Few cuisines travel to Hong Kong as happily as the food of Malaysia and Singapore. A steaming bowl of laksa, a plate of glossy Hainanese chicken rice, a pot of peppery bak kut teh — these are the dishes homesick Singaporeans and Malaysians hunt for, and increasingly what everyone else orders too. If you are after the best Malaysian and Singaporean restaurants in Hong Kong in 2026, this is my shortlist, from a Michelin-starred tasting menu to a 20-seat laksa counter.

I have kept it tight and honest: five kitchens I would happily send a friend to, spread across Hong Kong Island and Kowloon, with addresses, nearest MTR exits and realistic price ranges.

The short answer: The best Malaysian and Singaporean restaurants in Hong Kong for 2026 range from all-day favourite Café Malacca (馬來一菜館) in Shek Tong Tsui and one-Michelin-star Whey in Central to Chatterbox Café's famous chicken rice, Wan Chai stalwart Sabah (莎巴馬來西亞餐廳) and tiny laksa specialist Nyonya Coming. Budget from about HK$60 a bowl to HK$1,500 for the tasting menu.

In This Guide

  1. Café Malacca — Shek Tong Tsui
  2. Whey — Central (Michelin star)
  3. Chatterbox Café — Tsim Sha Tsui
  4. Sabah Malaysian Cuisine — Wan Chai
  5. Nyonya Coming — Sheung Wan
  6. At a glance: compare the five
  7. FAQ

Malaysian and Singaporean cooking overlap so heavily — shared roots in Hokkien, Cantonese, Malay, Indian and Peranakan (Nyonya) kitchens — that the best spots in town happily serve both. Here is where to start.

1. Café Malacca — Shek Tong Tsui

If you only try one address on this list, make it Café Malacca (馬來一菜館). Tucked inside JEN Hong Kong by Shangri-La on the western edge of Hong Kong Island, it has spent years quietly serving some of the city's most consistent Malaysian and Singaporean food.

The menu is a greatest-hits reel: Hainanese chicken rice, curry laksa, char kway teow, Hokkien mee, satay and a proper Singapore-style chilli crab. It is a hotel restaurant, so the room is comfortable and the service polished — but the cooking stays true. Come with a group and order across the map.

Café Malacca (馬來一菜館)

Shek Tong Tsui (石塘咀) · Malaysian & Singaporean · All-rounder

A polished, reliable hotel restaurant covering the full Malaysian and Singaporean canon — laksa, chicken rice, char kway teow and chilli crab. Best for a group feast across both cuisines.

CuisineMalaysian & Singaporean
AddressLevel 2, JEN Hong Kong by Shangri-La, 508 Queen's Road West, Shek Tong Tsui
Nearest MTRHKU, Exit B2 (about 1 min)
HoursDaily, roughly 6:30am–11pm (confirm before dinner)
PriceAround HK$150–300 per head
Good forGroups, homesick expats, first-timers

Confirm current hours and book via JEN Hong Kong by Shangri-La.

2. Whey — Central

For a special occasion, Whey is the one. Singaporean chef Barry Quek earned a Michelin star within months of opening, and the room on Wellington Street still holds one star in the 2026 MICHELIN Guide Hong Kong. This is not a hawker menu — it is a modern European tasting menu shot through with the flavours Quek grew up with.

Across a multi-course meal you might meet brioche with a buah keluak emulsion, silky pomfret with aromatic nasi ulam, and a Mao Shan Wang durian ice cream worth the supplement. It is Singaporean soul in fine-dining clothes, and the best table in town for anyone who wants their laksa flavours reimagined.

"Hong Kong is one of the only cities where you can slurp a HK$70 laksa at lunch and taste those same Singaporean flavours on a Michelin-starred tasting menu by night."

Whey

Central (中環) · Michelin one star · Modern European & Singaporean

A one-Michelin-star tasting-menu restaurant where chef Barry Quek weaves Singaporean ingredients through modern European technique. Best for a celebratory dinner.

CuisineModern European with Singaporean influences
AddressUG/F, The Wellington, 198 Wellington Street, Central
Nearest MTRSheung Wan, Exit E2 (or Central)
PriceTasting menu around HK$1,500+ per head
MichelinOne star (2026 Guide Hong Kong)
Good forSpecial occasions, date night

Confirm the current menu price and book ahead; listed in the MICHELIN Guide.

3. Chatterbox Café — Tsim Sha Tsui

Singapore's storied Chatterbox — famous since the 1970s for its chicken rice — brought its first overseas branch to Hong Kong, and you will find it inside K11 MUSEA in Tsim Sha Tsui. The draw is the award-winning Mandarin chicken rice, plump and fragrant, plus a satay platter, salted-egg chicken wings and a generous laksa.

It is a smart, mall-based café rather than a hole in the wall, which makes it an easy stop between harbourfront sightseeing and a K11 MUSEA browse. Portions are hearty and the chicken rice lives up to the hype.

Chatterbox Café

Tsim Sha Tsui (尖沙咀) · Singaporean · Famous chicken rice

The first overseas outpost of Singapore's Chatterbox, best known for its Mandarin chicken rice and laksa. Best for a comfortable, central Singaporean lunch.

