Sushi-GO is a quick service sushi chain where GO-Bots ferry plates straight to your table, with a large menu of affordable items curated by a Japanese chef. Its low prices and mall locations make it a frequent halal-status question among Muslim diners. The register answer is at the top of this page; here is the context around it.
What Sushi-GO says
Sushi-GO has not published a halal certification or a halal position for its Singapore outlets. Its official website makes no mention of halal status, pork-free preparation or Muslim-friendly options, and local food media that have reviewed the chain, such as Eatbook, note that it is not a halal-certified eatery. Questions about specific ingredients, such as whether mirin or sake is used in the rice and sauces, are best directed to the chain itself.
What this means for you
With no certificate and no published ingredient policy, there is nothing to verify against the register, so dining at Sushi-GO becomes a personal judgement about undisclosed kitchen practices rather than a verifiable certification status. Sushi kitchens commonly use rice seasoning and sauces that contain mirin or sake, which makes the absence of any statement more significant here than at, say, a fruit juice stall. If certification is your standard, treat Sushi-GO as unverified rather than as either halal or non-halal, and re-check the register from time to time, since chains do enter it when they certify premises.
Certified alternatives
If you want sushi with a certificate you can actually check, the register has you covered:
- Hei Sushi - a halal-certified conveyor belt sushi chain, the closest like-for-like swap.
- Certified restaurants - the register category to browse for other Japanese options near you.
To check any specific outlet, use the register search with the outlet name or the mall’s postal code.