a term not
exceeding 12 months or to both.
                                                                         [18/2012]
 (5) If any person contravenes subsection (2A)(a) or (b), an
immigration officer, a police officer or an auxiliary police officer
acting under the directions of an immigration officer or a police
officer, may take such steps, including the use of force, as may be
reasonably necessary to compel that person to comply with that
provision, and the master, operator, owner, agent or charterer of the
relevant vessel is bound to re‑embark or embark (as the case may be)
that person and to remove that person from Singapore.
                                                                         [18/2012]
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (6) [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Examination of persons arriving at authorised airport
 25.—(1) Every person arriving by air at any authorised airport in
Singapore, whether or not the person enters Singapore, must appear
before an immigration officer at such time and place as that officer
may direct.
                                                                         [18/2012]
 (1A) A person who appears before an immigration officer under
subsection (1) must furnish such particulars about the person, in such
form or manner, as that officer may require.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (2) The immigration officer, after such examination as he or she
may consider necessary, must inform any person whom the
immigration officer considers to be prohibited from entering
Singapore under the provisions of this Act or any regulations or
orders made under this Act of his or her finding.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (2A) The person mentioned in subsection (2) must immediately
comply with any direction given by an immigration officer under
subsection (2B).
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
49                       Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
 (2B) An immigration officer may direct the person mentioned in
subsection (2A) to —
      (a) leave Singapore by the first available means; or
      (b) proceed to, and remain in, an immigration depot or a place
          designated by the Controller, until arrangements are made
          for the person to leave Singapore, and leave Singapore in
          accordance with those arrangements.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (3) The captain, operator, owner, agent or charterer of the aircraft in
which the person arrived must, if so required by the immigration
officer, remove the person from Singapore by the same or such other
aircraft, to the person’s place of embarkation, the country of the
person’s birth or citizenship or such other destination, as that
immigration officer may direct.
                                                                       [18/2012]
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (4) Any person who —
      (a) refuses or neglects to appear before an immigration officer
          as required by subsection (1) or who leaves the place of
          examination without or otherwise than in accordance with
          the authorisation of that officer;
      (b) contravenes subsection (1A) or (2A); or
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
      (c) [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
      (d) being the captain, operator, owner, agent or charterer of the
          aircraft in which any person arrived in Singapore, refuses
          or neglects to remove the person from Singapore in
          accordance with subsection (3) after being informed by an
          immigration officer that the person is prohibited from
          entering Singapore or that the person has refused or
          neglected to appear before an immigration officer as
          required by subsection (1) or that the person has left the
          place of examination without, or otherwise than in
          accordance with, the authorisation of that officer,
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                                50
shall each be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a
fine not exceeding $4,000 or to imprisonment for a term not
exceeding 12 months or to both.
                                                                         [18/2012]
 (5) If any person contravenes subsection (2A), an immigration
officer, a police officer or an auxiliary police officer acting under the
directions of an immigration officer or a police officer, may take such
steps, including the use of force, as may be reasonably necessary to
compel that person to comply with that provision.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Examination of persons arriving by train
 25A.—(1) Every person arriving by train at any authorised train
checkpoint in Singapore, whether or not the person enters Singapore,
must appear before an immigration officer at such time and place as
that officer may direct.
                                                                         [18/2012]
 (1A) A person who appears before an immigration officer under
subsection (1) must furnish such particulars about the person, in such
form or manner, as that officer may require.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (2) The immigration officer, after such examination as he or she
may consider necessary, must inform any person whom the
immigration officer considers to be prohibited from entering
Singapore under the provisions of this Act or any regulations or
orders made under this Act of his or her finding.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (2A) The person mentioned in subsection (2) must immediately
comply with any direction given by an immigration officer under
subsection (2B).
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (2B) An immigration officer may direct the person mentioned in
subsection (2A) to —
       (a) leave Singapore by any mode of land transport or on foot;
           or
       (b) proceed to, and remain in, an immigration depot or a place
           designated by the Controller, until arrangements are made
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
51                       Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
           for the person to leave Singapore, and leave Singapore in
           accordance with those arrangements.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
  (3) The master, operator, owner, agent or charterer of the train in
which the person arrived must, if so required by the immigration
officer, remove the person from Singapore by the same or such other
train, to the person’s place of embarkation, the country of the person’s
birth or citizenship or such other destination, as that immigration
officer may direct.
                                                                       [18/2012]
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (4) Any person who —
      (a) refuses or neglects to appear before an immigration officer
          as required by subsection (1) or who leaves the place of
          examination without, or otherwise than in accordance with,
          the authorisation of that officer;
      (b) contravenes subsection (1A) or (2A); or
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
      (c) [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
      (d) being the master, operator, owner, agent or charterer of the
          train in which any person arrived in Singapore, refuses or
          neglects to remove the person from Singapore in
          accordance with subsection (3) after being informed by
          an immigration officer that the person is prohibited from
          entering Singapore or that the person has refused or
          neglected to appear before an immigration officer as
          required by subsection (1) or that the person has left the
          place of examination without, or otherwise than in
          accordance with, the authorisation of that officer,
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
shall each be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a
fine not exceeding $4,000 or to imprisonment for a term not
exceeding 12 months or to both.
                                                                       [18/2012]
 (5) If any person contravenes subsection (2A), an immigration
officer, a police officer or an auxiliary police officer acting under the
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                                52
directions of an immigration officer or a police officer, may take such
steps, including the use of force, as may be reasonably necessary to
compel that person to comply with that provision.
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Examination of persons entering Singapore by land or at place
other than authorised landing place or airport
 26.—(1) Every person who enters Singapore by land must —
       (a) proceed to the nearest immigration control post;
       (b) appear before an immigration officer in charge of the post;
           and
           (c) furnish such particulars about the person, in such form or
               manner, as that officer may require.
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (2) Every person arriving by sea or air in Singapore at any place,
other than at an authorised landing place or airport, must immediately
proceed to and appear before the nearest immigration officer.
 (3) The immigration officer before whom any person appears in
accordance with this section must, if the immigration officer
considers that the person is prohibited from entering Singapore
under the provisions of this Act or any regulations or orders made
under this Act, inform that person of his or her finding.
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (3A) The person mentioned in subsection (3) must immediately
comply with any direction given by an immigration officer under
subsection (3B).
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (3B) An immigration officer may direct the person mentioned in
subsection (3A) to —
       (a) leave Singapore in accordance with the instructions of the
           immigration officer; or
       (b) proceed to, and remain in, an immigration depot or a place
           designated by the Controller, until arrangements are made
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
53                       Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
           for the person to leave Singapore, and leave Singapore in
           accordance with those arrangements.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (4) Any person who contravenes this section shall be guilty of an
offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding
$4,000 or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months or to
both.
 (5) If any person contravenes subsection (3A), an immigration
officer, a police officer or an auxiliary police officer acting under the
directions of an immigration officer or a police officer, may take such
steps, including the use of force, as may be reasonably necessary to
compel that person to comply with that provision.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Power to send person to depot for further examination
 27.—(1) Where an immigration officer is in doubt as to the right of
any person to enter Singapore, it is lawful for that officer to direct the
person to an immigration depot and, in that case, that person must
proceed immediately to that depot and must remain there until
permitted to leave by that officer.
 (2) No person shall, except on the written order of the Minister, be
so detained for any period exceeding 7 days except that the Controller
may, in his or her discretion, and pending the completion of inquiries
regarding that person, release that person from the immigration depot
on such terms and conditions as the Controller may think fit, and for
that purpose the Controller may issue to that person a pass in the
prescribed form.
 (3) Any person who refuses or neglects to comply with any
directions given by an immigration officer under subsection (1), or
who leaves an immigration depot in contravention of that subsection,
shall be guilty of an offence.
Interrogation of travellers
  28.—(1) Any person who arrives in Singapore or who is about to
leave Singapore must —
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                      Immigration Act 1959                               54
       (a) fully and truthfully answer all questions and enquiries put
           to him or her by an immigration officer or a police officer
           tending, directly or indirectly, to establish his or her
           identity, nationality or occupation or bearing on any of the
           restrictions contained in this Act or the regulations or any
           absolute or conditional liability on his or her part to any
           military, naval or air force service under any country; and
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
       (b) disclose and produce to any such officer on demand all
           documents in his or her possession relating to those
           matters.
 (2) All such answers and documents shall be admissible in evidence
in any proceedings under this Act against the person making,
disclosing or producing the same.
 (3) Nothing in this section is to be construed as rendering any such
answer inadmissible in any other proceedings in which they would
otherwise be admissible.
 (4) Any person who —
       (a) refuses to answer any question or enquiry put to him or her
           under subsection (1);
       (b) knowingly gives any false or misleading answer to any
           such question or enquiry;
           (c) refuses or fails to produce any document in his or her
               possession when required to do so under subsection (1); or
       (d) knowingly produces any false or misleading document,
shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction —
           (e) in the case of an offence under paragraph (a), (b) or (c), to a
               fine not exceeding $2,000 or to imprisonment for a term
               not exceeding 6 months or to both; or
           (f) in the case of an offence under paragraph (d), to a fine not
               exceeding $6,000 or to imprisonment for a term not
               exceeding 2 years or to both.
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
55                       Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
Medical examination
 29.—(1) For the purpose of exercising his or her powers and
carrying out his or her functions and duties under this Act or the
regulations, an immigration officer may require any person who
desires to enter Singapore, or to whom a permit, pass or certificate has
been issued, to submit to an examination by a registered medical
practitioner.
                                                                       [18/2012]
 (2) The registered medical practitioner must, upon completion of an
examination of a person under subsection (1), submit a copy of the
results of the examination to the Controller.
                                                                       [18/2012]
 (3) Despite the provisions of any other written law or rule of law, a
registered medical practitioner must, if required by the Controller for
the purposes of exercising his or her powers and carrying out his or
her functions and duties under this Act or the regulations, furnish the
Controller with a copy of any medical record relating to a person who
has been examined pursuant to subsection (1) as the Controller may
require.
                                                                       [18/2012]
  (4) Any person to whom a permit, pass or certificate has been
issued who, without reasonable excuse, refuses to submit to an
examination when required by an immigration officer under
subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on
conviction to a fine not exceeding $2,000 or to imprisonment for a
term not exceeding 6 months or to both.
 (5) The Controller may cancel the permit, pass or certificate of any
person who refuses to submit to any examination when required to do
so by an immigration officer under subsection (1).
 (6) If the Controller cancels a person’s permit, pass or certificate
under subsection (5), the Controller must give notice of the
cancellation to the person.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (7) [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (8) In this section, “registered medical practitioner” means a
medical practitioner registered under the Medical Registration
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                                56
Act 1997 who is employed in any hospital or medical institution and
is designated by name or office by the Controller in writing for the
purposes of this section.
                                                                         [18/2012]
Immigration officer may give instructions to prevent evasion of
examination
  30.—(1) An immigration officer may give such instructions as may
be reasonably necessary to ensure that no person who arrives in, or is
leaving, Singapore evades examination either of his or her person or
effects.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (2) Any person who, without reasonable excuse, refuses or fails to
comply with any instructions given under subsection (1) shall be
guilty of an offence.
                                  PART 5
                    REMOVAL FROM SINGAPORE
Removal of prohibited immigrants from Singapore
 31.—(1) If during the examination of any person arriving in
Singapore or after such inquiry as may be necessary that person is
found to be a prohibited immigrant, the Controller shall, subject to the
provisions of the regulations, prohibit the person from disembarking
or may detain the person at an immigration depot or other place
designated by the Controller.
 (2) The person shall be liable to be removed from Singapore to his
or her place of embarkation or to the country of his or her birth or
citizenship or to any other port or place designated by the Controller.
 (3) For the purposes of this Part, any reference to a person who has
arrived in Singapore includes a reference to a person who has arrived
but has not yet entered Singapore.
Power of Controller to remove prohibited immigrants
 31A.—(1) The Controller may, at any time, by written order, direct
any person mentioned in subsection (2) to remove, within such period
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
57                       Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
as may be specified in the order, a prohibited immigrant who has
arrived in Singapore.
 (2) An order under subsection (1) is to be made against and served
on —
      (a) the master of the vessel, aircraft or train which first brought
          the prohibited immigrant to Singapore; or
      (b) the master of any other vessel, aircraft or train belonging to
          the same owner or chartered by the same charterer of the
          vessel, aircraft or train mentioned in paragraph (a).
 (3) The Controller may take such action or use such force as may be
necessary to ensure that an order under this section is complied with.
 (4) Without limiting subsection (3), the Controller may, by written
order, direct the person against whom an order under this section is
made, not to move his or her vessel, aircraft or train unless the
prohibited immigrant named in that order is on board the vessel,
aircraft or train.
  (5) Any person who contravenes any order made under
subsection (1) or (4) shall be guilty of an offence and shall be
liable on conviction to a fine of not less than $5,000 and not more than
$10,000 or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months or to
both.
Removal of illegal immigrants
 32.—(1) Any person who is convicted of an offence under
section 5, 6, 8 or 9 is liable to be removed from Singapore by
order of the Controller.
 (1A) If a person is ordered to be removed from Singapore under
subsection (1), the Controller may repatriate the person to —
      (a) the person’s place of embarkation;
      (b) the country of the person’s birth or citizenship; or
      (c) any other place designated by the Controller.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                                58
 (2) A citizen of Singapore convicted of an offence under section 5
must not be ordered to be removed from Singapore under this section.
