Where to Eat in Singapore: Standout Restaurants & Food Spots

Updated

Singapore turns eating into a national sport, and its hawker centres are the playing field — open-air halls where dozens of specialist stalls cook one dish brilliantly. A multicultural city plates Chinese, Malay and Indian flavors side by side, often for the price of a coffee back home.

Dishes Worth Crossing the City For

Each stall tends to perfect a single recipe. Seek out these:

  • Hainanese chicken rice — poached chicken with fragrant, fat-cooked rice and a trio of chili, ginger and dark soy.
  • Chili crab — whole crab in a sweet-savory tomato gravy; order fried mantou buns to mop up every drop.
  • Laksa — rice noodles in a rich coconut-curry broth with prawns and cockles.
  • Satay — charcoal-grilled skewers with a thick peanut sauce.
  • Char kway teow — smoky stir-fried flat noodles with egg, cockles and Chinese sausage.

Where to Wander and Eat

Maxwell Food Centre is a hawker institution, packed at lunch with office workers queueing for chicken rice and porridge. Grab a seat first, then order.

Lau Pa Sat, a handsome Victorian iron pavilion, hums after dark when the adjacent street fires up its satay grills under the open sky.

A practical ordering tip: "chope" your table by leaving a packet of tissues on it — that is the local reservation system — before you join the stall queues. Many stalls are cash-preferred, so keep small notes handy.

While Singapore menus are usually in English, plenty of hawker stalls label dishes only in Chinese, Malay or Tamil, so photographing the sign to translate it helps you tell the laksa from the lor mee and order with confidence.