British home appliance maker Dyson will invest $1.1 billion in Singapore over the next four years as part of its $3.6 billion global investment plan, the inventor of the bagless vacuum cleaner officially opened its new global headquarters on March 25 time indicated. Moved to the city-state from the south of England.
Singapore has become a hub for Dyson’s research and engineering teams, as well as commercial, advanced manufacturing and supply chain operations. It has more than 1,400 employees in the country, including 560 engineers and scientists.
The company now plans to hire more than 250 local and foreign talented engineers and scientists in the fields of robotics, machine learning, high-speed electric digital motors, energy storage and more.
Research, Engineering and Manufacturing in Singapore
In addition to its new headquarters at St James Power Station, Dyson has other locations in Singapore, including an engineering centre, a motor manufacturing facility and a new battery factory. .
In announcing its global investment plan in 2020, Dyson said the funding would be distributed among Singapore, two campuses in Wiltshire in southwest England and the Philippines.
In January 2019, Dyson announced plans to relocate the company’s headquarters to Singapore, calling the move a “commercial decision” to get closer to its fastest-growing market in the entire Asia-Pacific region.
To/from Singapore: James Dyson
However, founder James Dyson – the billionaire Brexit supporter – has also expressed his dissatisfaction with the overly bureaucratic restrictions in dealing with EU and UK tax issues. He personally moved to Singapore in 2019, where he bought a property and set up a family office, but moved his residence back to the UK two years later.
Founded in 1991, the company has gone from developing beautifully designed products ranging from hand dryers and air purifiers to hair care tools and vacuums to becoming a household name. In 2019, a project to develop and produce electric vehicles in Singapore was abandoned as “not commercially viable”.
Dyson’s new global headquarters at decommissioned St James Power Station in Singapore British home appliance maker Dyson will invest $1.1 billion in Singapore over the next four years as part of its $3.6 billion global investment plan, the inventor of the bagless vacuum cleaner officially opened its new global headquarters on March 25 time indicated. Moved to the city-state from the south of England. Singapore has become a hub for Dyson’s research and engineering teams, as well as commercial, advanced manufacturing and supply chain operations. It has more than 1,400 employees…

British home appliance maker Dyson will invest $1.1 billion in Singapore over the next four years as part of its $3.6 billion global investment plan, the inventor of the bagless vacuum cleaner officially opened its new global headquarters on March 25 time indicated. Moved to the city-state from the south of England.
Singapore has become a hub for Dyson’s research and engineering teams, as well as commercial, advanced manufacturing and supply chain operations. It has more than 1,400 employees in the country, including 560 engineers and scientists.
The company now plans to hire more than 250 local and foreign talented engineers and scientists in the fields of robotics, machine learning, high-speed electric digital motors, energy storage and more.
Research, Engineering and Manufacturing in Singapore
In addition to its new headquarters at St James Power Station, Dyson has other locations in Singapore, including an engineering centre, a motor manufacturing facility and a new battery factory. .
In announcing its global investment plan in 2020, Dyson said the funding would be distributed among Singapore, two campuses in Wiltshire in southwest England and the Philippines.
In January 2019, Dyson announced plans to relocate the company’s headquarters to Singapore, calling the move a “commercial decision” to get closer to its fastest-growing market in the entire Asia-Pacific region.
To/from Singapore: James Dyson
However, founder James Dyson – a billionaire Brexit supporter – has also expressed his dissatisfaction with the overly bureaucratic restrictions in dealing with EU and UK tax issues. He personally moved to Singapore in 2019, where he bought a property and set up a family office, but moved his residence back to the UK two years later.
Founded in 1991, the company has gone from developing beautifully designed products ranging from hand dryers and air purifiers to hair care tools and vacuums to becoming a household name. In 2019, a project to develop and produce electric vehicles in Singapore was abandoned as “not commercially viable”.