Removal of persons unlawfully remaining in Singapore
 33.—(1) Where the presence of any person in Singapore is
unlawful by reason of section 15 or 62, that person is, whether or
not any proceedings are taken against him or her in respect of any
offence under that section, liable to be removed from Singapore by
order of the Controller.
 (2) [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (3) [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (4) [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (5) Where an order of removal under subsection (1) has been made
in respect of any person, any permit, pass or certificate to enter or
remain in Singapore issued to him or her under this Act or the
regulations is cancelled on the date of the order.
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (5A) If a person is ordered to be removed from Singapore under
subsection (1), the Controller may repatriate the person to —
       (a) the person’s place of embarkation;
       (b) the country of the person’s birth or citizenship; or
           (c) any other place designated by the Controller.
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (6) Nothing in this Part or the regulations requires the Controller to
disclose any fact, produce any document or assign any reason for the
making of any order of removal under this Part which he or she
considers it to be against the public interest to do so.
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Removal of persons ceasing to be citizens of Singapore
 33A.—(1) The Controller may order that a person mentioned in
section 11A(1) be removed from Singapore if the Controller is
satisfied that —
       (a) the person is a prohibited immigrant; or
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
59                        Immigration Act 1959                          2020 Ed.
      (b) the presence of the person in Singapore is undesirable or
          would be prejudicial to public security in Singapore.
  (2) If an order of removal is made under subsection (1) in respect of
a person, any permit or pass issued to the person under section 11A(3)
is cancelled on the date of the order.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Detention of persons ordered to be removed
 34.—(1) Where any person is ordered to be removed from
Singapore under the provisions of this Act, it is lawful for the
Controller to order that person to be detained in custody for such
period as may be necessary for the purpose of making arrangements
for that person’s removal.
 (2) [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (3) Any person who is ordered to be removed from Singapore may
be placed on board a suitable vessel, aircraft or train by any police
officer or immigration officer, and may be lawfully detained on board
that vessel, aircraft or train, so long as the vessel, aircraft or train is
within the limits of Singapore.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (4) Any person who is detained in custody pursuant to an order
made by the Controller under subsection (1) may be so detained in
any prison, police station or immigration depot, or in any other place
appointed for the purpose by the Controller.
Power to arrest person liable to removal
  35. Any person reasonably believed to be a person liable to removal
from Singapore under this Act may be arrested without warrant by
any immigration officer generally or specially authorised by the
Controller in that behalf or by a police officer, and may be detained in
any prison, police station or immigration depot for a period not
exceeding 14 days pending a decision as to whether an order for his or
her removal should be made.
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                                60
Unlawful return after removal
 36.—(1) A person who is removed from or otherwise lawfully sent
out of Singapore must not enter or reside in Singapore without the
prior written permission of the Controller.
 (2) Any person who contravenes subsection (1) shall be guilty of an
offence and shall on conviction be punished with imprisonment for a
presumptive minimum term of not less than one year and not more
than 3 years and shall also be liable to a fine not exceeding $6,000.
  (3) Any person who is convicted of an offence under subsection (2)
is liable to be removed from Singapore by order of the Controller.
 (4) If a person is ordered to be removed from Singapore under
subsection (3), the Controller may repatriate the person to —
       (a) the person’s place of embarkation;
       (b) the country of the person’s birth or citizenship; or
           (c) any other place designated by the Controller.
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
                                   PART 5A
             OBLIGATIONS RELATING TO IDENTIFYING
           INFORMATION OR PASSENGER INFORMATION
                                                                           [18/2012]
Interpretation of this Part
 36A. In this Part, unless the context otherwise requires —
      “disclose”, in relation to identifying information that is a
         personal identifier or in relation to passenger information,
         includes providing access to the identifying information or
         passenger information;
      “identifying information” means —
                (a) any personal identifier;
                (b) any meaningful identifier derived from any personal
                    identifier;
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
61                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
            (c) any record of a result of analysing any personal
                identifier or meaningful identifier derived from any
                personal identifier; and
            (d) any other information, derived from any personal
                identifier or meaningful identifier derived from any
                personal identifier, or from any record of a kind
                referred to in paragraph (c), that could be used to
                discover a particular person’s identity or to get
                information about a particular person;
     “passenger information” means the information relating to a
        passenger on board an aircraft, a vessel or a train provided to
        the Controller or any immigration officer pursuant to any
        provision of this Act.
                                                                     [18/2012]
Authorising access to or disclosure of identifying information
and passenger information
 36B.—(1) The Minister may, in writing, authorise a specified
person, or any person included in a specified class of persons —
      (a) to access identifying information or passenger information
          of the kind specified in the Minister’s authorisation; or
      (b) to disclose, on written request, identifying information or
          passenger information of the kind specified in the
          Minister’s authorisation, to another specified person, or
          another person included in a specified class of persons, in
          the Minister’s authorisation,
for the purpose or purposes specified in the Minister’s authorisation.
                                                                     [18/2012]
 (2) The Minister must specify in an authorisation under this section,
as the purpose or purposes for which access or disclosure is
authorised, one or more of the following purposes, and no other:
      (a) combating document and identity fraud in immigration
          matters;
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                                62
       (b) assisting in the identification of, and authenticating the
           identity of, any person who may be required by or under
           this Act to provide a personal identifier;
      (ba) assisting in the locating and identification of passengers
           within any part of an authorised airport;
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
           (c) improving the efficiency and integrity of immigration
               processing at authorised landing places, airports, train
               checkpoints or points of entry;
      (ca) improving the efficiency, integrity and security of
           operations and processes relating to authorised airports
           and aircraft at authorised airports;
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
      (cb) improving the efficiency and integrity of processes relating
           to the purchase of duty free goods and the tourist refund
           scheme established under the Goods and Services Tax Act
           1993;
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
       (d) assisting in the identification of, and authenticating the
           identity of, any applicant for or holder of a Singapore visa,
           and facilitating his or her entry into Singapore;
           (e) enforcement of the criminal law, including investigating or
               prosecuting a person for an offence under any written law;
           (f) administering or managing the storage of identifying
               information or passenger information;
       (g) modifying identifying information to enable it to be
           matched with other identifying information, or in order
           to correct errors or ensure compliance with appropriate
           standards;
       (h) identifying non-citizens who are prohibited immigrants,
           who are of national security concern or who are associated
           with activities of a criminal nature and whose detention or
           supervision may be necessary in the interests of public
           safety, peace and good order;
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
63                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
      (i) making decisions under this Act, the Passports Act 2007 or
          the regulations made under either Act;
     (ia) preventing, detecting or investigating criminal or terrorist
          activities or activities which may be prejudicial to the
          security of Singapore or any part thereof or to the
          maintenance of public order or essential services;
     (ib) identifying an individual who is unconscious or otherwise
          unable to communicate, for the purposes of providing
          urgent medical care to the individual;
      (j) any other purpose the disclosure of which is required or
          authorised by or under any written law.
                                                            [18/2012; 53/2018]
 (3) For the purposes of subsection (1)(b), a specified person or a
specified class of persons to whom identifying information or
passenger information may be disclosed may include a police
force, a law enforcement body or a border control body of a
foreign country.
                                                                     [18/2012]
Accessing or disclosing identifying information or passenger
information
 36C.—(1) If a person accesses identifying information or
passenger information, and the person —
      (a) is not authorised under section 36B to access any
          identifying information or passenger information; or
      (b) is not authorised under section 36B to access the
          identifying information or passenger information for the
          purpose for which the person accessed it,
the person shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on
conviction to a fine not exceeding $5,000 or to imprisonment for a
term not exceeding 3 years or to both.
                                                                     [18/2012]
 (2) If a person’s conduct causes disclosure of identifying
information or passenger information, and the disclosure is not a
disclosure that is for any of the purposes specified in section 36B(2),
the person shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                                64
conviction to a fine not exceeding $5,000 or to imprisonment for a
term not exceeding 3 years or to both.
                                                                         [18/2012]
                                  PART 6
                           MISCELLANEOUS
Performance of duties of immigration officers
 37.—(1) Immigration officers appointed under this Act must
perform the duties imposed on them by this Act and the
regulations, and must also perform such duties as are required of
them by the Controller, either directly or through any other officer.
 (2) No action taken by any such officer under or for any purpose of
this Act is deemed to be invalid or unauthorised by reason only that it
was not taken by the officer specially appointed or detailed for the
purpose.
 (3) Every immigration officer is deemed to be a public servant
within the meaning of the Penal Code 1871.
Authority of immigration officer to arrest and prosecute
 38.—(1) Except when exercising any powers under section 51AA,
51AB, 51AC or 51AD, every immigration officer appointed under
this Act has the authority and powers of a police officer to enforce any
of the provisions of this Act relating to arrest, detention or removal.
                                                                          [6/2018]
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (2) Every immigration officer has the authority to appear in court
and may, with the authorisation of the Public Prosecutor, conduct any
prosecution in respect of any offence under this Act or the
regulations.
                                                                         [15/2010]
 (3) In any case relating to the commission of an offence under this
Act or the regulations, an immigration officer has all the powers of a
police officer under the Criminal Procedure Code 2010 in relation to
an investigation into an arrestable offence.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
65                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
  (4) For the purposes of subsection (3), when an immigration officer
is exercising the powers of a police officer under the Criminal
Procedure Code 2010, the immigration officer is deemed to be an
officer not below the rank of inspector of police.
                                                                     [15/2010]
Immigration officer to be armed
 38A. Every immigration officer must be provided with such batons,
arms, ammunition and other accoutrements as may be necessary for
the effective discharge of his or her duties.
Power to summon witnesses, etc.
 39.—(1) The Controller may, for the purpose of any inquiry under
this Act, summon and examine witnesses on oath or affirmation, and
may require the production of documents relevant to the inquiry.
 (2) Any person summoned as a witness under subsection (1) who,
without reasonable excuse, fails to attend at the time and place
mentioned in the summons, or who, having attended, refuses to
answer any question that may lawfully be put to him or her or to
produce any document which it is in his or her power to produce, shall
be guilty of an offence.
Exclusion of judicial review
 39A.—(1) There shall be no judicial review in any court of any act
done or decision made by the Minister or the Controller under any
provision of this Act except in regard to any question relating to
compliance with any procedural requirement of this Act or the
regulations governing that act or decision.
 (2) In this section, “judicial review” includes proceedings instituted
by way of —
      (a) an application for a Mandatory Order, a Prohibiting Order
          or a Quashing Order;
      (b) an application for a declaration or an injunction;
      (c) an Order for Review of Detention; and
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                                66
       (d) any other suit or action relating to or arising out of any
           decision made or act done pursuant to any power conferred
           upon the Minister or the Controller by any provision of this
           Act.
Opportunity to be heard not required to be given
 39B. To avoid doubt, before making any decision under this Act or
the regulations, the Controller or the Minister (as the case may be) is
not required to give any person who may be affected by the decision
an opportunity to be heard.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Duty of police officers to execute orders
 40. Every police officer must, when so requested by an immigration
officer, receive and execute any written order of the Controller, and
any warrant of the Controller for the arrest, detention or removal of
any person made under the provisions of this Act.
Restriction on discharge of member of crew
 41.—(1) When any seaman is about to be or is discharged or paid
off in Singapore, the master, owner, charterer or agent must so notify
the Controller.
 (2) A member of a crew who has been discharged or paid off must
not be left in Singapore unless either —
       (a) he or she is a citizen of Singapore; or
       (b) he or she is in possession of a valid permit or pass.
  (3) Where there has been any contravention of subsection (2), the
master, owner, charterer, agent or consignee of the vessel, aircraft or
train in which the person concerned was employed is liable for the
maintenance of that person and for the cost of that person’s
repatriation to that person’s place of birth or citizenship or, if the
master, owner, charterer, agent or consignee so elects, to such other
place as the Controller may approve.
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
67                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
Signing on or bringing as member of crew any person with
intent to land contrary to this Act
 42. Any transportation company and any person, including the
master and the owner of a vessel, aircraft or train arriving in
Singapore, who —
      (a) has knowingly signed on the ship’s articles or brought to
          Singapore as a member of the crew of the vessel, aircraft or
          train any person with intent to permit that person to enter
          Singapore contrary to the provisions of this Act or the
          regulations; or
      (b) represents to an immigration officer that that person is a
          bona fide member of the crew of the vessel, aircraft or
          train,
shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine
not exceeding $4,000 and not less than $200 in respect of each such
person.
Security to prevent unlawful landing
 43.—(1) An immigration officer may demand security from the
master, owner, charterer or agent or consignee of any vessel, aircraft
or train from which the immigration officer has reasonable grounds to
believe that any person is about to disembark in or enter Singapore in
contravention of the provisions of this Act or the regulations, and may
refuse to release the vessel, aircraft or train from examination until
the security is furnished.
 (1A) Despite subsection (1), an immigration officer may demand
security from the master, owner, charterer or agent of any vessel to
ensure that no member of the crew of the vessel disembarks in or
enters Singapore in contravention of the provisions of this Act or the
regulations, and may refuse to release the vessel from examination
until the security is furnished.
 (2) The Controller may, if satisfied that any person has disembarked
in or entered Singapore from any vessel, aircraft or train, in respect of
which security has been furnished under subsection (1) or (1A), in
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                      Immigration Act 1959                         68
contravention of any provisions of this Act or the regulations, direct
the forfeiture of the security or any part thereof.
