Marine Parade finally has its own MRT station — the Thomson-East Coast Line put this classic seaside estate one ride from town, and its halal food deserves the visit. Parkway Parade remains the anchor mall, its food court and restaurant floors carrying the certified staples, while the Marine Parade Central Market & Food Centre next door keeps old-school Malay breakfast and nasi padang traditions alive. Walk ten minutes and you're at East Coast Park, Singapore's favourite picnic coastline — assemble your spread from the certified bakeries and Muslim-owned stalls first. The Katong-Joo Chiat heritage belt borders the estate to the north, adding Peranakan-era shophouse cafés (check badges — not all are halal). This guide sorts the verified options across the estate: MUIS-certified, Muslim-owned and halal-friendly, each scored so you can judge at a glance before you commit to the queue.
Halal spots you can reach on foot from Marine Parade's stations.
Where halal food clusters in Marine Parade.
Yes — Parkway Parade's food court and restaurant floors include halal-certified outlets. Check each outlet's certificate on the MUIS register or the badge on its listing here.
Stock up around Marine Parade Central — the market's Malay stalls and the certified bakeries at Parkway Parade — before walking down to the park.
Most famous Katong laksa stalls are not halal-certified. Some halal versions exist nearby — check the badge on each listing rather than assuming.
No. Each listing is clearly labelled — MUIS Certified, Admin Verified, Muslim-Owned or self-declared — with a halal-confidence score. Always confirm certification on MUIS HalalSG.
Use the map view or area filters to see halal places nearby, then sort by halal-confidence score or rating.