Clear, source-backed guidance to help you make an informed choice.
Yes — Texas Chicken Singapore is MUIS halal-certified across its outlets, so its fried chicken, tenders and sides are halal. Certification is per-premises and renewable — confirm the specific outlet on the MUIS HalalSG register.
Yes — Texas Chicken Singapore is MUIS halal-certified across its outlets, so its fried chicken, tenders and sides are halal. Certification is per-premises and renewable — confirm the specific outlet on the MUIS HalalSG register.
MUIS certification is issued per premises. Texas Chicken's Singapore outlets are covered under its certification, but a brand-new outlet is only covered once its own certificate is issued — confirm the specific outlet on the MUIS HalalSG register if it just opened.
Yes. Certificates are time-limited and renewed periodically, and MUIS can suspend a certificate if conditions are breached. The MUIS HalalSG register always reflects the current status, which is why every answer here links to it.
Search for Texas Chicken 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.
MUIS halal certification means the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore has audited the premises, ingredients and supply chain, and issued a halal certificate for the outlet or plant. Certified outlets display the certificate and appear on the official MUIS HalalSG register.
Certification is per-premises and time-limited: it must be renewed, and a new outlet is only covered once its own certificate is issued. That is why we always link you to the register — the certificate on the wall and the HalalSG listing are the ground truth on the day you visit.