 (3) The Controller must not direct the forfeiture of any security
under subsection (2) if he or she is satisfied that the master, owner,
charterer, agent or consignee took every reasonable precaution to
prevent any person from so disembarking in or entering Singapore.
 (4) The security under subsection (1) or (1A) shall be given in such
manner and form as the Controller may determine and may be by
bond, guarantee, cash deposit or any other method, or by 2 or more
different methods.
Reports as to persons failing to continue their journey
 44.—(1) Where any through passenger on or member of the crew of
any vessel, aircraft or train fails to continue his or her journey in the
vessel, aircraft or train in circumstances from which it may
reasonably be inferred that the passenger or member of the crew
has remained in Singapore, the master of the vessel, aircraft or train
(as the case may be) must notify an immigration officer or a police
officer of the failure of the passenger or member of the crew to
continue his or her journey.
 (2) A master of a vessel, an aircraft or a train who fails to comply
with subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence.
Repatriation
 45.—(1) Any person residing in Singapore who —
       (a) is not a citizen of Singapore;
       (b) is by reason of destitution, infirmity or mental incapacity,
           unable to obtain employment or to support himself or
           herself and his or her family (if any);
           (c) is unable to pay the cost of his or her passage and of the
               passages of his or her family (if any) to the country of his or
               her birth or citizenship; and
       (d) is or is likely to become a charge upon the public or on a
           charitable institution,
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
69                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
may apply to the Controller for the repatriation of himself or herself
and his or her family (if any) at the cost of the Government.
 (2) Upon an application under subsection (1), if the Controller is
satisfied, after such inquiry as he or she thinks necessary, that the
person has or is about to become a charge on the public or on a
charitable institution and is unable to pay the cost of the repatriation
of himself or herself and his or her family (if any) and that no
government, organisation, company or person is liable or willing to
pay the cost of repatriation, the Controller may authorise the payment
of the cost subject to the condition specified in subsection (3).
 (3) Any person repatriated at the cost of the Government must enter
into an undertaking, in such form as may be prescribed, that he or she
will not return to Singapore without the written sanction of the
Controller.
 (4) Such sanction is conditional upon the person refunding to the
Controller all costs and charges incurred in the repatriation of the
person and his or her family (if any) and is subject to such other
conditions as the Controller may consider expedient.
 (5) Any person repatriated at the cost of the Government under this
section who enters or attempts to enter Singapore without the
sanction of the Controller under subsection (3), or who having
entered Singapore with such sanction, fails or neglects to comply
with any condition upon which the sanction was given, shall be guilty
of an offence.
Masters, owners, etc., liable for expenses
 46.—(1) If any person —
      (a) enters Singapore from any vessel, aircraft or train contrary
          to the provisions of this Act or the regulations;
      (b) disembarks from any vessel on which he or she has been
          re‑embarked or to which he or she has been returned under
          section 19, 20 or 24; or
      (c) arrives at any authorised airport or train checkpoint in
          Singapore from any aircraft or train (as the case may be)
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2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                                70
            and is required to leave or depart from Singapore under
            section 25 or 25A, as the case may be,
the master, owner, charterer and agent thereof shall be jointly and
severally liable for all expenses incurred by the Government in
respect of the detention and maintenance of the person and his or her
removal from Singapore.
                                                                         [18/2012]
  (2) The expenses are recoverable as a debt due to the Government
from the master, owner, charterer and agent of the vessel, aircraft or
train jointly and severally.
Obligation to afford free passage
 47.—(1) When an order of removal is made under the provisions of
this Act in respect of any person who has entered Singapore contrary
to the provisions of this Act or the regulations, and the person was
brought to Singapore in a vessel, an aircraft or a train, the master of
the vessel, aircraft or train, and also the master of any vessel, aircraft
or train belonging to the same owners or chartered by the same
charterers, must, if required in writing by the Controller, receive the
person on board his or her vessel, aircraft or train and afford the
person free of charge a passage to the port or place at which the
person embarked for Singapore or to any other port or place
designated by the Controller and proper accommodation and
maintenance during the voyage, flight or journey.
 (2) No master shall be liable under subsection (1) unless the order
of removal has been made by the Controller within 12 months from
the date on which the person entered Singapore.
 (3) A master of a vessel, an aircraft or a train who fails to comply
with this section shall be guilty of an offence.
Seizure of moneys for purposes of repatriation, etc.
 47A.—(1) A specified immigrant is liable to pay to the Government
a sum sufficient to cover all expenses incurred by the Government in
connection with the detention, maintenance, medical treatment and
removal from Singapore of himself or herself and his or her
dependants.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
71                       Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
 (2) For the purposes of subsection (1), the Controller may order a
specified immigrant to be searched and that all moneys found on him
or her when so searched be seized and used by the Controller to meet
the expenses which have been incurred or may be incurred by the
Government under that subsection.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (3) Where any sum seized under subsection (2) is in excess of the
total amount of expenses for which the specified immigrant is liable
under subsection (1), the balance of the moneys must be returned to
him or her.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (4) The Controller may seize moneys under subsection (2) even
though the specified immigrant has not been charged with nor
convicted of an offence.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (5) Any person who claims to be the legal owner of any moneys
seized under subsection (2) (other than the specified immigrant from
whom the moneys were seized) may, within 6 years from the date of
seizure, apply to the Controller in such form and manner as may be
prescribed for the moneys seized to be returned to him or her.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
  (6) Despite the provisions of any written law, the moneys seized
under subsection (2) (except any excess moneys which have been
returned to the specified immigrant under subsection (3)) shall not be
liable to be garnished, attached, sequestered or levied upon for or in
respect of any debt or claim, other than to meet the expenses referred
to in subsection (1) or any claim made under subsection (5).
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (7) In this section, “specified immigrant” means —
      (a) a prohibited immigrant; or
      (b) a person who is ordered to be removed from Singapore
          under section 32(1), 33(1), 33A(1), 36(3) or 57(3).
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Power to detain vessel
 48.—(1) The Controller may by writing under his or her hand
authorise the Director of Marine to detain any vessel in connection
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2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                         72
with which an offence under this Act is reasonably believed to have
been or to be about to be committed, and the vessel may then be
detained either at the place where it is found or at any place to which
the Controller may order it to be brought.
 (1A) The Controller must give notice to the master, owner,
charterer or agent of the vessel of the detention of the vessel.
 (2) For the purposes of the detention and other lawful dealing with
the vessel, the Director of Marine has power to muster the crew and
may, if he or she considers it necessary to do so, place a police guard
on board.
  (3) The detention is for safe custody only, and ceases if a bond with
2 sufficient sureties to the satisfaction of the Controller is given by the
master, owner, charterer or agent of the vessel for the payment of any
fine, costs, expenses or charges incurred under this Act in respect of
any offence or default thereunder.
 (4) If default is made in the payment of any such fine, costs,
expenses or charges, the Director of Marine may seize the vessel and
the vessel is to be declared forfeited to the Government by order of a
court of competent jurisdiction upon the application of the
Attorney‑General.
 (4A) Any vessel so forfeited is to be sold free of all encumbrances.
 (5) The proceeds of sale of a vessel under this section must, despite
any rule of law relating to priority of claims, be applied first in
payment of any fine, costs, expenses or charges incurred under this
Act and of any costs incurred in and about the sale and the
proceedings leading thereto, and the balance must be paid to the
owner of the vessel or other person lawfully entitled to the proceeds
thereof.
  (6) Section 3(1)(r) of the High Court (Admiralty Jurisdiction)
Act 1961 is to be construed as extending to any claim in respect of a
liability incurred by the owner of a vessel under this Act.
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
73                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
Power to seize, detain and forfeit vessels below 200 tons or
vehicles
 49.—(1) Any vessel below 200 tons or any vehicle that is used, or
in respect of which there is reasonable cause to suspect that it has
been or that it is about to be used, in the commission of any offence
under this Act or the regulations may be seized and detained at any
place either on land or in the territorial waters of Singapore —
      (a) by the Controller, or any immigration officer authorised in
          that behalf by the Controller in writing under his or her
          hand; or
      (b) by any police officer authorised in that behalf by a Deputy
          Commissioner of Police in writing under his or her hand.
                                                                     [18/2012]
 (2) The seizing officer must immediately give written notice of the
seizure and the grounds thereof to the owner, charterer or agent of the
vehicle or vessel so seized or detained, either by delivering the notice
to the owner, charterer or agent in person or by post at that person’s
place of office or abode, if known.
 (3) The notice under subsection (2) is not required to be given
where the seizure or detention is made in the presence of or with the
knowledge of the offender or the owner or the agent of the offender or
owner, as the case may be.
 (4) Any vehicle or vessel liable to seizure or detention under
subsection (1) is liable to forfeiture.
 (5) An order for the forfeiture or for the release of any vehicle or
vessel liable to forfeiture under this section is to be made by the court
before which the prosecution with regard thereto has been held.
 (6) Where, upon an application by the Public Prosecutor, it is
proved to the satisfaction of a court that an offence under this Act or
the regulations has been committed and that the vehicle or vessel was
used in the commission of the offence, the court is to make an order
for the forfeiture of the vehicle or vessel, even though no person may
have been charged with or convicted of the offence.
 (6A) No vehicle or vessel is to be forfeited under this section if it is
established by the owner thereof that the vehicle or vessel was
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                        74
unlawfully in the possession of another person without the owner’s
consent.
 (7) The Controller may sell any vehicle or vessel forfeited under
this section.
 (8) The proceeds of the sale must, after payment of the expenses of
the sale, be applied in payment of any fine, costs or charges incurred
under this Act and any balance remaining must be paid into the
Consolidated Fund.
Power of interrogation
 50.—(1) Any person reasonably believed to be a person liable to
removal from Singapore under any of the provisions of this Act may
be questioned by an immigration officer.
 (2) The person must fully and truthfully answer all questions and
enquiries put to the person by the immigration officer tending,
directly or indirectly, to establish the person’s identity, nationality or
occupation or bearing on any of the restrictions contained in this Act
or the regulations, and shall disclose and produce to that officer on
demand all documents in the person’s possession relating to those
matters.
 (3) All such answers and documents are admissible in evidence in
any proceedings under this Act against the person making or
producing the same.
 (4) Nothing in this section is to be construed as rendering any such
answers inadmissible in any other proceedings in which they would
otherwise be admissible.
Power of search and arrest for offence under Act
 51.—(1) Any immigration officer or any other officer generally or
specially authorised in writing in that behalf by the Controller, and
any officer of the Singapore Customs acting under the instructions of
such immigration officer, and any police officer may without a
warrant and with or without assistance —
       (a) enter and search any premises; and
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
75                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
      (b) stop and search any vehicle, train, vessel or person, or
          search any aircraft, whether in a public place or not,
if he or she has reason to believe that any evidence of the commission
of an offence under this Act or the regulations is likely to be found on
the premises or person or in the vehicle, vessel, aircraft or train, and
may seize any evidence so found.
                                                                      [6/2018]
 (2) A woman must not be searched under this section except by a
woman.
 (3) Any police officer, immigration officer or customs officer may
arrest without warrant any person whom the officer reasonably
believes has committed an offence under this Act or the regulations.
 (4) Where any person is arrested by an immigration officer or
customs officer under subsection (3), the immigration officer or
customs officer must comply with sections 67 and 68 of the Criminal
Procedure Code 2010 as if he or she were a police officer.
                                                                     [15/2010]
Power of search and arrest for offences committed within
authorised area, etc.
 51AA.—(1) An immigration officer or a police officer may,
without a warrant and with or without assistance, stop and search
any vehicle, train, vessel or person, or search any aircraft, within or in
the vicinity of an authorised area, if the immigration officer or police
officer has reason to believe that —
      (a) a relevant offence has been, or is likely to be, committed
          within or in the vicinity of the authorised area; and
      (b) any evidence of the commission of the relevant offence is
          likely to be found on the person or in the vehicle, train,
          vessel or aircraft.
                                                                      [6/2018]
 (2) An immigration officer or a police officer may seize any
evidence so found under subsection (1).
                                                                      [6/2018]
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2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                             76
 (3) A woman must not be searched under this section except by a
woman.
                                                                         [6/2018]
 (4) An immigration officer or a police officer may require any
person subject to a search under subsection (1) to undergo any form
of security screening, including doing one or more of the following:
       (a) to walk through a walk-through detector;
       (b) to pass the person’s personal property through an X‑ray
           machine;
           (c) to allow the immigration officer or police officer to pass a
               hand‑held scanner in close proximity to the person;
       (d) to allow the immigration officer or police officer to pass a
           hand‑held scanner in close proximity to the person’s
           personal property.
                                                                         [6/2018]
 (5) If an immigration officer has reason to believe that a relevant
offence has been committed within or in the vicinity of an authorised
area, the immigration officer may examine orally any person who
appears to be acquainted with the facts and circumstances of the
relevant offence.
                                                                         [6/2018]
 (6) The person mentioned in subsection (5) is bound to state truly
the facts and circumstances with which the person is acquainted,
except that the person need not say anything that might expose the
person to a criminal charge, penalty or forfeiture.
                                                                         [6/2018]
 (7) A statement made by a person mentioned in subsection (5)
must —
       (a) be reduced to writing;
       (b) be read over to the person;
           (c) if the person does not understand English, be interpreted to
               the person in a language that the person understands; and
       (d) after correction (if necessary), be signed by the person.
