North Region · Singapore

Halal food in Central Water Catchment

Central Water Catchment is Singapore's central nature reserve, not a dining destination. It holds MacRitchie, Upper Peirce and Upper Seletar reservoirs and the forest of the Central Catchment Nature Reserve. Certified halal food here is very limited, tied to visitor kiosks, park facilities and the edges of nearby estates. The certified outlets listed here come from the MUIS public register.

A&W

Certified

Restaurant · Central Water Catchment

20 Mandai Lake Road #02-01 · 729825

Coffee House

Certified

Restaurant · Central Water Catchment

20 Mandai Lake Road #02-04 · 729825

Copper Chimney Express

Certified

Restaurant · Central Water Catchment

20 Mandai Lake Road #02-06 Bird Paradise · 729825

Kentucky Fried Chicken Management Pte Ltd (KFC)

Certified

Restaurant · Central Water Catchment

80 Mandai Lake Road #02 Singapore Zoological Gardens · 729826

Kentucky Fried Chicken Management Pte Ltd (KFC)

Certified

Restaurant · Central Water Catchment

80 Mandai Lake Road Singapore Zoological Gardens · 729826

McDonald's

Certified

Restaurant · Central Water Catchment

80 Mandai Lake Road #01-22 Singapore Zoo · 729826

Munchi Pancakes

Certified

Snack Bar / Bakery · Central Water Catchment

80 Mandai Lake Road #01-K1 Singapore Zoo (F & B) · 729826

Central Water Catchment is a North Region planning area, but it is mostly forest and water rather than homes or shops. It takes in the Central Catchment Nature Reserve and the MacRitchie, Upper Peirce and Upper Seletar reservoirs, which makes it one of the greenest parts of Singapore and one of the least built up. For eating, that character matters. There is no town centre or hawker street here, so certified halal food is very limited and connected to visitor amenities, park facilities or institutions sitting near the reserve edges.

How to read this page

HalalFreak is an independent directory rebuilt from the MUIS public register. Each entry names a specific premises and its certificate reference, not a blanket status for the reserve. Confirm any outlet on the MUIS Halal e-Service by matching the certificate number, since a certificate covers one address and expiry. For nearby options, browse neighbouring areas.

Frequently asked questions

How many halal-certified establishments are there in Central Water Catchment?

As of 5 July 2026, the MUIS public register lists 7 certified establishments in the Central Water Catchment planning area.

How do I confirm an outlet in Central Water Catchment is still halal-certified?

Search the outlet's name on the official MUIS Halal e-Service, or open its page on HalalFreak and match the certificate number shown against the MUIS register.

Is there much halal food in Central Water Catchment?

No. This is Singapore's central nature reserve, covering MacRitchie, Upper Peirce and Upper Seletar reservoirs rather than an HDB town or a food street. Certified halal food is very limited here and tied to visitor amenities, park kiosks or institutions near the reserve edges, so options are far fewer than in a residential area.

Where would certified outlets in Central Water Catchment be?

Any certified outlet sits near the reserve's visitor points and its outer boundary, for example around park entrances, reservoir facilities or nearby institutions, rather than deep inside the forest. The certified outlets listed here point to specific premises on the register, so read each address before planning a visit.

How do I confirm a Central Water Catchment outlet is MUIS certified?

Note the outlet name and certificate number shown here, then look it up on the MUIS Halal e-Service. A certificate covers the exact premises and period stated, so the address should match the location you plan to visit and the expiry date should still be current.

What if the eatery I want is not listed?

A missing listing usually means the premises is not on the MUIS public register, or its certificate lapsed and was not renewed. It says nothing about the food itself. Search the MUIS Halal e-Service by name or address, and treat the certificate as the source of truth.