CuisineSingaporean
AddressShop B110, B1/F, K11 MUSEA, Victoria Dockside, 18 Salisbury Road, TST
Nearest MTREast Tsim Sha Tsui, Exit J (Victoria Dockside)
PriceAround HK$140–250 per head
Good forChicken rice, families, mall dining

A second branch operates at The Wai in Tai Wai; confirm hours before visiting.

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4. Sabah Malaysian Cuisine — Wan Chai

A Wan Chai fixture for the better part of two decades, Sabah (莎巴馬來西亞餐廳) is the neighbourhood Malaysian everyone seems to have a soft spot for. It shuttered briefly before reopening on Wan Chai Road, and the cooking is as gutsy as ever: bak kut teh, beef rendang, seafood laksa and boneless Hainanese chicken rice.

It is unfussy, well-priced and listed in the MICHELIN Guide as a value pick — the kind of place you go when you want the real, garlicky, herbal flavours rather than a hotel's tidy version.

Sabah Malaysian Cuisine (莎巴馬來西亞餐廳)

Wan Chai (灣仔) · Malaysian · Neighbourhood institution

A long-running, well-priced Wan Chai Malaysian listed in the MICHELIN Guide, strong on bak kut teh, rendang and seafood laksa. Best for a gutsy, authentic weeknight dinner.

CuisineMalaysian
AddressShop 1, G/F, Pao Woo Mansion, 177–179 Wan Chai Road, Wan Chai
Nearest MTRWan Chai, Exit A3 (towards Wan Chai Road)
PriceAround HK$100–200 per head
Good forBak kut teh, value, regulars

Small and popular — go early or expect a short wait at peak times.

5. Nyonya Coming — Sheung Wan

Blink and you will miss it: Nyonya Coming is a 20-seat counter on Queen's Road in Sheung Wan doing one thing brilliantly — Nyonya (Peranakan) laksa. The signature seafood laksa arrives fragrant with galangal, lemongrass and chilli, thick with prawns and fish balls.

The menu is short by design: a handful of laksa and rice options, no frills, quick turnover. It is the antithesis of the hotel restaurant, and a brilliant reminder that some of Hong Kong's best Southeast Asian food comes out of the tiniest kitchens.

Nyonya Coming

Sheung Wan (上環) · Malaysian / Peranakan · Laksa specialist

A tiny 20-seat Sheung Wan spot laser-focused on fragrant Nyonya seafood laksa. Best for a quick, no-frills bowl of the good stuff.

CuisineMalaysian / Peranakan (Nyonya)
AddressShop I, 1/F, Central Mansion, 270–276 Queen's Road, Sheung Wan
Nearest MTRSheung Wan, Exit A2 (about 5 min)
PriceAround HK$60–120 per head
Good forLaksa lovers, quick solo lunch

Seats are limited and cash may be preferred — confirm before you go.

At a glance: compare the five

Best Malaysian & Singaporean restaurants in Hong Kong 2026

RestaurantAreaStyleFrom (per head)
Café MalaccaShek Tong TsuiMalaysian & Singaporean all-rounder~HK$150
WheyCentralModern European · 1 Michelin star~HK$1,500 (tasting)
Chatterbox CaféTsim Sha TsuiSingaporean · chicken rice~HK$140
SabahWan ChaiMalaysian · bak kut teh & laksa~HK$100
Nyonya ComingSheung WanNyonya laksa specialist~HK$60

Prices are approximate per-head guides and change with menus and seasons — always confirm on the day.

Still hungry for Southeast and East Asian flavours? Our roundups of the best Thai restaurants and best Korean restaurants cover more of the region, while Hong Kong's best Indian restaurants share the same spice-loving spirit. For the wider picture, browse our 50 best restaurants in Hong Kong and, for a blowout, the city's Michelin-starred tables.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best Malaysian restaurant in Hong Kong?
For a reliable all-rounder, Café Malacca (馬來一菜館) at JEN Hong Kong by Shangri-La in Shek Tong Tsui is the long-standing favourite, covering both Malaysian and Singaporean classics. For a punchier, hawker-style hit, Sabah Malaysian Cuisine (莎巴馬來西亞餐廳) in Wan Chai is a beloved neighbourhood institution.
Where can I get the best laksa in Hong Kong?
Nyonya Coming, a tiny 20-seat spot on Queen's Road in Sheung Wan, is prized for its fragrant Nyonya seafood laksa. Café Malacca, Sabah and Chatterbox Café also serve strong bowls, from curry laksa to a jumbo scallop version.
Is there a Michelin-starred Singaporean restaurant in Hong Kong?
Whey, on Wellington Street in Central, holds one star in the 2026 MICHELIN Guide Hong Kong. Chef Barry Quek serves a modern European tasting menu threaded with Singaporean flavours such as buah keluak and nasi ulam, so it is Singaporean-influenced fine dining rather than a traditional hawker menu.
How much does Malaysian or Singaporean food cost in Hong Kong?
Hawker-style bowls of laksa or chicken rice at casual spots such as Nyonya Coming or Sabah run about HK$60–150 per person. A relaxed meal at Café Malacca or Chatterbox is roughly HK$150–300 a head, while the tasting menu at Michelin-starred Whey is a special-occasion HK$1,500 or so.

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