                                                                         [6/2018]
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
77                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
 (8) An immigration officer may arrest without warrant any person if
the immigration officer has reason to believe that a relevant offence
(being also an arrestable offence) has been committed within or in the
vicinity of an authorised area.
                                                                     [6/2018]
 (9) An immigration officer may arrest any person who, within or in
the vicinity of an authorised area, is accused of committing or
commits in the view or presence of the immigration officer, a
non‑arrestable offence if, on the demand of the immigration
officer —
      (a) the person refuses to give his or her name and residential
          address; or
      (b) the person gives a residential address outside Singapore, or
          a name or residential address which the immigration
          officer has reason to believe is false.
                                                                     [6/2018]
 (10) [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (11) [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (12) [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (13) An immigration officer, who has reasonable grounds to
suspect that a relevant offence may be committed within or in the
vicinity of an authorised area, may intervene for the purpose of
preventing and must, to the best of the immigration officer’s ability,
use all lawful means to prevent the commission of the relevant
offence.
                                                                     [6/2018]
 (14) Where a relevant offence is committed within or in the vicinity
of an authorised area, an immigration officer may, for the purpose of
preserving any crime scene, cordon off any area where the relevant
offence is committed.
                                                                     [6/2018]
 (15) Nothing in this section affects any other power exercisable by
an immigration officer under any other written law.
                                                                     [6/2018]
 (16) In this section —
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                             78
       [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
      “relevant offence” means an offence under any written law
         (other than this Act or the regulations).
                                                                         [6/2018]
Power to arrest other persons within authorised area, etc.
 51AB.—(1) This section applies to a person within or in the
vicinity of an authorised area who —
       (a) has an arrest warrant issued against him or her;
       (b) may be arrested by a police officer without a warrant under
           section 64(1) of the Criminal Procedure Code 2010; or
           (c) is concerned in a specified offence.
 (2) For the purposes of subsection (1)(c) and section 51AD, a
person who is concerned in a specified offence includes the
following:
       (a) a person who is reasonably suspected of having been
           involved in the specified offence;
       (b) a person against whom a reasonable complaint has been
           made or credible information has been received, of the
           person having been concerned or involved in the specified
           offence.
 (3) Despite any other written law, an immigration officer may —
       (a) arrest a person mentioned in subsection (1)(a) even though
           the arrest warrant issued against that person is not directed
           to the immigration officer; or
       (b) arrest a person mentioned in subsection (1)(b) or (c)
           without a warrant.
 (4) Despite any other written law, if any vehicle within or in the
vicinity of an authorised area —
       (a) is driven by, or under the control of, a person mentioned in
           subsection (1); or
       (b) is owned by, and includes as its passenger, that person,
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
79                       Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
an immigration officer may, without a warrant and with or without
assistance, stop, search and detain the vehicle.
 (5) In this section and section 51AD —
     “prescribed law enforcement agency” means any authority or
        person, charged with the duty of investigating offences or
        charging offenders under any written law (other than this Act
        or the regulations), prescribed for the purposes of this section
        and section 51AD by the Minister;
     “specified offence” means any offence under any written law
        (other than this Act or the regulations) by or under which an
        officer of, or a person appointed by, a prescribed law
        enforcement agency may arrest the person without a warrant.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Power to detain stolen vehicle within authorised area, etc.
 51AC.—(1) This section applies to a vehicle that —
      (a) is within or in the vicinity of an authorised area; and
      (b) satisfies either or both of the following conditions:
             (i) the Commissioner of Police or a police officer is
                 satisfied that the vehicle has been stolen or illegally
                 taken or used;
            (ii) the vehicle is liable to be seized by a police officer
                 under section 95(1) of the Road Traffic Act 1961.
 (2) Despite any other written law, an immigration officer may,
without warrant and with or without assistance —
      (a) stop and seize the vehicle; and
      (b) detain the vehicle for a period not exceeding 24 hours in
          any suitable place of detention within or in the vicinity of
          an authorised area.
 (3) If an immigration officer seizes and detains the vehicle under
subsection (2), the immigration officer must —
      (a) immediately inform a police officer of the seizure;
      (b) hand over the vehicle to a police officer; and
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2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                                80
           (c) inform the driver or person in charge of the vehicle of the
               basis on which the vehicle is seized and detained.
 (4) Despite any other written law, if —
       (a) the vehicle satisfies the condition mentioned in
           subsection (1)(b)(i); and
       (b) the driver or person in charge of the vehicle is within or in
           the vicinity of an authorised area,
an immigration officer may, without warrant, arrest the driver or
person.
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Procedure for arrest
 51AD.—(1) An officer who makes an arrest under this Act —
       (a) must touch or confine the body of the person to be arrested
           unless the person submits to arrest by word or action;
       (b) may use all reasonable means necessary to make the arrest
           if the person to be arrested forcibly resists or tries to evade
           arrest; and
           (c) may search the person.
 (2) A person arrested must not be restrained more than is necessary
to prevent the person’s escape.
 (3) A woman must not be searched under subsection (1)(c) except
by a woman.
 (4) If an immigration officer arrests a person under section 51AA,
51AB or 51AC, the immigration officer —
       (a) must immediately inform an authorised officer of the
           arrest;
       (b) must hand over the person to an authorised officer; and
           (c) may detain the person for a period not exceeding 24 hours
               in any suitable place of detention within or in the vicinity
               of an authorised area pending the handing over of the
               person under paragraph (b).
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
81                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
  (5) When a person is handed over to an authorised officer under
subsection (4)(b), the authorised officer must re‑arrest the person
if —
      (a) in the case of an arrest under section 51AA(8) — the
          authorised officer has reason to believe that a relevant
          offence mentioned in section 51AA(8) has been
          committed;
      (b) in the case of an arrest under section 51AA(9) — the
          authorised officer has reason to believe that the person has
          committed the non‑arrestable offence mentioned in
          section 51AA(9) and the person —
             (i) refuses to give his or her name and residential
                 address when required by the authorised officer; or
            (ii) gives a residential address outside Singapore, or a
                 name or residential address that the authorised
                 officer has reason to believe is false;
      (c) in the case of an arrest under section 51AB(3) read with
          section 51AB(1)(a) — the authorised officer is satisfied
          that an arrest warrant has been issued against the person;
      (d) in the case of an arrest under section 51AB(3) read with
          section 51AB(1)(b) — the authorised officer has reason to
          believe that the person is a person mentioned in
          section 64(1) of the Criminal Procedure Code 2010;
      (e) in the case of an arrest under section 51AB(3) read with
          section 51AB(1)(c) — the authorised officer has reason to
          believe that the person is concerned in a specified offence;
          or
       (f) in the case of an arrest under section 51AC(4) — the
           authorised officer has reason to believe that the vehicle in
           question has been stolen or illegally taken or used.
 (6) If the authorised officer does not re‑arrest under subsection (5) a
person handed over to the authorised officer under subsection (4)(b),
the person must be released.
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                                82
 (7) In this section, “authorised officer”, in relation to a person
arrested by an immigration officer, means —
       (a) if the person is arrested under section 51AA(8) or (9) or
           51AC(4) — a police officer;
       (b) if an arrest warrant has been issued against the person and
           the person is arrested under section 51AB(3) read with
           section 51AB(1)(a) — a person who may execute the arrest
           warrant under section 69 of the Criminal Procedure Code
           2010;
           (c) if the person may be arrested by a police officer without a
               warrant under section 64(1) of the Criminal Procedure
               Code 2010 and the person is arrested under
               section 51AB(3) read with section 51AB(1)(b) — a
               police officer; or
       (d) if the person is concerned in a specified offence and the
           person is arrested under section 51AB(3) in relation to the
           specified offence —
                 (i) a police officer; or
                (ii) an officer of, or a person appointed by, a prescribed
                     law enforcement agency,
       (d) who is empowered by or under any written law (other than
           this Act or the regulations) to arrest the person without a
           warrant in relation to the specified offence.
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Power to search person in immigration depot
 51AE.—(1) An immigration officer may search a person who is
detained, or required to remain, in an immigration depot under this
Act or any other written law.
 (2) A woman must not be searched under subsection (1) except by a
woman.
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
83                       Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
Bail and bond
 51AF.—(1) A person who has been arrested by a police officer, an
immigration officer or a customs officer under section 51(3) may be
released on bail or on personal bond granted by any immigration
officer.
 (2) Division 5 (Bails and bonds) of Part 6 of the Criminal Procedure
Code 2010 applies to the release of a person on bail or on personal
bond under this section or section 92 or 93 of the Criminal Procedure
Code 2010 (as the case may be) with the following modifications:
      (a) any reference to “officer”, “police officer” or “police
          officer of or above the rank of sergeant” is to be read to
          include an immigration officer;
      (b) the reference to the Commissioner of Police in
          section 92(1) of the Criminal Procedure Code 2010 is to
          be read to include the Controller.
                                                  [Act 16 of 2024 wef 17/06/2024]
Provision of information by Housing and Development Board
 51A.—(1) Any immigration officer duly authorised by the
Controller may, if the immigration officer considers it necessary
for administering or enforcing any requirement under this Act or the
regulations relating to the reporting of the place of residence of any
person or any change thereof, by written notice require the Board to
disclose any secret or confidential document or information which is
in the possession or control of the Board.
                                                                        [5/2010]
 (2) The Board must disclose the document or information required
by an immigration officer under subsection (1) despite any obligation
as to secrecy or confidentiality imposed by any law.
                                                                        [5/2010]
 (3) Any immigration officer to whom any document or information
has been disclosed under subsection (2) must not disclose that
document or information to any other person except —
      (a) to another law enforcement officer for the performance of
          his or her official duties in administering or facilitating the
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                               84
            administration of any written law, provided the Board
            consents to such disclosure; or
       (b) for the purpose of criminal proceedings.
                                                                         [5/2010]
  (4) Any immigration officer who contravenes subsection (3), or any
law enforcement officer who discloses any document or information
obtained under that subsection to any other person other than for the
purpose specified in paragraph (a) or (b) of that subsection, shall be
guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine not
exceeding $2,000 or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding
12 months or to both.
                                                                         [5/2010]
 (5) In this section, unless the context otherwise requires —
      “Board” means the Housing and Development Board
        established under section 3 of the Housing and
        Development Act 1959;
      “disclose”, in relation to any document or information, includes
         allowing access to such document or information;
      “law enforcement officer” means —
              (a) any police officer;
              (b) any immigration officer; or
              (c) any registration officer within the meaning of the
                  National Registration Act 1965.
                                                                         [5/2010]
Person registered under Enlistment Act 1970
  52.—(1) An immigration officer may prevent any person from
leaving Singapore and require the person to surrender the person’s
passport to the immigration officer if the immigration officer has
reason to believe that the person is a person subject to the Enlistment
Act 1970 who is not exempted from the requirement for an exit
permit and is attempting to leave Singapore without an exit permit
issued by the proper authority.
                                                    [Act 10 of 2024 wef01/05/2024]
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
85                       Immigration Act 1959                          2020 Ed.
 (2) In this section, “person subject to the Enlistment Act 1970” and
“proper authority” have the same meaning as “person subject to this
Act” and “proper authority”, respectively, in section 2 of the
Enlistment Act 1970.
                                                  [Act 10 of 2024 wef01/05/2024]
 53. [Repealed by Act 26 of 2022 wef 12/06/2023]
Counterfoils, etc., to be prima facie evidence
 54. In any proceedings under this Act or at the hearing of any
charge for an offence under this Act, any counterfoil or counterpart of
any permit, pass, certificate or other document issued under this Act
or the regulations and purporting to be signed by the Controller or by
an immigration officer generally or specially authorised in that behalf
by the Controller may be produced in evidence without further proof
and is prima facie evidence of the facts therein stated and is, unless
the contrary be proved, presumed to be a true statement of the
relevant contents of the permit, pass, certificate or other document to
which it relates.
