Kampong Glam is the spiritual home of halal dining in Singapore. The golden dome of Sultan Mosque rises over Bussorah Street's restored shophouses, and the streets radiating from it — Arab Street, Haji Lane, Baghdad Street — hold the island's densest concentration of halal restaurants, from generations-old nasi padang institutions to third-wave Muslim-owned cafés and Middle Eastern grills. This was the seat of the Malay sultanate and the historic gathering point for pilgrims bound for Mecca; the Malay Heritage Centre on the mosque's doorstep tells that story. Today the district runs from breakfast teh tarik to well-past-midnight supper, with Bugis Junction and Bugis+ adding mall-certified options two minutes away. It is, simply, where you bring anyone who doubts halal food can headline a food district. This guide scores every verified spot — certified, Muslim-owned, halal-friendly — across the quarter.
Halal spots you can reach on foot from Kampong Glam's stations.
Where halal food clusters in Kampong Glam.
Most eateries in the historic quarter are halal or Muslim-owned, but not all — a few bars and cafés on Haji Lane are exceptions. Check the badge on each listing; certified outlets link to their MUIS record.
Lunch and dinner peaks are intense on weekends, and Ramadan evenings are the busiest of the year. Weekday mid-afternoons are the calmest window for the famous spots.
Yes — Sultan Mosque welcomes respectful visitors outside prayer times, with robes provided at the entrance. Friday midday is reserved for congregational prayers.
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.