Singapore Food & Hawker Day: Eat Like a Local for 24 Hours
Singapore's hawker culture is UNESCO-listed for a reason: some of the world's best food comes off S$5 plates in open-sided food centres. This one-day eating itinerary strings together the classic hawker halls, a guided tasting walk through the heritage quarters and a Peranakan finale — with the top-rated food tours and classes to book.
At a glance
- 1Kaya toast breakfast
- 2Maxwell Food Centre lunch
- 3Chinatown & Little India food walk
- 4Satay night at Lau Pa Sat
Morning: kopi and the hawker classics
Begin the local way with kaya toast, soft-boiled eggs and a strong kopi at a traditional coffeeshop. Then head to Maxwell Food Centre in Chinatown before the office crowd arrives around noon — the famous Tian Tian chicken rice draws a queue for a plate that costs about S$6. Most hawker dishes run S$4–8, so grazing across two or three stalls is entirely reasonable. Bring cash or a local payment app; some stalls still don't take cards.
Afternoon: a guided walk through the quarters
A guided food walk is the fastest way to decode the menu. Tours through Chinatown, Little India and Kampong Glam typically pack in seven to nine tastings over three to four hours — think fish-head curry, biryani, murtabak and teh tarik — while the guide explains how Chinese, Indian and Malay kitchens shaped one cuisine. Book a day or two ahead; small-group departures cap at around ten people and fill quickly.
Peranakan flavours and cooking classes
Peranakan food — the Chinese-Malay fusion born in the Straits — is Singapore's own invention, all spice pastes, coconut and slow-cooked depth. Try a laksa or ayam buah keluak, then go deeper with a hands-on cooking class: several start with a wet-market visit to shop for ingredients before you pound your own rempah. Classes run small and sell out days ahead, so this is the one thing to book in advance.
Evening: satay street at Lau Pa Sat
Finish at Lau Pa Sat, the Victorian cast-iron market hall in the financial district. From about 7pm, Boon Tat Street beside it closes to traffic and turns into satay street — order chicken, mutton and prawn skewers by the dozen with a cold Tiger beer as the towers light up overhead. It is touristy, cheap and genuinely fun, and it runs late enough to follow any dinner plan.
Book the experiences in this itinerary
Top-rated tours for exactly what this plan recommends in Singapore — prices per person.