Regulations
 55.—(1) The Minister may make regulations not inconsistent with
the provisions of this Act for all or any of the following purposes:
      (a) prescribing anything that is to be or may be prescribed
          under the provisions of this Act;
      (b) prescribing the forms to be used for the purposes of this
          Act;
      (c) providing for and regulating matters relating to permits,
          passes (including classes of passes) and certificates,
          including (without limitation) the Controller’s powers —
             (i) relating to an application for and the issue of a
                 permit, pass or certificate, and the cancellation of a
                 pass;
            (ii) to decide the validity period for, and vary the validity
                 period of, a pass or certificate;
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                                86
               (iii) to impose conditions on a pass or certificate at the
                     time of or after the issue of the pass or certificate, and
                     vary or revoke any condition of the pass or
                     certificate; and
               (iv) to apply section 11(5A) with the necessary
                    modifications for a class of pass holders or
                    certificate holders;
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
      (ca) prescribing the duties and responsibilities of a holder of a
           permit, pass or certificate;
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
       (d) providing for the payment and recovery of any expenses
           incurred by the Government in connection with the
           detention, maintenance, medical treatment and removal
           from Singapore of any person under the provisions of this
           Act;
           (e) prescribing the place where, the person to whom and the
               manner in which application to enter Singapore must be
               made;
      (ea) providing for the circumstances for granting Singapore
           visas and the conditions subject to which a Singapore visa
           may be granted;
      (eb) providing for the manner in which personal identifiers
           (within the meaning of Part 5A) are obtained and kept;
           (f) prescribing the procedure to be followed by persons
               entering Singapore;
       (g) prescribing the procedure to be followed by authorities in
           the exercise of their functions under this Act;
      (ga) providing for the taking or recording of any personal
           identifier of —
                 (i) any person who applies for or has been issued with a
                     permit or pass;
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
87                      Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
           (ii) any person suspected or have been convicted of an
                offence under section 5, 6(1), 15 or 36 or the
                regulations;
           (iii) any prohibited immigrant;
           (iv) any person (other than a citizen of Singapore) who
                transits through Singapore; or
           (v) any applicant for, or holder of, a Singapore visa;
      (h) [Deleted by Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
      (i) providing for a deposit or security to be made or given by
          or in respect of any person as a condition of, or for the grant
          of, an entry permit, a re‑entry permit or a pass to him or her
          and the conditions subject to which the deposit or security
          may be forfeited;
      (j) prescribing the fees to be charged upon the issue of any
          entry permit, re‑entry permit, certificate, pass, Singapore
          visa or document issued or to be issued under this Act or
          the regulations and the processing of any application for
          the issue of such entry permit, re‑entry permit, certificate,
          pass, Singapore visa or document;
     (ja) prescribing different fees for different classes of applicants
          for any entry permit, re‑entry permit, certificate, pass,
          Singapore visa or document issued or to be issued under
          this Act or the regulations, and any application fee so
          prescribed need not bear any relationship to the cost of
          issuing or processing the entry permit, re‑entry permit,
          certificate, pass, Singapore visa or document;
      (k) prescribing the penalties of imprisonment for a term not
          exceeding 2 years or a fine not exceeding $3,000 or both
          for the breach of the regulations;
     (ka) prescribing the penalties for the late payment of any fees
          prescribed under the regulations;
     (kb) providing for the maintenance and management of any
          immigration depot, including the care, control, discipline
          and medical examination of any person in an immigration
        Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                                88
               depot, and making different provisions for different
               immigration depots;
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
           (l) generally for the better carrying into effect of the purposes
               and provisions of this Act.
                                                                   [18/2012; 6/2018]
 (2) All regulations made under this section must be presented to
Parliament as soon as possible after publication in the Gazette.
 (3) If a resolution is passed within the next 3 months after the
regulations are so presented disapproving the regulations or any part
thereof, the regulations or such part thereof (as the case may be) then
cease to have effect but without affecting the validity of anything
previously done thereunder.
Power to exempt from provisions of this Act
 56.—(1) Despite anything in this Act, the Minister may by order
exempt any person or class of persons, either absolutely or
conditionally, from all or any of the provisions of this Act and may
in that order provide for any presumptions necessary in order to give
effect thereto.
 (2) Every order made under this section which relates to a class of
persons shall be published in the Gazette.
Offences
 57.—(1) Any person who —
       (a) attempts unlawfully to enter Singapore in contravention of
           any provision of this Act, other than section 6(1), or the
           regulations;
      (aa) abets any person to enter Singapore in contravention of the
           provisions of this Act or the regulations;
       (b) abets any person to leave Singapore in contravention of the
           provisions of this Act or the regulations;
           (c) engages in the business or trade of conveying to or out of
               Singapore in or on any vehicle, vessel, aircraft or train any
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
89                     Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
         person whom he or she knows or has reasonable grounds
         for believing is a prohibited immigrant;
     (d) harbours a person —
           (i) whom the defendant knows has acted in
               contravention of the provisions of this Act or the
               regulations;
          (ii) with reckless disregard as to whether he or she has
               acted in contravention of the provisions of this Act or
               the regulations; or
          (iii) negligently failing to ascertain as to whether he or
                she has acted in contravention of the provisions of
                this Act or the regulations;
     (e) employs any person who has acted in contravention of
         section 6(1), 15 or 36(1) or the regulations;
                                                [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
     (f) makes or causes to be made any false report, false
         statement or false representation in connection with any
         obligation imposed by the provisions of this Act or the
         regulations;
     (g) resists or obstructs, actively or passively, any immigration
         officer in the execution of the immigration officer’s duty;
     (h) without lawful excuse hinders or obstructs any removal
         under the provisions of this Act;
     (i) gives, sells or parts with possession of any entry or re‑entry
         permit, pass, Singapore visa or certificate in order that it
         may be used in contravention of paragraph (j);
     (j) uses any entry or re-entry permit, pass, Singapore visa or
         certificate issued to any other person as if it had been
         lawfully issued to himself or herself;
     (k) obtains or attempts to obtain any entry permit, re‑entry
         permit, pass, Singapore visa or certificate for himself or
         herself, or for any other person, by giving information
         (whether in or outside Singapore) which the firstmentioned
         person knows —
       Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                                90
                 (i) is false or misleading in a material particular; or
                (ii) omits any matter or thing without which the
                     information is misleading in a material particular;
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
      (ka) obtains or attempts to obtain any entry permit, re‑entry
           permit, pass, Singapore visa or certificate for himself or
           herself, or for any other person, by giving information
           (whether in or outside Singapore) that —
                 (i) is false or misleading in a material particular; or
                (ii) omits any matter or thing without which the
                     information is misleading in a material particular;
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
           (l) uses or without lawful authority has in the person’s
               possession any forged, unlawfully altered or irregular
               entry or re‑entry permit, pass, Singapore visa or certificate
               or other document issued under this Act or the regulations,
               or any permit, pass, Singapore visa or certificate or other
               document so issued on which any endorsement has been
               forged or unlawfully altered;
       (m) makes or has in the person’s possession, without lawful
           authority, or traffics in any electronic template, stamp, seal,
           plate, paraphernalia or other instrument knowing that the
           electronic template, stamp, seal, plate, paraphernalia or
           instrument is or is intended to be used for forging or
           unlawfully altering any endorsement made under this Act
           or the regulations on any passport, entry or re‑entry permit,
           pass, Singapore visa or certificate or other document issued
           or to be issued under this Act or the regulations; or
       (n) makes or has in the person’s possession, without lawful
           authority, or traffics in any device, machine, paper,
           material or other thing knowing that the device,
           machine, paper, material or thing is or has been specially
           designed or adapted for making a forged entry or re‑entry
           permit, pass, Singapore visa or certificate or other
           document issued under this Act or the regulations,
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
91                       Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
shall be guilty of an offence.
 (1AAA) An offence under subsection (1)(ka) is a strict liability
offence.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (1AA) A person who is guilty of an offence under subsection (1) —
      (a) in the case of an offence under subsection (1)(a), shall be
          punished with imprisonment for a term not exceeding
          2 years and shall also be liable to a fine not exceeding
          $4,000;
      (b) in the case of an offence under subsection (1)(aa), shall be
          punished with imprisonment for a presumptive minimum
          term of not less than 6 months and not more than 2 years,
          and —
             (i) where the offence is abetted within the meaning of
                 section 107(1)(b) or (c) of the Penal Code 1871 and
                 the offence abetted is punishable with caning, shall
                 also be punished with caning with not less than
                 3 strokes; or
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
            (ii) in any other case, shall also be liable to a fine not
                 exceeding $6,000;
      (c) subject to subsection (1A), in the case of an offence under
          subsection (1)(b) or (e), shall be punished with
          imprisonment for a presumptive minimum term of not
          less than 6 months and not more than 2 years and shall also
          be liable to a fine not exceeding $6,000;
      (d) in the case of an offence under subsection (1)(c), shall be
          punished with imprisonment for a term of not less than
          2 years and not more than 5 years and shall also be
          punished with caning with not less than 3 strokes;
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
      (e) in the case of an offence under subsection (1)(d)(i) or (ii),
          shall on conviction be punished with imprisonment for a
          presumptive minimum term of not less than 6 months and
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                                  92
              not more than 2 years and shall also be liable to a fine not
              exceeding $6,000;
           (f) in the case of an offence under subsection (1)(d)(iii), shall
               be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $6,000 or to
               imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months or to
               both;
       (g) in the case of an offence under subsection (1)(f), (g), (h),
           (i), (j) or (l), shall be liable on conviction to a fine not
           exceeding $4,000 or to imprisonment for a term not
           exceeding 12 months or to both;
                                                        [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
      (ga) in the case of an offence under subsection (1)(k), shall be
           liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $8,000 or to
           imprisonment for a term not exceeding 12 months or to
           both;
                                                        [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
      (gb) in the case of an offence under subsection (1)(ka), shall be
           liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $4,000; and
                                                        [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
       (h) in the case of an offence under subsection (1)(m) or (n),
           shall be liable on conviction to a fine not exceeding $8,000
           or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 5 years or to
           both.
                                         [15/2010; 18/2012; 15/2019; S 22/89; S 227/95]
 (1A) Where, in the case of any offence under subsection (1)(e), it is
proved to the satisfaction of the court that the defendant has at the
same time employed more than 5 immigration offenders, the
defendant shall be punished with caning in addition to the
punishment prescribed for that offence.
                                                                             [15/2010]
                                                        [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (1B) Where, by virtue of section 325(1)(a) or (b) of the Criminal
Procedure Code 2010, the defendant referred to in subsection (1A) is
not punishable with caning, he shall, in lieu of caning, be punished
with a fine not exceeding $10,000.
                                                                             [15/2010]
                                                        [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
93                       Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
 (2) Where a body corporate is guilty of an offence under
subsection (1)(e) and that offence is proved to have been
committed with the authority, consent or connivance of any
director, manager, secretary or other similar officer of the body
corporate or any person who was purporting to act in any such
capacity, he or she, as well as the body corporate, shall be guilty of
that offence and shall be liable to be proceeded against and punished
accordingly.
  (2A) Where a body corporate is guilty of an offence under this Act
for which a period of mandatory imprisonment or mandatory caning
is prescribed, the body corporate shall, in lieu of imprisonment or
caning, be liable on conviction to a fine of not less than $100,000 and
not more than $200,000.
 (3) Any person unlawfully entering or re‑entering or attempting
unlawfully to enter or re‑enter Singapore or unlawfully remaining in
Singapore shall, whether or not any proceedings are taken against
him or her in respect of that offence, be liable to be removed from
Singapore by order of the Controller.
 (3A) If a person is ordered to be removed from Singapore under
subsection (3), the Controller may repatriate the person to —
      (a) the person’s place of embarkation;
      (b) the country of the person’s birth or citizenship; or
      (c) any other place designated by the Controller.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (4) Where the master of any vessel is charged with an offence under
this Act, the clearance of the vessel may be refused until the charge
has been heard and the fine (if any) imposed has been paid.
 (5) Where, in any proceedings under this Act or the regulations, it is
proved that the defendant has failed to produce on demand by an
immigration officer or a police officer —
      (a) any valid permit, pass or certificate issued to him or her
          under this Act or the regulations;
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                        94
       (b) any other document accepted by the Controller as evidence
           that the defendant has entered or remained in Singapore
           lawfully; or
           (c) any other evidence showing to the satisfaction of the
               Controller that the defendant is exempted from
               section 6(1),
it is presumed, until the contrary is proved, that he or she has (as the
case may be) entered or re‑entered or remained in Singapore
unlawfully.
 (6) Where, in any proceedings for an offence under
subsection (1)(c), it is proved that the defendant has conveyed any
prohibited immigrant in any vehicle, vessel, aircraft or train, it is
presumed, until the contrary is proved, that he or she is engaged in the
business or trade of conveying to Singapore in or on that vehicle,
vessel, aircraft or train that prohibited immigrant knowing him or her
to be, or having reasonable grounds for believing him or her to be, a
prohibited immigrant.
 (7) Where, in any proceedings for an offence under
subsection (1)(d)(ii) or (iii), it is proved that the defendant has
given shelter to an immigration offender, it is presumed, until the
contrary is proved, that the defendant has harboured him or her with
reckless disregard as to whether he or she is an immigration offender
or negligently failing to ascertain as to whether he or she is an
immigration offender, as the case may be.
  (7A) In any proceedings for an offence under subsection (1)(d)(ii)
or (iii), it is not a defence for the defendant to prove that the
immigration offender harboured was in possession of a permit or pass
issued to the immigration offender under this Act or the regulations
unless the defendant further proves that he or she had exercised due
diligence to ascertain that the permit or pass was at the material time
valid under this Act or the regulations.
 (7B) Where a defendant who is charged with an offence under
subsection (1)(d)(ii) has rebutted the presumption that the defendant
has harboured an immigration offender with reckless disregard as to
whether he or she is such a person under subsection (7), the defendant
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
95                        Immigration Act 1959                       2020 Ed.
shall be liable to         be   charged     with    an    offence    under
subsection (1)(d)(iii).
 (7C) For the purpose of subsection (7A) —
      (a) a defendant who is charged with an offence under
          subsection (1)(d)(ii) is not to be deemed to have
          exercised due diligence unless the defendant has carried
          out any 2 of the acts specified in subsection (7D); and
      (b) a defendant who is charged with an offence under
          subsection (1)(d)(iii) is not to be deemed to have
          exercised due diligence unless the defendant has carried
          out all the acts specified in subsection (7D).
 (7D) The acts referred to in subsection (7C), to be carried out by the
defendant in relation to the immigration offender harboured, are —
      (a) inspecting the permit or pass issued to the immigration
          offender under this Act or the regulations;
      (b) checking the permit or pass to ascertain that the particulars
          on the passport of the immigration offender materially
          correspond with the particulars set out in the permit or
          pass;
      (c) checking with —
             (i) the Controller of Immigration or the Controller of
                 Work Passes (as the case may be) that the permit or
                 pass was valid at the material time; or
            (ii) the employer to verify that the immigration offender
                 is employed by the employer and that the particulars
                 of the immigration offender correspond with the
                 records of the employer, where the name of the
                 employer of the immigration offender is specified in
                 the permit or pass.
