Tanjong Pagar is a CBD district that eats well at lunch and into the evening. The office towers around the MRT drive demand, and the halal options cluster in the food centres and malls — Amoy Street Food Centre and Maxwell Food Centre (on the Chinatown edge) carry Muslim-owned and halal stalls, while Tanjong Pagar Plaza and 100AM add food-court and restaurant choices. The district is also known for its Korean strip, though most of those are not halal — so it pays to eat by the badge. Historic mosques on the Telok Ayer side are within walking distance. With the East-West line here and the Thomson-East Coast line at Maxwell, it's well connected to the wider halal clusters. This guide tracks the verified halal and Muslim-owned options across Tanjong Pagar's food centres, malls and shophouses, each scored for halal confidence before you go.
Halal spots you can reach on foot from Tanjong Pagar's stations.
Where halal food clusters in Tanjong Pagar.
Yes — the food centres (Amoy Street, Maxwell) have Muslim-owned and halal stalls, and the malls carry halal-certified outlets, though many CBD restaurants are not halal. Check each one's badge or the MUIS HalalSG register.
Mostly not — Tanjong Pagar's Korean strip largely serves pork and alcohol. For halal Korean, choose a MUIS-certified Korean restaurant and verify it on the register.
The hawker centres for quick, affordable stalls, or the mall food halls for halal-certified fast-casual — both suit the CBD lunch crowd.
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.