Raffles Place is the core of Singapore's CBD, and it eats hardest at weekday lunch. The standout for halal diners is Lau Pa Sat — the historic cast-iron market whose Satay Street fires up in the evening and whose interior holds Muslim-owned and halal stalls — while nearby Telok Ayer and Amoy Street food centres add more, and the office malls (One Raffles Place, Marina Bay Link Mall) carry halal-certified fast-casual outlets. Two of the country's oldest mosques sit a short walk away on the Telok Ayer/South Bridge stretch. Weekends are quiet here, so time your visit for lunch or the satay-street evenings. This guide tracks the verified halal and Muslim-owned options across Raffles Place's food centres and towers, each scored for halal confidence so the CBD lunch run lands somewhere you can trust.
We're still adding halal places in Raffles Place.
Halal spots you can reach on foot from Raffles Place's stations.
Where halal food clusters in Raffles Place.
Yes — Lau Pa Sat has Muslim-owned and halal stalls (and the famous Satay Street in the evenings), and the office malls carry halal-certified fast-casual outlets. Check each stall's badge or the MUIS HalalSG register.
Satay Street has Muslim-owned satay stalls, but not every stall is certified — look for the stall's halal marking and verify where you can.
Weekday lunch for the food centres and malls, or the evening for Lau Pa Sat's Satay Street. Weekends in the CBD are much quieter.
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.