 (8) Where an immigration offender is found at any premises or
place, other than premises used solely for residential purposes, the
occupier of the premises or place is presumed, until the contrary is
proved, to have employed him or her knowing that he or she is an
immigration offender.
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                        96
 (9) In any proceedings for an offence under subsection (1)(e), it is
not a defence for the defendant to prove that the person employed by
the defendant was in possession of a permit or pass issued to the
person under this Act or the regulations unless the defendant further
proves that the defendant had exercised due diligence to ascertain that
the permit or pass was at the material time valid under this Act or the
regulations.
 (10) For the purpose of subsection (9), a defendant who is charged
with an offence under subsection (1)(e) is not to be deemed to have
exercise due diligence unless the defendant —
       (a) has inspected the permit or pass issued to the person
           employed by the defendant;
       (b) has checked the permit or pass to ascertain that the
           particulars on the passport of the person employed by the
           defendant materially correspond with the particulars set
           out in the permit or pass; and
           (c) where the person employed by the defendant is a holder of
               a visit pass, has reasonable grounds for believing that the
               person had, at the material time, in force a work pass issued
               under the Employment of Foreign Manpower Act 1990 or
               had obtained the written consent of the Controller of
               Immigration.
 (11) A person, being the owner, tenant or occupier of any premises
or place referred to in subsection (8), must not knowingly permit or
suffer such premises or place or any part thereof to be kept or used as
a place or premises in which any person is employed in contravention
of subsection (1)(e).
 (12) Any person who contravenes subsection (11) shall be guilty of
an offence and shall on conviction be punished with imprisonment for
a term of not less than 6 months and not more than 2 years and shall
also be liable to a fine not exceeding $6,000.
  (12A) Where, in any proceedings for an offence under
subsection (1)(m) of possession without lawful authority of any
electronic template, stamp, seal, plate, paraphernalia or instrument, it
is proved —
             Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
97                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
      (a) that the electronic template, stamp, seal, plate,
          paraphernalia or instrument was in the custody or under
          the control of the defendant when it was used for forging or
          unlawfully altering an endorsement mentioned in that
          subsection; or
      (b) that the defendant had in the defendant’s possession the
          electronic template, stamp, seal, plate, paraphernalia or
          instrument which had been specially designed or adapted
          for forging or unlawfully altering an endorsement
          mentioned in that subsection,
it is presumed, until the contrary is proved, that the defendant knew
that the electronic template, stamp, seal, plate, paraphernalia or
instrument (as the case may be) was or would be used to forge or
unlawfully alter an endorsement mentioned in that subsection.
                                                                     [18/2012]
 (12B) Where, in any proceedings for an offence under
subsection (1)(n) of possession without lawful authority of any
device, machine, paper, material or thing, it is proved —
      (a) that the device, machine, paper, material or thing was in the
          custody or under the control of the defendant when it was
          used to make the forged entry or re‑entry permit, pass,
          Singapore visa or certificate or other document issued
          under this Act or the regulations; or
      (b) that the defendant had in the defendant’s possession the
          device, machine, paper, material or thing which had been
          specially designed or adapted for making a forged entry or
          re‑entry permit, pass, Singapore visa or certificate or other
          document issued under this Act or the regulations,
it is presumed, until the contrary is proved, that the defendant knew
that the device, machine, paper, material or thing (as the case may be)
was or had been specially designed or adapted for making a forged
entry or re‑entry permit, pass, Singapore visa or certificate or other
document issued under this Act or the regulations.
                                                                     [18/2012]
 (12C) In subsection (1)(m) and (n), “traffic”, in relation to any
thing, means —
         Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                                98
       (a) to sell, deliver or distribute that thing; or
       (b) to offer to do or to cause to be done any act mentioned in
           paragraph (a) in relation to that thing.
                                                                           [18/2012]
 (13) In this section and sections 57A and 57B, “immigration
offender” means a person who has acted in contravention of
section 6(1), 15 or 36(1) or the regulations.
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
 (14) A reference to a permit or pass in subsections (7D) and (10) in
relation to a person is a reference to —
       (a) the original permit or pass issued (in a physical or an
           electronic form) to that person under this Act or the
           regulations; or
       (b) an electronic copy, or a prescribed electronic record
           displaying the details, of that permit or pass which —
                 (i) is made available to that person on any prescribed
                     electronic service; or
                (ii) satisfies the prescribed requirements.
                                                      [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Prohibition of immigration offender entering or remaining at
work place
 57A.—(1) An occupier of a work place who has control of access to
the work place must not permit any immigration offender to enter or
remain at the work place.
 (2) Where an immigration offender is found at a work place, it is
presumed, until the contrary is proved, that the occupier of the work
place —
       (a) had control of access to the work place;
       (b) had permitted the immigration offender to enter or remain
           at the work place; and
           (c) had knowledge that he or she is an immigration offender.
 (3) The presumptions provided for in subsection (2)(b) and (c) are
not rebutted unless the defendant proves that the defendant had
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99                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
exercised due diligence to prevent the immigration offender from
entering or remaining at the work place.
 (4) For the purposes of subsection (3), a defendant is not presumed
to have exercised due diligence unless the defendant had taken all
reasonable measures to prevent any immigration offender from
entering or remaining at the work place, including all the measures
prescribed under subsection (5) in respect of the work place.
 (5) For the purposes of subsection (4), the Minister may, by
notification in the Gazette, prescribe the measures that are required to
be taken by the occupier of the work place.
 (6) Any person who contravenes subsection (1) shall be guilty of an
offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine of not less than
$15,000 and not more than $30,000 or to imprisonment for a term not
exceeding 12 months or to both for each immigration offender found
at the work place and, in the case of a second or subsequent
conviction, to a fine of not less than $30,000 and not more than
$60,000 or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 2 years or to
both for each immigration offender found at the work place.
 (7) In this section —
     “construction works” means the construction, extension,
        installation, carrying out, repair, maintenance, renewal,
        removal, alteration, dismantling or demolition of —
            (a) any building, erection, edifice, structure, wall, fence
                or chimney, whether constructed wholly or partly
                above or below ground level;
            (b) any road, motorway, harbour works, railway,
                cableway, canal or aerodrome;
            (c) any drainage, irrigation or river control work;
            (d) any electrical, water, gas or telecommunication
                works;
            (e) any bridge, viaduct, dam, reservoir, earthworks,
                pipeline, sewer, aqueduct, culvert, drive, shaft,
                tunnel or reclamation,
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2020 Ed.                    Immigration Act 1959                        100
           and includes any works which form an integral part of, or are
           preparatory to, the works described in paragraphs (a) to (e),
           including site clearance, earth‑moving, excavation, laying of
           foundation, site restoration and landscaping, and such other
           works or activities as the Minister may, by notification in the
           Gazette, specify to be construction works;
      “occupier”, in relation to a work place, means the principal
         contractor who undertakes any construction works at the
         work place and includes such other person as the Minister
         may, by notification in the Gazette, specify to be the occupier
         of the work place;
      “principal contractor” means a person who has entered into a
         contract with an owner, a developer or a lessee of a property
         or an agent of one of those persons for the purpose of carrying
         out any construction works on the property;
      “work place” means any place or premises where any
        construction works are being carried out and includes —
               (a) all the land within the vicinity of the work place
                   which are owned by the person for whom the
                   construction works are being carried out and to
                   which the principal contractor has control of access;
               (b) any canteen, sleeping quarters, office and other
                   structures or buildings erected on the work place; and
               (c) such other place or premises as the Minister may, by
                   notification in the Gazette, specify to be a work place.
Assisting, encouraging or inducing giving of shelter to
immigration offenders
 57B.—(1) Any person who, for or in expectation of any fee, gain or
reward, assists, encourages or induces any other person to give shelter
to any immigration offender shall, if the second-mentioned person
gives shelter to the immigration offender in consequence of such
assistance, encouragement or inducement, be guilty of an offence and
shall on conviction be punished with imprisonment for a presumptive
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101                      Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
minimum term of not less than 6 months and not more than 2 years
and shall also be liable to a fine not exceeding $6,000.
                                                                     [15/2019]
 (2) In any proceedings for an offence under subsection (1), it is not
a defence for the defendant to prove that the immigration offender
was in possession of a permit or pass issued to the immigration
offender under this Act or the regulations unless the defendant further
proves that he or she had exercised due diligence to ascertain that the
permit or pass was at the material time valid under this Act or the
regulations.
 (3) For the purpose of subsection (2), a defendant who is charged
with an offence under subsection (1) is not to be deemed to have
exercised due diligence unless the defendant —
      (a) has inspected the permit or pass issued to the person
          harboured;
      (b) has checked the permit or pass to ascertain that the
          particulars on the passport of the person harboured
          materially correspond with the particulars set out in the
          permit or pass; and
      (c) has checked with —
             (i) the Controller of Immigration or the Controller of
                 Work Passes (as the case may be) that the permit or
                 pass was valid at the material time; or
            (ii) the employer to verify that the person is employed by
                 the employer and that the person’s particulars
                 correspond with the employer’s records, where the
                 name of the employer of the person harboured is
                 specified in the permit or pass.
 (4) No prosecution for an offence under subsection (1) or for an
attempt to commit that offence is to be instituted unless the person
whom the defendant is alleged to have assisted, encouraged or
induced in fact gave shelter to the immigration offender in
consequence of such assistance, encouragement or inducement.
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 (5) A reference to a permit or pass in subsection (3) in relation to a
person is to be read as a reference to the original copy of the permit or
pass issued to that person under this Act or the regulations.
Marriage of convenience
 57C.—(1) Any person who contracts or otherwise enters into a
marriage —
       (a) knowing or having reason to believe that the purpose of the
           marriage is to assist one of the parties to the marriage to
           obtain an immigration advantage; and
       (b) where any gratification, whether from a party to the
           marriage or another person, is offered, given or received as
           an inducement or reward to any party to the marriage for
           entering into the marriage,
shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine
not exceeding $10,000 or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding
10 years or to both.
                                                                       [18/2012]
 (2) Any person who arranges or otherwise assists in arranging a
marriage between 2 other persons, with the intention of assisting one
of the parties to the marriage to obtain an immigration advantage,
shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine
not exceeding $10,000 or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding
10 years or to both.
                                                                       [18/2012]
 (3) This section applies to a marriage entered into whether in
Singapore or outside Singapore.
                                                                       [18/2012]
  (4) In any proceedings for an offence under subsection (1) or (2), it
is a defence for the person charged with the offence to prove that,
although one purpose of the marriage was to assist a party to the
marriage to obtain an immigration advantage, the defendant believed
on reasonable grounds, when contracting or entering into the
marriage, that the marriage would result in a genuine marital
relationship.
                                                               [18/2012; 7/2016]
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103                       Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
 (5) For the purposes of subsection (4), what constitutes a genuine
marital relationship is a question of fact and the court is to have regard
to all the circumstances of the case in determining the question.
                                                                      [18/2012]
 (6) In this section —
      “gratification” includes —
             (a) money or any gift, loan, fee, reward, commission,
                 valuable security or other property or interest in
                 property of any description, whether movable or
                 immovable;
             (b) any office, employment or contract;
             (c) any payment, release, discharge or liquidation of any
                 loan, obligation or other liability, whether in whole or
                 in part; and
             (d) any other service, favour or advantage of any
                 description;
      “immigration advantage”, in relation to a party to a marriage,
         means the grant or extension of the validity of any visa, pass,
         permit or re‑entry permit under this Act or the regulations or
         any order made under this Act for that party or for a child or
         parent of that party.
                                                                      [18/2012]
Wearing and possession of uniforms, etc., by others
 57D.—(1) A person who, when the person is not an immigration
officer —
       (a) wears or possesses any immigration officer uniform, or
           uses any immigration officer insignia —
              (i) for the purpose of personating or representing
                  himself or herself as an immigration officer; or
             (ii) knowing that it is likely to cause any member of the
                  public to believe that he or she is an immigration
                  officer;
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2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                            104
       (b) uses the designation or a rank of an immigration officer, in
           connection with any business, occupation or
           employment —
                 (i) for the purpose of personating or representing
                     himself or herself as an immigration officer; or
                (ii) knowing that it is likely to cause any member of the
                     public to believe that he or she is an immigration
                     officer;
           (c) represents himself or herself, by word or conduct, to be an
               immigration officer for the purpose of personating or
               representing himself or herself as an immigration officer;
               or
       (d) wears or possesses any immigration officer uniform, or
           uses any immigration officer insignia, in connection with
           any business, occupation or employment, for the purpose
           of falsely claiming, suggesting or implying —
                 (i) that the person receives or is to receive, a fee,
                     commission or other reward for providing
                     professional or other services in relation to a
                     matter being dealt with or to be dealt with by the
                     Controller;
                (ii) that the Controller has agreed to acquire any goods or
                     services provided by or on behalf of the person, or
                     that those goods or services had previously been used
                     or acquired by the Controller; or
               (iii) that the person has the sponsorship or approval of the
                     Controller for any goods or services provided by or
                     on behalf of the person,
shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine
not exceeding $2,500 or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding
6 months or to both.
