Heritage neighbourhood

Kampong Glam — heritage, halal food, and the corners most visitors miss

Kampong Glam is the historic Malay-Muslim quarter of Singapore, anchored by the golden-domed Masjid Sultan and threaded with shophouse-lined heritage streets: Bussorah, Kandahar, Baghdad, Arab. It's small enough to walk in a morning, dense enough that you'll find something new on the third visit, and home to the highest concentration of halal food in the city.

Bussorah Street in Kampong Glam, Singapore — looking towards the golden dome of Masjid Sultan

What to see

Masjid Sultan

The defining building of the neighbourhood. Built in 1824 and rebuilt in 1932, the gold-domed mosque is a National Monument and the focal point of Bussorah Street. Visitors are welcome outside prayer times; modest dress is required and loaner robes are available at the entrance. The view from the top of Bussorah Street looking down toward the dome is the postcard shot for a reason.

Bussorah Street

The tree-lined pedestrian street running up to Masjid Sultan. Restored shophouses on both sides, mostly halal-certified restaurants and cafés on the ground floor, often live music or quiet jazz spilling out at night. The best Friday-evening neighbourhood atmosphere in central Singapore.

Arab Street

Arab Street in Kampong Glam, Singapore — heritage shophouses, textile and rug shops

The textile and rug spine of the area. Long-established shops sell saris, songket, batik, Persian rugs, and ittar (alcohol-free perfume oils). Worth stepping into a few; the older shops have stories worth their air-conditioning alone.

Haji Lane

Haji Lane in Kampong Glam, Singapore — pastel shophouses, street art, and independent boutiques

A narrow lane parallel to Arab Street that became Singapore's independent boutique and street-art hub. Murals on every wall, small designers, vintage stores, hidden bars. Quietest in the morning; very busy on weekend nights.

Malay Heritage Centre

Housed in the former Istana Kampong Glam (the residence of the Malay royal family), the Malay Heritage Centre is the museum of the neighbourhood and the broader Malay community. The grounds and gardens are free to enter and give the most peaceful corner of Kampong Glam.

What to eat

Kampong Glam has the highest density of halal-certified food in Singapore. You can walk a single block and pass nasi padang, biryani, murtabak, kebabs, shawarma, Turkish, Lebanese, and modern fusion, all halal. Look for the green MUIS logo at the entrance.

What to try: nasi padang at one of the long-standing Bussorah Street institutions; murtabak at the Arab Street end (a stuffed flatbread that originated in this part of the world); teh tarik (pulled tea) at any kopitiam; and a manakish or Turkish breakfast at one of the Middle-Eastern cafés that have moved in over the last decade.

When to go: lunch is the busiest time. For a quieter meal aim for late afternoon (3–5pm) when restaurants are settling between sittings. Friday lunchtime gets crowded around prayer times.

How to spend half a day in Kampong Glam

  1. 9:00am. Start at Bugis MRT, walk up Victoria Street to the heritage boundary.
  2. 9:30am. Bussorah Street, working up toward Masjid Sultan with the dome in view.
  3. 10:00am. Masjid Sultan visitor entrance, 30 to 40 minutes for a slow walk-through and the courtyard.
  4. 11:00am. Arab Street and Baghdad Street, browsing the textile and perfume shops.
  5. 12:00pm. Early lunch at a halal-certified restaurant on Bussorah or Kandahar (avoid the busy Friday lunchtime).
  6. 1:30pm. Haji Lane and the Malay Heritage Centre gardens for a quieter end to the visit.

For travellers who'd rather have a guide who knows what's worth slowing down for and what's worth skipping, our STB-licensed Kampong Glam tours cover the same ground with stories and detours that don't show up on a map.

Frequently asked questions

Where is Kampong Glam in Singapore?
Kampong Glam is in central Singapore, just north of the Singapore River and a short walk from Bugis MRT station. The historic boundaries run roughly from Beach Road and Victoria Street to Jalan Sultan and Ophir Road. The MUIS-administered Malay Heritage Centre and Masjid Sultan sit at its heart.
What is Kampong Glam known for?
Kampong Glam is the historic Malay-Muslim quarter of Singapore. It's known for the golden-domed Masjid Sultan (a National Monument), Arab Street's textile and rug shops, Bussorah Street's heritage shophouses, Haji Lane's independent boutiques and street art, and one of the highest concentrations of halal food in Singapore.
How do you get to Kampong Glam by MRT?
Bugis MRT station (East-West and Downtown lines) is the closest station, about a 5-minute walk north to Masjid Sultan. Nicoll Highway (Circle line) is also walkable. Buses 7, 32, 51, 61, 63, 80, 145, 175, 197, and 851 stop nearby.
Is Kampong Glam halal-friendly?
Yes. Kampong Glam has the highest concentration of halal-certified eateries in Singapore. Almost every restaurant on Bussorah Street, Kandahar Street, Baghdad Street, and Arab Street is halal-certified or halal-conscious. Look for the green MUIS halal logo.
How much time do you need in Kampong Glam?
Half a day (3–4 hours) covers the highlights: Masjid Sultan, the heritage streets, lunch at one of the halal-certified restaurants, and a wander through Haji Lane. A full day lets you add the Malay Heritage Centre, an unhurried meal, and time to browse the textile and perfume shops on Arab Street.

See Kampong Glam with a local guide

Heritage walks, halal food trails, and Jaulah Masjid (mosque heritage) programs led by STB-licensed guides who know the neighbourhood at every hour of the day.