Eggslut, the Los Angeles egg sandwich brand that grew from a food truck into an international chain, drew long queues when it arrived in Singapore, and halal questions came with the hype. The register answer is at the top of this page; here is the context around it.
What Eggslut says
Eggslut has not published a halal certification or a halal position for its Singapore operation. Its menu at Scotts Square was built around eggs, brioche sandwiches and items such as bacon, which local food media covered extensively without any halal claim from the brand. The bigger practical point is that the brand has since closed its Scotts Square outlet, its only Singapore location, as reported by DanielFoodDiary, which also noted the chain’s withdrawal from other Asian markets. There is currently no Eggslut outlet in Singapore to certify or to check.
What this means for you
For now the question is largely academic. If you come across Eggslut products through travel, pop-ups or a future return to Singapore, treat the brand as unverified rather than as either halal or non-halal, and check the specific premises rather than the brand name. Certification is issued per premises, so a certified outlet in one country tells you nothing about another. Our guide on how to check halal certification in Singapore covers the habit worth keeping, and the register search is where any future outlet would show up.
Certified alternatives
If what you actually want is an indulgent egg-and-brioche style breakfast with a certificate you can verify, start from these register-backed pages:
- McDonald’s - certified islandwide, and its breakfast muffins with egg are the everyday stand-in.
- Swensen’s - a certified Western chain for the fuller American diner experience.