                                                                         [53/2018]
 (2) An immigration officer who wears any immigration officer
uniform or uses any immigration officer insignia otherwise than —
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105                      Immigration Act 1959                        2020 Ed.
      (a) in the course of, and for the purpose of, exercising the
          functions of an immigration officer; or
      (b) for such other purpose authorised in writing by the
          Controller,
shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine
not exceeding $2,500 or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding
6 months or to both.
                                                                     [53/2018]
 (3) It is a defence to any prosecution for an offence under
subsection (1)(a) or (2) if the accused proves, on a balance of
probabilities, that —
      (a) the accused had the express permission of the Controller to
          wear or possess the immigration officer uniform or use the
          immigration officer insignia, as the case may be; or
      (b) the accused wore or possessed the immigration officer
          uniform or used the immigration officer insignia (as the
          case may be) for the purposes of a public entertainment
          provided in compliance with the Public Entertainments
          Act 1958.
                                                                     [53/2018]
 (4) A person (whether or not an immigration officer) who —
      (a) manufactures any immigration officer uniform or
          immigration officer insignia otherwise than under an
          agreement with the Government;
      (b) sells any immigration officer uniform or immigration
          officer insignia to a person who is neither an immigration
          officer nor otherwise authorised or permitted under
          subsection (3) to wear or possess the immigration officer
          uniform or use the immigration officer insignia; or
      (c) gives or provides, whether or not for a consideration, any
          immigration officer uniform or immigration officer
          insignia to a person who is neither an immigration
          officer nor otherwise authorised or permitted under
          subsection (3) to wear or possess the immigration officer
          uniform or use the immigration officer insignia,
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2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                            106
shall be guilty of an offence and shall be liable on conviction to a fine
not exceeding $10,000 or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding
3 years or to both.
                                                                       [53/2018]
 (5) It is a defence to any prosecution for an offence under
subsection (4) if the accused proves, on a balance of probabilities,
that —
       (a) the accused had reasonable grounds to believe and did
           make reasonable inquiries to ascertain that the person to
           whom the immigration officer uniform or immigration
           officer insignia was sold, given or provided was —
               (i) an immigration officer; or
              (ii) a person otherwise authorised or permitted under
                   subsection (3) to wear or possess the immigration
                   officer uniform or use the immigration officer
                   insignia; or
       (b) the accused had received from the person to whom the
           immigration officer uniform or immigration officer
           insignia was sold, given or provided, evidence
           purporting to show that —
               (i) that person was an immigration officer or was
                   otherwise authorised or permitted under
                   subsection (3) to wear or possess the immigration
                   officer uniform or use the immigration officer
                   insignia; and
              (ii) it was reasonable to and the accused did accept that
                   evidence as correct.
                                                                       [53/2018]
 (6) An offence under subsection (1), (2) or (4) is an arrestable
offence.
                                                                       [53/2018]
 (7) In this section —
      “immigration officer insignia” means —
              (a) any item (being any insignia, emblem, logo, symbol,
                  representation, device, badge of rank or other thing)
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
107                       Immigration Act 1959                       2020 Ed.
                that is generally recognised as being used by an
                immigration officer;
            (b) any part of any such item;
            (c) any reasonable imitation of any such item, or part of
                such item; or
            (d) any insignia, emblem, logo, symbol, representation,
                device, badge of rank or other thing prescribed as
                being within this definition;
      “immigration officer uniform” means the uniform of an
         immigration officer, and includes —
            (a) any part of such a uniform or any accoutrement of an
                immigration officer that is generally recognised as a
                part of the uniform or accoutrement of an
                immigration officer; or
            (b) any reasonable imitation of such a uniform or
                accoutrement, or part of a uniform or accoutrement;
      “sell” includes —
            (a) exchange or let on hire;
            (b) offer, expose, possess, send, forward or deliver for
                sale, exchange or hire; or
            (c) cause, suffer or allow any sale, exchange or hire;
      “use”, in relation to immigration officer insignia, includes —
            (a) driving on a public road a vehicle that has on it any
                immigration officer insignia; and
            (b) using a reproduction or               representation       of
                immigration officer insignia,
        but does not include wearing an immigration officer uniform.
                                                                     [53/2018]
General penalty
 58. Any person guilty of an offence under this Act for which no
special penalty is provided shall be liable on conviction to a fine not
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2020 Ed.                   Immigration Act 1959                               108
exceeding $2,000 or to imprisonment for a term not exceeding
6 months or to both.
When sentence of caning is prevented from being carried out
 58A.—(1) If a sentence of caning imposed on a person under
section 6(3)(a), 9(6), 11A(6)(b) or 15(3)(b) for an offence, or
section 57(1A) for an offence under section 57(1)(e), is wholly or
partially prevented from being carried out under section 331 of the
Criminal Procedure Code 2010, that person must be kept in custody
until the court that imposed the sentence revises the sentence.
 (2) The court that imposed the sentence mentioned in subsection (1)
may —
       (a) remit the sentence; or
       (b) impose, instead of as much of the sentence of caning as
           was not carried out —
               (i) where the sentence of caning was imposed under
                   section 6(3)(a), 9(6), 11A(6)(b) or 15(3)(b) — a fine
                   not exceeding $6,000; or
              (ii) where the sentence of caning was imposed under
                   section 57(1A) — a fine not exceeding $10,000.
 (3) The fine that the court may impose under subsection (2)(b) for
an offence is in addition to any other punishment to which the person
has been sentenced for the offence.
                                                    [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Composition of offences
 59. The Controller or any immigration officer authorised by name
or by office in that behalf by the Minister by notification in the
Gazette may compound such offence under this Act or the regulations
as may be prescribed as being an offence that may be compounded by
collecting from the person reasonably suspected of having committed
the offence a sum not exceeding $500.
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109                      Immigration Act 1959                           2020 Ed.
Jurisdiction of Courts
 60.—(1) All offences under this Act or the regulations shall be
cognizable by a District Court or a Magistrate’s Court.
 (2) Any District Court or Magistrate’s Court may, despite anything
in the Criminal Procedure Code 2010, impose the full punishment
prescribed for any offence except that a Magistrate’s Court shall not
impose a sentence of imprisonment for a term exceeding 3 years.
                                                  [Act 31 of 2023 wef 31/12/2024]
Disposal of fees, rates, fines and forfeitures
 61. All fees levied, all rates and fines imposed and recovered, all
moneys forfeited and all costs and charges recovered under this Act
must be paid into the Consolidated Fund.
                                                                       [18/2012]
Amendment of Schedule
 61A. The Minister may, by order in the Gazette, amend
the Schedule, except that any other personal identifier so
prescribed in the order must —
      (a) be an image of, or a measurement or recording of, an
          external part of the human body or a person’s voice; and
      (b) not be an identifier the obtaining of which would involve
          the taking of an invasive sample within the meaning given
          by section 8 of the Registration of Criminals Act 1949.
                                                  [Act 26 of 2022 wef 12/06/2023]
Saving
 62.—(1) Any person in Singapore whose presence is unlawful
under the provisions of any previous written law for the time being in
force in Singapore or any regulations or orders made thereunder is
deemed to be unlawfully in Singapore for the purposes of this Act.
 (2) Any authority to enter Singapore granted under the provisions
of any law in force immediately before 16 April 1963 and valid on
that date is deemed to be a valid permit issued under the provisions of
this Act but subject to any limitations imposed by that law.
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2020 Ed.                     Immigration Act 1959                            110
                              THE SCHEDULE
                                                             Sections 2(1) and 61A
                            PERSONAL IDENTIFIERS
 1. A person’s fingerprint or handprint (taken using paper and ink, digital
scanning technologies or otherwise).
 2. A photograph or other image of a person’s face and shoulders.
 3. A person’s signature.
 4. An image of a person’s iris (taken using iris scanning technologies).
                                                                     [S 703/2016]
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
                         LEGISLATIVE HISTORY
                        IMMIGRATION ACT 1959
 This Legislative History is a service provided by the Law Revision Commission
on a best-efforts basis. It is not part of the Act.
             PICTORIAL OVERVIEW OF PREDECESSOR ACTS
                      LEGISLATIVE HISTORY DETAILS
                                 PART 1
                          ALIENS ORDINANCE
                   (CHAPTER 90, 1936 REVISED EDITION)
 1. Ordinance 18 of 1932 — Aliens Ordinance, 1932
     Bill                             :   G.N. No. 1311/1932
     First Reading                    :   8 August 1932
     Second Reading                   :   19 October 1932
     Notice of Amendments             :   19 October 1932
     Third Reading                    :   5 December 1932
     Commencement                     :   1 January 1933
 2. Ordinance 5 of 1934 — Aliens (Amendment) Ordinance, 1934
     Bill                             :   G.N. No. 2212/1933
     First Reading                    :   4 December 1933
     Second Reading                   :   12 February 1934
     Notice of Amendments             :   12 February 1934
     Third Reading                    :   12 February 1934
     Commencement                     :   23 February 1934
            Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
                                        ii
3. Ordinance 26 of 1935 — The Aliens (Amendment) Ordinance, 1935
   Bill                             :        G.N. No. 1070/1935
   First Reading                    :        17 June 1935
   Second and Third Readings        :        26 August 1935
   Commencement                     :        6 September 1935
4. 1936 Revised Edition — Aliens Ordinance (Chapter 90)
   Operation                        :        1 September 1936
5. Ordinance 3 of 1938 — Aliens (Amendment) Ordinance, 1938
   Bill                             :        G.N. No. 3591/1937
   First Reading                    :        15 December 1937
   Second and Third Readings        :        14 February 1938
   Commencement                     :        7 March 1938
6. Ordinance 32 of 1939 — Aliens (Amendment) Ordinance, 1939
   Bill                             :        G.N. No. 1618/1939
   First Reading                    :        12 June 1939
   Second Reading                   :        28 August 1939
   Notice of Amendments             :        28 August 1939
   Third Reading                    :        28 August 1939
   Commencement                     :        16 September 1939
                              PART 2
               PASSENGERS RESTRICTION ORDINANCE
                (CHAPTER 93, 1936 REVISED EDITION)
7. Ordinance IX of 1906 — The Exclusion Ordinance 1906
   Bill                             :        G.N. No. 1542/1905
   First Reading                    :        22 December 1905
   Second Reading                   :        19 January 1906
   Notice of Amendments             :        2 March 1906
   Third Reading                    :        16 March 1906
   Commencement                     :        16 March 1906
          Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
                                         iii
    Note: This Ordinance was read and construed as one with the Indian
          Act XLI of 1850.
 8. Ordinance 14 of 1919 — Passengers Restriction Ordinance, 1919
    Bill                             :         G.N. No. 223/1919
    First Reading                    :         17 February 1919
    Second Reading                   :         10 March 1919
    Notice of Amendments             :         31 March 1919
    Third Reading                    :         31 March 1919
    Commencement                     :         4 April 1919
    Note: This Ordinance repealed the Indian Act XLI of 1850, the Exclusion
          Ordinance 1906 (Ordinance IX of 1906) and sections 3, 4 and 13 of
          the Registration of Aliens Ordinance 1917 (Ordinance 2 of 1917).
 9. 1920 Revised Edition — Ordinance No. 169 (Passengers Restriction)
    Operation                        :         28 November 1921
10. 1926 Revised Edition — Ordinance No. 169 (Passengers Restriction)
    Operation                        :         1 August 1926
11. Ordinance 1 of 1930 — Passengers Restriction (Amendment) Ordinance,
                          1930
    Bill                             :         G.N. No. 2337/1929
    First Reading                    :         9 December 1929
    Second Reading                   :         27 January 1930
    Third Reading                    :         24 March 1930
    Commencement                     :         15 April 1930
12. Ordinance 1 of 1932 — Passengers Restriction (Amendment) Ordinance,
                          1932
    Bill                             :         G.N. No. 2258/1931
    First Reading                    :         7 December 1931
    Second and Third Readings        :         26 January 1932
    Commencement                     :         17 February 1932
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
                                         iv
13. Ordinance 13 of 1934 — The Passengers Restriction (Amendment)
                           Ordinance, 1934
    Bill                             :        G.N. No. 245/1934
    First Reading                    :        12 February 1934
    Second and Third Readings        :        16 April 1934
    Commencement                     :        12 May 1934
14. 1936 Revised Edition — Passengers Restriction Ordinance (Chapter 93)
    Operation                        :        1 September 1936
15. Ordinance 18 of 1937 — Passengers Restriction (Amendment)
                           Ordinance, 1937
    Bill                             :        G.N. No. 2066/1937
    First and Second Readings        :        30 August 1937
    Notice of Amendments             :        30 August 1937
    Third Reading                    :        30 August 1937
    Commencement                     :        4 September 1937
                                PART 3
                     IMMIGRATION ORDINANCE
                 (CHAPTER 102, 1955 REVISED EDITION)
16. Ordinance 5 of 1952 — Immigration Ordinance, 1952
    Bill                             :        G.N. No. S 113/1951
    First Reading                    :        24 April 1951
    Select Committee Report          :        Council Paper No. 114 of 1951
    Second Reading                   :        20 February 1952
    Notice of Amendments             :        20 February 1952
    Third Reading                    :        20 February 1952
    Commencement                     :        1 August 1953
17. 1955 Revised Edition — Immigration Ordinance (Chapter 102)
    Operation                        :        1 July 1956
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
                                          v
18. Ordinance 31 of 1958 — Legislative Assembly (Presentation of
                           Subsidiary Legislation) Ordinance, 1958
    (Amendments made by section 2 read with the Schedule to the above
    Ordinance)
     Bill                             :       158/1958
     First Reading                    :       16 July 1958
     Second Reading                   :       13 August 1958
     Notice of Amendments             :       10 September 1958
     Third Reading                    :       10 September 1958
     Commencement                     :       25 September 1958 (section 2 read
                                              with the Schedule)
19. Ordinance 22 of 1959 — Immigration (Amendment) Ordinance, 1959
     Bill                             :       202/1959
     First Reading                    :       11 February 1959
     Second and Third Readings        :       3 March 1959
     Commencement                     :       1 May 1959
20. G.N. No. S 223/1959 — Singapore Constitution (Modification of Laws)
                          Order, 1959
     Commencement                     :       3 June 1959
21. Ordinance 62 of 1959 — State Advocate‑General (Transfer of Powers)
                           Ordinance, 1959
    (Amendments made by section 5 read with the Schedule to the above
    Ordinance)
     Bill                             :       22/1959
     First Reading                    :       13 August 1959
     Second and Third Readings        :       2 September 1959
     Commencement                     :       11 September 1959 (section 5 read
                                              with the Schedule)
22. G.N. No. S (N.S.) 179/1959 — Singapore Constitution (Modification of
                                 Laws) (No. 5) Order, 1959
     Commencement                     :       20 November 1959
23. Ordinance 73 of 1960 — Immigration (Amendment) Ordinance, 1960
     Bill                             :       113/1960
            Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
                                         vi
    First Reading                    :        29 November 1960
    Second and Third Readings        :        29 December 1960
    Commencement                     :        1 April 1961
                                 PART 4
                         IMMIGRATION ACT 1959
                         (2020 REVISED EDITION)
24. M. Ordinance 12 of 1959 — Immigration Ordinance, 1959
    Commencement                     :        1 May 1959
    Application                      :        16 September 1963
    Note: This Ordinance was extended to Singapore with amendments by the
          Immigration Act, 1963 (M. Act 27 of 1963) on 16 September 1963.
