That RM1.99 RON95 price everyone raves about? Not for you. If you’re driving a Singapore-registered car into JB, you’re pumping RON97, full stop. And from 21 May 2026, that grade just got pricier. Here’s what a tank actually costs, the rule that’ll cost you a fortune if you ignore it, and the cleanest way to pay.
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| Highlights | Details |
|---|---|
| What SG cars can pump | RON97 only (RON95 is banned for foreign cars) |
| RON97 price (21–27 May 2026) | 4.85 MYR (~S$1.47) per litre |
| A full 40-litre tank | ~194 MYR (~S$59) |
| How to pay | Tap your YouTrip card for RON97 or cash |
| Before you drive | Valid VEP + 3/4 tank leaving SG (fine up to S$500) |
Table of Contents:
RON97, the only grade Singapore cars can use, is 4.85 MYR (~S$1.47) per litre for 21–27 May 2026. That’s up 15 cents from 4.70 MYR the week before.
Prices moved across the board this week. According to Malaysia’s Ministry of Finance, the bump tracks higher global crude prices, with the Middle East conflict still squeezing supply.
| Fuel | Price/litre | Weekly change | For SG cars? |
|---|---|---|---|
| RON97 | 4.85 MYR (~S$1.47) | +15 cents | Yes |
| RON95 (unsubsidised) | 4.07 MYR (~S$1.23) | +20 cents | Banned for foreign cars |
| RON95 (subsidised) | 1.99 MYR (~S$0.60) | No change | Banned for foreign cars |
| Diesel (Peninsular) | 4.97 MYR (~S$1.51) | +10 cents | Only if you drive a diesel |
One thing to know: RON97, unsubsidised RON95 and diesel are floated weekly under Malaysia’s Automatic Pricing Mechanism, so the RON97 number shifts every Wednesday. The 1.99 MYR subsidised RON95 is the only one that stays put, and it’s the one you can’t touch.
Check the live SGD value before you go with the best SGD to MYR rate guide.
No. Foreign-registered vehicles are banned from RON95 entirely, subsidised or not, and must use RON97. This isn’t new in spirit, but the teeth are.
From 1 April 2026, enforcement extended to drivers, not just petrol stations. Get caught filling a foreign-plated car with RON95, and you’re looking at a fine of up to 1 million MYR (~S$303,000), up to three years’ jail, or both. People have tried taping over plates. People have been caught. It’s not worth it.
So the maths is simple:
A 40-litre tank of RON97 in JB runs about 194 MYR (~S$59). Fill the same tank in Singapore, and you’re well past that, even after the usual credit-card discount.
| Where | RON97 / 95-octane | 40-litre tank |
|---|---|---|
| JB (RON97) | ~S$1.47/litre | ~S$59 |
| Singapore (95-octane) | ~S$2.10–2.60/litre after discount | ~S$85–105 |
SG pump prices vary by station and card rebate.
Verify both before relying on the gap.
So even at RON97, the higher grade, you’re saving close to S$50 a tank. That’s real money if you cross often. Just remember the savings shrink once you factor in the VEP, toll, and the time you’ll spend in the Causeway queue, so don’t drive over only to pump. Pair it with a JB food run, a café day, or a full day out, and it makes sense.
Tap your card for RON97, it’s still allowed. Malaysia blocked foreign cards at the pump for RON95, but Singapore cards can still pay for RON97 at Petronas, Shell, Caltex, and Petron in JB. Since RON97 is the only grade you can use anyway, the ban doesn’t really touch you.
Here’s the order that works best:
One quirk to expect at the pump: some stations place a temporary pre-authorisation hold on your card that’s released once the real amount goes through. It’s normal, just know how petrol holding fees work so the hold doesn’t catch you off guard.
For everything else on the trip, the YouTrip Malaysian Ringgit Wallet lets you hold and lock MYR in advance, and there’s a full rundown of where YouTrip works across Malaysia if you’re new to it.
Two rules trip up first-timers, and both cost money. Sort them before you hit the Causeway.
Not driving this time? The RTS Link to Bukit Chagar and the usual train and bus options skip the petrol question entirely.
No. Foreign-registered vehicles are banned from RON95, both the 1.99 MYR subsidised grade and the unsubsidised one. Singapore cars must pump RON97. Since 1 April 2026, drivers, not just stations, face penalties of up to 1 million MYR (~S$303,000) or jail.
RON97 or higher only. It’s the unsubsidised premium grade, priced at 4.85 MYR (~S$1.47) per litre for 21–27 May 2026. The price floats weekly, so check before you go.
A 40-litre tank of RON97 costs roughly 194 MYR (~S$59) at current prices. That’s around S$30–45 less than the same fill in Singapore, even after local card discounts.
Yes, for RON97. Malaysia’s foreign-card ban only applies to RON95, which you can’t buy anyway. Tap a Singapore card at Petronas, Shell, Caltex or Petron, and if the pump declines it, pay at the counter instead.
You need a valid, activated VEP to enter Malaysia at all, petrol or not. Without one it’s a 300 MYR (~S$91) fine and you can’t exit until you pay.
Not on its own. The per-tank saving is real, but VEP, tolls, and queue time eat into it. It’s worth it when petrol is one stop on a bigger JB day, not the only reason you crossed.
RON97 isn’t the bargain the RON95 price boards advertise, but it’s still cheaper than home, and it’s the only grade that won’t land you a six-figure fine. Fill up, tap to pay, and make the trip count.
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Happy travels!
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