Clear, source-backed guidance to help you make an informed choice.
Astons Specialities is not halal — its menu includes pork and alcohol and its outlets are not MUIS-certified. For a halal alternative, the same group runs ANDES by Astons, a separate halal-certified steak-and-Western brand — confirm ANDES outlets on the MUIS HalalSG register.
Astons Specialities is not halal — its menu includes pork and alcohol and its outlets are not MUIS-certified. For a halal alternative, the same group runs ANDES by Astons, a separate halal-certified steak-and-Western brand — confirm ANDES outlets on the MUIS HalalSG register.
Astons holds no MUIS certification, so nothing on its menu is independently verified halal. Some items may contain no obviously non-halal ingredients, but sourcing and handling are unverified — most halal-conscious diners choose a certified alternative instead.
Search the establishment on the official MUIS HalalSG register at halal.muis.gov.sg, or look for the MUIS certificate displayed at the outlet. A 'no pork, no lard' sign is self-declared and is not certification.
Search for Astons on the official MUIS HalalSG register at halal.muis.gov.sg, or look for a valid MUIS halal certificate displayed at the outlet. A “no pork, no lard” sign is self-declared and is not the same as MUIS halal certification.
The brand or product is not listed on the MUIS HalalSG register. This does not automatically mean everything it sells is non-halal — but there is no independent verification, and in many cases the menu includes confirmed non-halal items such as pork or alcohol.
Ingredients, recipes and certification status change. Always verify on MUIS HalalSG or with the brand before consuming, and check the specific concerns we list above for this brand.