Domino’s Pizza is one of the most familiar delivery names in Singapore, and its halal status is a question many Muslim households check before ordering. That is exactly why this page is worth reading carefully. The register answer is at the top of this page; here is the context around it.
What Domino’s says
A regional halal guide has reported Domino’s Pizza Singapore as being included in the MUIS directory of halal-certified eating establishments. The same guide notes the important caveat: MUIS certificates have a validity period and must be renewed to stay on the register. Separately, the brand’s regional operator, Domino’s Pizza Enterprises, has been through a broad operational reset across its markets, which included closing its commissaries in Singapore and Malaysia and shifting ingredient distribution to partner warehouses, even as the Singapore business has announced plans to keep expanding.
What this means for you
A brand that was reported as certified before is not automatically certified now. Certification attaches to premises and to a validity window, not to a logo, and operational changes like new supply arrangements are exactly the moments when paperwork can lapse or be refiled. The register answer at the top of this page reflects the current position, and it can change in either direction, so re-check it before you order rather than relying on memory or on older articles. If certification is your standard, verify the specific outlet feeding you today.
Certified alternatives
If you want pizza with a certificate you can actually check, start from these register-backed pages:
- Pizza Hut - a certified pizza chain and the most direct swap for a Domino’s order.
- Canadian 2 For 1 Pizza - a certified chain built around takeaway and delivery value deals.
- What if an outlet is not listed? - what a missing register entry does and does not mean.
To check any specific outlet, use the register search with the outlet name or the mall’s postal code.