Singapore's Exclusive Distributor · Engineered Integrated Door & Window System
Budgeting·8 min read

The hidden costs homeowners miss when quoting windows.

Two quotations can look thousands apart and end up costing the same — or the cheaper one costing more. Here is where the difference actually hides.

The hidden costs homeowners miss when quoting windows.
In this article
  1. Why quotes are so hard to compare
  2. What you're actually paying for
  3. The extras that appear later
  4. The cost no quote prints
  5. How to compare properly

When homeowners collect window quotations, the instinct is to line them up and look at the bottom number. It is the one thing every quote makes easy to compare — and the one thing that tells you the least. A window is not a finished product on a shelf; it is a specification. Two quotes for “aluminium windows” can describe two completely different things at the same price.

Why quotes are so hard to compare

“Aluminium window” is not a spec — it is a category. The real cost drivers sit underneath it: the wall thickness of the profile, whether there is a genuine continuous thermal break, the grade of the glass unit, the quality of the seals and hardware, and whether the whole thing is an engineered system or parts assembled on site. A quote that lists only “aluminium sliding window, powder-coated” is leaving all of that unsaid — and unpriced.

Before comparing prices, get every quote onto the same specification. If you are not sure how to read one, our guide to telling a system window from thermal-break aluminium is the place to start.

What you're actually paying for

It helps to see roughly where the money in a window goes. The frame is only part of it — glass is often just as large a share, and the labour to fit and seal it is very real money.

Frame 28% Glass 26% Seals & hardware 16% Install 20% Making good 10%
Illustrative split of where a fitted window's cost sits — exact proportions vary by project.

Glass is quietly half the window

Glass is where a surprising amount of cost — and comfort — lives. Single glazing, double glazing, the coating, the spacer, the laminate for safety and noise: each changes the price meaningfully, and each changes how the room feels. A cheaper quote often achieves its price simply by specifying a thinner, plainer glass unit. You will not see it on paper; you will hear it the first time it rains.

Installation and making good

The window is only half the job. Removing the old frames, preparing the opening, sealing correctly against water, and making good the surrounding wall and finishes all take skilled labour. Some quotes fold this in; others quietly leave it out, so the true figure only appears once work has started.

Red flag

A quote noticeably cheaper than the others, with a vague specification (“aluminium window”, “tempered glass”, no mention of installation scope). The saving is almost always coming from somewhere you cannot see yet.

The extras that appear later

The cost no quote prints

The most expensive line item is the one no quotation shows: doing it twice. A window that leaks, whistles, or whose hardware seizes within a few years has to be resealed, repaired, or replaced — often after it has already damaged the wall or finishes around it. The saving that looked good on signing day is spent several times over.

The cheapest window and the cheapest quotation are rarely the same thing.

How to compare properly

Put every quotation on the same specification, ask what installation and making-good include, and check the glass and hardware line by line. Then judge the price. A higher number attached to a complete, engineered, warranted system is often the cheaper decision once you count the years you will live with it — and the repairs you will not have to make.

Homeowner tip

Ask each supplier one question: “What is not included in this price?” The clarity — or vagueness — of the answer tells you as much as the number itself.

Key takeaways

Common questions

Why are window quotes in Singapore so different in price?

Because “aluminium window” covers a huge range of specifications. Profile thickness, thermal break, glass grade, seals, hardware and whether it is an engineered system or assembled parts all move the price — and are often left off the quote. Get every quotation onto the same spec before comparing.

Is a more expensive window always better?

Not automatically — but a low price almost always comes from somewhere, usually thinner glass, cheaper seals and hardware, or installation and making-good left out. The goal is not the highest price; it is the complete, correctly specified system at a fair one.

What should a proper window quotation include?

The full specification (profile, glass, seals, hardware), what installation and making-good cover, removal and disposal of the old windows, waterproofing, any access equipment, and the warranty. Anything vague is a cost waiting to appear later.

How much should I budget for windows in a Singapore renovation?

It varies too widely to quote a single figure — it depends on the number and size of openings, the system grade, glass, and access. The useful move is not to chase a price per window but to get like-for-like specifications, so the figures you compare describe the same thing.

Plan it properly, once

Know what you're paying for.

Tell us your home and what matters in each room. We will help you build a clear, like-for-like specification — so every quote you compare is measuring the same thing.