In Boyer-Lindquist coordinates, the Kerr metric is
$$ds^2=-\frac{\Delta}{\rho^2} \left(dt-a \sin^2{\theta}~d\phi\right)^2+\frac{\sin^2{\theta}}{\rho^2}\left(\left(r^2+a^2\right)d\phi-a dt\right)^2+\frac{\rho^2}{\Delta} dr^2+ \rho^2 d\theta^2,~~~~\rightarrow(1)$$
where, $$\Delta(r)\equiv r^2-2Mr+a^2,~~~~\rightarrow(2)$$ $$\rho^2(r,\theta)\equiv r^2+a^2 \cos^2{\theta}.~~~~\rightarrow(3)$$
A curvature singularity occurs when $\rho^2=0$, which corresponds to a ring on the equatorial plane, $$r=0,~~~~\cos{\theta}=0.~~~~\rightarrow(4)$$
To judge the nature of the singularity, which is a surface of the form $\rho=\mathrm{const.}$, let us modify the coordinate system such that we have a coordinate $\rho$ instead of $r$.
Start with
$$d\rho=\partial_\mu \rho~dx^\mu,~~~~\rightarrow(5)$$
where, using Eq.(3), $$\partial_\mu \rho=\left(0,\frac{r}{\rho},\frac{-a^2\cos{\theta}\sin{\theta}}{\rho},0\right).~~~~\rightarrow(6)$$
Then, substituiting Eq.(6) into Eq.(5), we get $$d\rho=\frac{1}{\rho}\left(rdr-a^2 \cos{\theta}\sin{\theta}d\theta\right).~~~~\rightarrow(7)$$
which could be written as
$$\color{red}{\rho dr}=\frac{\rho}{r}\left(\rho d\rho-a^2\cos{\theta}\sin{\theta}d\theta\right).~~~~\rightarrow(8)$$
Now, substitute Eq.(8) into the original metric Eq.(1) to express the Kerr metric in coordinates $\{t,\rho,\theta,\phi\}$:
$$ds^2=-\frac{\Delta}{\rho^2} \left(dt-a \sin^2{\theta}~d\phi\right)^2+\frac{\sin^2{\theta}}{\rho^2}\left(\left(r^2+a^2\right)d\phi-a dt\right)^2+\frac{\color{red}{\frac{\rho^2}{r^2}\left(\rho d\rho-a^2\cos{\theta}\sin{\theta}d\theta\right)^2}}{\Delta}+ \rho^2 d\theta^2,~~~~\rightarrow(9)$$
where now $$r=r(\rho,\theta)=\sqrt{\rho^2-a^2\cos^2{\theta}},~~~~\rightarrow(10)$$ and $$\Delta(r)=\Delta\left(r\left(\rho,\theta\right)\right)=\rho^2-a^2\cos^2{\theta}-2M\sqrt{\rho^2-a^2\cos^2{\theta}}+a^2.~~~~\rightarrow(11)$$
Since we only care about the nature of the $\rho$ coordinate as we approach the singularity, let us set $t=t_0,~\theta=\pi/2,~\phi=\phi_0.$ The metric then becomes
$$ds^2=\frac{\frac{\rho^2}{r^2}\left(\rho d\rho\right)^2}{\Delta}=\left(\frac{\rho^2}{\rho^2-2M\rho+a^2}\right) d\rho^2.~~~~\rightarrow(12)$$
As you approach the singularity, $\rho$ gets closer and closer to zero, and $a^2$ dominates in the denominator:
$$ds^2\approx\left(\frac{\rho^2}{a^2}\right) d\rho^2>0 \Longrightarrow \boxed{\lim_{\rho\rightarrow0}{ds^2\big|_\left\{t=t_0,~\theta=\pi/2,~\phi=\phi_0\right\}}>0.}~~~~\rightarrow(13)$$
This shows that the coordinate $\rho$ is a spatial coordinate all the way down to the singularity.
If, however, we let $a\rightarrow0$ to get the Schwarzschild limit, then we recover the usual behavior of Schwarzschild: $\rho$ (which is identical to $r$ when $a=0$) becomes timelike below the horizon and all the way down to the singularity. We have
$$ds^2=\left(\frac{\rho^2}{\rho^2-2M\rho}\right) d\rho^2=\left(\frac{\rho}{\rho-2M}\right) d\rho^2\Longrightarrow\boxed{\lim_{\rho\rightarrow0}{ds^2\big|_\left\{\color{red}{a=0},~t=t_0,~\theta=\pi/2,~\phi=\phi_0\right\}}<0.}~~~~\rightarrow(14)$$
Equation (14) is the limit of equation (13) as $a\rightarrow0$ in the manner you asked for.