25. M. Act 27 of 1963 — Immigration Act, 1963
    Commencement                     :        16 September 1963
    Note: This Act repealed the Immigration Ordinance (Chapter 102,
          1955 Revised Edition) and extended the Federation of Malaya
          Immigration Ordinance, 1959 (Ordinance 12 of 1959) with
          amendments to Singapore.
26. Act 1 of 1966 — Immigration (Amendment) Act, 1966
    Bill                             :        70/1966
    First Reading                    :        31 December 1965
    Second and Third Readings        :        23 February 1966
    Commencement                     :        4 March 1966
27. G.N. No. S 145/1966 — Modification of Laws (Immigration) Order, 1966
    Commencement                     :        22 July 1966
28. 1966 Reprint — Immigration Ordinance, 1959
    Reprint                          :        27 July 1966
29. Act 12 of 1970 — Immigration (Amendment) Act, 1970
    Bill                             :        26/1969
    First Reading                    :        22 December 1969
    Second and Third Readings        :        27 January 1970
    Commencement                     :        19 June 1970
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
                                         vii
30. 1970 Revised Edition — Immigration Act (Chapter 81)
    Operation                        :         1 April 1971
31. Act 21 of 1973 — Statutes of the Republic of Singapore (Miscellaneous
                     Amendments) Act, 1973
    (Amendments made by section 2 read with the Schedule to the above Act)
    Bill                             :         16/1973
    First Reading                    :         7 March 1973
    Second and Third Readings        :         20 March 1973
    Commencement                     :         6 April 1973 (section 2 read with the
                                               Schedule)
32. Act 60 of 1973 — Immigration (Amendment) Act, 1973
    Bill                             :         52/1973
    First Reading                    :         28 August 1973
    Second Reading                   :         30 November 1973
    Notice of Amendments             :         30 November 1973
    Third Reading                    :         30 November 1973
    Commencement                     :         1 March 1974
33. G.N. No. S 353/1975 — Metrication (Immigration Act) Order, 1975
    Commencement                     :         1 January 1976
34. G.N. No. S 68/1976 — The Metrication (Immigration Act) Order, 1975
    Commencement                     :         1 January 1976
35. Act 13 of 1977 — Immigration (Amendment) Act, 1977
    Bill                             :         15/1977
    First Reading                    :         2 September 1977
    Second and Third Readings        :         9 November 1977
    Commencement                     :         16 December 1977
36. Act 35 of 1984 — Immigration (Amendment) Act 1984
    Bill                             :         30/1984
    First Reading                    :         19 October 1984
    Second and Third Readings        :         20 November 1984
    Commencement                     :         7 December 1984
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
                                         viii
37. 1985 Revised Edition — Immigration Act (Chapter 133)
    Operation                        :          30 March 1987
38. G.N. No. S 22/1989 — Revised Edition of the Laws (Rectification)
                         Order 1989
    Operation                        :          30 March 1987
39. Act 6 of 1989 — Immigration (Amendment) Act 1989
    Bill                             :          8/1989
    First Reading                    :          16 January 1989
    Second and Third Readings        :          26 January 1989
    Commencement                     :          31 March 1989
40. Act 34 of 1989 — Immigration (Amendment No. 2) Act 1989
    Bill                             :          36/1989
    First Reading                    :          4 August 1989
    Second and Third Readings        :          31 August 1989
    Commencement                     :          13 October 1989
41. Act 38 of 1993 — Immigration (Amendment) Act 1993
    Bill                             :          32/1993
    First Reading                    :          12 October 1993
    Second and Third Readings        :          10 November 1993
    Commencement                     :          22 April 1994
42. 1995 Revised Edition — Immigration Act (Chapter 133)
    Operation                        :          15 March 1995
43. G.N. No. S 227/1995 — Revised Edition of the Laws (Rectification)
                          Order 1995
    Operation                        :          15 March 1995
44. Act 41 of 1995 — Immigration (Amendment) Act 1995
    Bill                             :          33/1995
    First Reading                    :          27 September 1995
    Second and Third Readings        :          1 November 1995
    Commencement                     :          1 March 1996
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
                                          ix
45. 1997 Revised Edition — Immigration Act (Chapter 133)
     Operation                        :        20 December 1997
46. Act 34 of 1998 — Immigration (Amendment) Act 1998
     Bill                             :        35/1998
     First Reading                    :        31 July 1998
     Second Reading                   :        4 September 1998
     Notice of Amendments             :        4 September 1998
     Third Reading                    :        4 September 1998
     Commencement                     :        5 October 1998
47. Act 4 of 2003 — Customs (Amendment) Act 2003
    (Amendments made by section 26 read with item (12) of the Schedule to the
    above Act)
     Bill                             :        6/2003
     First Reading                    :        10 March 2003
     Second and Third Readings        :        21 March 2003
     Commencement                     :        1 April 2003 (section 26 read with
                                               item (12) of the Schedule)
48. Act 53 of 2004 — Immigration (Amendment) Act 2004
     Bill                             :        51/2004
     First Reading                    :        19 October 2004
     Second and Third Readings        :        16 November 2004
     Commencement                     :        15 January 2005
49. Act 42 of 2005 — Statutes (Miscellaneous Amendments) (No. 2) Act 2005
    (Amendments made by section 6 read with item (7) of the Fourth Schedule to
    the above Act)
     Bill                             :        30/2005
     First Reading                    :        17 October 2005
     Second and Third Readings        :        21 November 2005
     Commencement                     :        1 January 2006 (section 6 read with
                                               item (7) of the Fourth Schedule)
            Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
                                          x
50. Act 2 of 2007 — Statutes (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act 2007
    (Amendments made by section 10 of the above Act)
     Bill                             :       14/2006
     First Reading                    :       8 November 2006
     Second and Third Readings        :       22 January 2007
     Commencement                     :       1 March 2007 (section 10)
51. Act 30 of 2007 — Employment of Foreign Workers (Amendment)
                     Act 2007
    (Amendments made by section 28 read with item (3) of the Schedule to the
    above Act)
     Bill                             :       17/2007
     First Reading                    :       9 April 2007
     Second and Third Readings        :       22 May 2007
     Commencement                     :       1 July 2007 (section 28 read with
                                              item (3) of the Schedule)
52. Act 33 of 2007 — Passports Act 2007
    (Amendments made by section 62 read with the Second Schedule to the above
    Act)
     Bill                             :       21/2007
     First Reading                    :       21 May 2007
     Second and Third Readings        :       16 July 2007
     Commencement                     :       1 December 2007 (section 62 read
                                              with the Second Schedule)
53. 2008 Revised Edition — Immigration Act (Chapter 133)
     Operation                        :       1 January 2008
54. Act 5 of 2010 — Moneylenders (Amendment) Act 2010
    (Amendments made by section 13 of the above Act)
     Bill                             :       23/2009
     First Reading                    :       23 November 2009
     Second and Third Readings        :       12 January 2010
     Commencement                     :       11 February 2010 (section 13)
            Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
                                          xi
55. Act 15 of 2010 — Criminal Procedure Code 2010
    (Amendments made by section 430 read with item 47 of the Sixth Schedule to
    the above Act)
     Bill                             :        11/2010
     First Reading                    :        26 April 2010
     Second Reading                   :        18 May 2010
     Commencement                     :        2 January 2011 (section 430 read with
                                               item 47 of the Sixth Schedule)
56. Act 18 of 2012 — Immigration (Amendment) Act 2012
     Bill                             :        16/2012
     First Reading                    :        9 July 2012
     Second and Third Readings        :        13 August 2012
     Commencement                     :        19 December 2012
57. Act 16 of 2016 — Statutes (Miscellaneous Amendments) Act 2016
    (Amendments made by section 10 of the above Act)
     Bill                             :        15/2016
     First Reading                    :        14 April 2016
     Second and Third Readings        :        9 May 2016
     Commencement                     :        10 June 2016 (section 10)
58. Act 7 of 2016 — Women's Charter (Amendment) Act 2016
    (Amendments made by section 47 of the above Act)
     Bill                             :        6/2016
     First Reading                    :        26 January 2016
     Second and Third Readings        :        29 February 2016
     Commencement                     :        1 October 2016 (section 47)
59. G.N. No. S 703/2016 — Immigration Act (Amendment of Schedule)
                          Order 2016
     Commencement                     :        1 January 2017
60. Act 6 of 2018 — Immigration (Amendment) Act 2018
     Bill                             :        46/2017
     First Reading                    :        6 November 2017
     Second and Third Readings        :        8 January 2018
            Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
                                         xii
    Commencement                     :         1 April 2018
61. Act 53 of 2018 — Civil Defence and Other Matters Act 2018
    (Amendments made by Part 2 of the above Act)
    Bill                             :         44/2018
    First Reading                    :         1 October 2018
    Second and Third Readings        :         20 November 2018
    Commencement                     :         1 February 2019 (section 25)
                                               13 May 2019 (section 26)
62. Act 15 of 2019 — Criminal Law Reform Act 2019
    (Amendments made by section 176 of the above Act)
    Bill                             :         6/2019
    First Reading                    :         11 February 2019
    Second Reading                   :         6 May 2019
    Notice of Amendments             :         6 May 2019
    Third Reading                    :         6 May 2019
    Commencement                     :         1 January 2020 (section 176)
63. 2020 Revised Edition — Immigration Act 1959
    Operation                        :         31 December 2021
64. Act 26 of 2022 — Registration of Criminals (Amendment) Act 2022
    (Amendments made by the above Act)
    Bill                             :         19/2022
    First Reading                    :         1 August 2022
    Second and Third Readings        :         12 September 2022
    Commencement                     :         12 June 2023
65. Act 13 of 2024 — Infectious Diseases (Amendment) Act 2024
    (Amendments made by the above Act)
    Bill                             :         7/2024
    First Reading                    :         5 February 2024
    Second and Third Readings        :         7 March 2024
    Commencement                     :         9 April 2024
66. Act 10 of 2024 — Enlistment and Other Matters (Amendment) Act 2024
    Bill                             :         1/2024
           Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024
                                             xiii
        First Reading                    :          1 January 2024
        Second and Third Readings        :          16 February 2024
        Commencement                     :          1 May 2024
67. Act 16 of 2024 — Law Enforcement and Other Matters Act 2024
    (Amendments made by the above Act)
        Bill                             :          14/2024
        First Reading                    :          7 March 2024
        Second and Third Readings        :          2 April 2024
        Commencement                     :          17 June 2024
68. Act 31 of 2023 — Immigration (Amendment) Act 2023
    (Amendments made by the above Act)
        Bill                             :          26/2023
        First Reading                    :          2 August 2023
        Second and Third Readings        :          18 September 2023
        Commencement                     :          31 December 2024
                                     Abbreviations
.                       (updated on 29 August 2022)
G.N.                    Gazette Notification
G.N. Sp.                Gazette Notification (Special Supplement)
L.A.                    Legislative Assembly
L.N.                    Legal Notification (Federal/Malaysian)
M.                      Malaya/Malaysia (including Federated Malay States,
                        Malayan Union, Federation of Malaya and Federation of
                        Malaysia)
Parl.                   Parliament
S                       Subsidiary Legislation
S.I.                    Statutory Instrument (United Kingdom)
S (N.S.)                Subsidiary Legislation (New Series)
S.S.G.G.                Straits Settlements Government Gazette
S.S.G.G. (E)            Straits Settlements Government Gazette (Extraordinary)
               Informal Consolidation – version in force from 31/12/2024