Irreligion in Singapore
As of the last census in 2020, 20% of residents in Singapore have no religious affiliation. The rate of irreligion varies among the different ethnic groups of Singapore; officially, about 26% of ethnic Chinese have no religion, compared to 2.2% of Indians and just 0.4% of Malays. Age also plays a factor: around 24% of people aged 15 to 24 indicated they had no religious connection, compared to 15% of residents aged 55 and over. While Singapore is a secular state, the true figures of irreligion may not be properly ascertained, as leaving certain religions can result in ostracism by one's family or community.
Singapore's non-religious tend to be atheists, agnostics, humanists, theists, deists or skeptics. Some locals affiliate with no religion, but will still continue practice traditional rituals like ancestral worship, which they do not necessarily regard as religious in essence. The number of non-religious people in Singapore has risen. Census reports show that those who said they have no religion rose from 13% in 1980 to 20% in 2020. In recent years, social gatherings of non-religious people have become more popular in Singapore.