For a comprehensive guide to birth control, see our complete guide.
Medically reviewed by Dr. Kevin Chua, Medical Director
Disclaimer: This article provides general medical information and is not a substitute for professional medical advice. Always consult a licensed doctor before starting any contraception.
There's no universal "best" birth control. There's only the best method for you — which depends on your health, your lifestyle, your skin, your relationship status, your plans for children, and a dozen other factors that a generic internet guide can't account for.
What this guide can do is give you a structured way to think through the decision so that when you speak to your doctor, you're not starting from zero.
Before personal preferences, there are medical factors that narrow the field.
Combined pills, the patch, and the vaginal ring all contain oestrogen. Women with the following conditions typically cannot use them safely:
If any of these apply, your choices shift to progestogen-only methods (mini-pill, IUD, implant, injection) or non-hormonal methods (copper IUD, condoms, fertility awareness).
Once medical constraints are accounted for, here are the dimensions that matter most:
Honest self-assessment here matters. The pill is 99.7% effective with perfect use — but typical-use failure rates are closer to 7–9% because humans are imperfect. If you travel frequently, have variable schedules, or know yourself to be forgetful about daily medications, a long-acting method (IUD, implant) may genuinely suit you better.
Not all contraceptives handle periods the same way.
| Goal | Best Options |
|---|---|
| Lighter periods | Hormonal IUD (Mirena), combined pill (continuous use), implant |
| Less painful periods | Combined pill, hormonal IUD |
| No periods at all | Hormonal IUD (many users get none), continuous pill use |
| Normal periods (no hormonal effect) | Copper IUD, condoms |
| Help with PMS/PMDD | Yaz (drospirenone, 24-day active), combined pill |
| Help with acne | Yasmin, Yaz, Diane-35 (anti-androgenic formulations) |
Some women prefer to avoid synthetic hormones entirely. Non-hormonal options:
Work through these in order:
Step 1: Do you have any medical contraindications to oestrogen? → If yes, combined methods are out.
Step 2: How long do you want to use contraception without interruption? → Over 3 years → consider LARC.
Step 3: Are you looking for period benefits (acne, pain, PMS, bleeding)? → Yes → hormonal methods, specific formulations.
Step 4: How do you feel about a daily routine? → Low enthusiasm → longer-acting options.
Step 5: Do you also need STI protection? → Only condoms provide this — can be combined with any other method.
Most OCP brands are available at Guardian, Watsons, and hospital pharmacies. A prescription is required.
Singapore residents and PRs can access subsidised contraceptive consultations at polyclinics. Waiting times are typically longer but costs are lower. Some polyclinics offer family planning services specifically.
IUD insertion and implant placement are available at most private gynaecology clinics and at some polyclinics. Cost varies significantly between public and private settings.
If you travel internationally, time zone changes affect pill timing — set reminders to the time zone you're in, or switch to a method that doesn't require precise daily timing.
Oral contraceptive pills in Singapore typically cost SGD $20–50 per month depending on the brand and formulation. Generic options are available at the lower end of this range.
For LARC methods, the upfront cost is higher but the per-year cost is typically lower than pills over a 3–5-year period. See our birth control cost comparison for full detail.
Prices are approximate and may vary. Updated April 2026.
Yasmin (drospirenone) is a good all-round choice, particularly for women with acne or PMS concerns. But whether it's the best choice for you depends on your specific profile. It's not the only answer.
A combined pill with a 4th-generation progestogen (drospirenone) is a common starting point — well-tolerated and with benefits for skin and PMS. Your zoey™ doctor will recommend based on your full health assessment.
Absolutely. All hormonal methods are reversible. Switching from pill to IUD or back is routine. Give your doctor a call or message when you want to discuss a change.
Less than it used to. Modern IUDs (including Kyleena) are now routinely offered to women who haven't had children. Discuss with your doctor — the "only for women who've been pregnant" guideline is outdated.
A Pap smear is part of routine cervical screening (recommended every 3 years from age 25 in Singapore) but is not required as a prerequisite for contraceptive prescriptions. The two are independent.
→ Return to pillar: Complete Guide to Birth Control in Singapore
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult a licensed doctor before starting any contraception.

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