Yishun quietly holds its own as one of the North's best halal food neighbourhoods. The action centres on Northpoint City — Singapore's largest northern mall, directly above Yishun MRT — where halal-certified fast food, bakeries and family restaurants sit alongside a big basement food scene. Step out to the heartland and it gets better: Chong Pang City is a late-night supper institution for Malay food, while Yishun Park Hawker Centre brings newer hawker concepts under one roof. Muslim-owned cafés and food stalls dot the HDB blocks between Khatib and Canberra, and Masjid Darul Makmur anchors the community off Yishun Avenue. Whether you're after post-work dinner near the MRT, a weekend family meal, or 1am supper at Chong Pang, this guide tracks the verified halal and Muslim-owned options — each with its halal-confidence score, so you know what's MUIS-certified and what's self-declared.
Halal spots you can reach on foot from Yishun's stations.
Where halal food clusters in Yishun.
Yes — Northpoint City has multiple halal-certified outlets across its food court, fast-food chains and restaurants. Check each outlet's certificate on the MUIS HalalSG register, or look for the badge on its Humble Halal listing.
Chong Pang City (near Blk 105 Yishun Ring Road) is the classic northern supper spot, with Malay and Muslim-owned stalls that run late. Yishun Park Hawker Centre is a newer alternative with earlier hours.
Yes — Masjid Darul Makmur serves the Yishun area. Many nearby eateries are used to the Friday-prayer lunch crowd, so expect queues after Jumu'ah.
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.