Restaurant in Singapore, Singapore
Nae:um
800ptsMichelin-starred Korean tasting menu, book early.

About Nae:um
Nae:um holds a Michelin star and a rank of 45 on Asia's 50 Best, making it the most credentialed Korean contemporary tasting menu in Singapore. Chef Louis Han's seasonally episodic format rewards returning diners, and the service matches the kitchen's ambition at the $$$ price tier. Book four to six weeks out minimum — this one fills fast.
Should You Book Nae:um?
If you're choosing between Nae:um and Jaan by Kirk Westaway for a special occasion dinner in Singapore, the decision comes down to what you want from a tasting menu: Jaan delivers a more familiar European fine-dining register; Nae:um gives you something harder to find in this city — Korean culinary memory rendered with genuine technical discipline. At the $$$ price tier, Nae:um sits at the same spend level as Jaan and Iggy's, but it's the only restaurant in that bracket doing this particular kind of Korean contemporary cooking. Book it.
The Case for Nae:um
Nae:um earned its Michelin star in 2024 and holds a rank of 45 on Asia's 50 Best Restaurants — two trust signals that matter when you're committing to a tasting menu at this price point. Chef Louis Han named the restaurant after a Korean word meaning a fragrance that evokes memories, and that framing is not incidental: the menu changes with the seasons and is structured around episodes that connect back to Korean food culture and Han's recollections of home. If you've dined here once and wondered whether the episodic format holds across seasons, the answer is yes , this is a restaurant where a return visit will deliver a materially different menu rather than the same hits rearranged.
The room is a deliberate counterpoint to the maximalist interiors that dominate Singapore's fine-dining circuit. Cream and birch tones, a calm layout, and natural light during lunch service make it one of the quieter environments in the Telok Ayer corridor. For a second visit, that room works in your favour: you'll spend less time orienting to the space and more attention on what arrives at the table. The aroma-first philosophy embedded in the restaurant's name is not just marketing , it signals a kitchen that thinks about how courses land before they reach the plate, which is relevant to how you should pace yourself through the menu.
The service at Nae:um is worth addressing directly, because at this price tier service philosophy either earns the spend or undermines it. Based on its Michelin recognition and 4.6 rating across 254 Google reviews, the front-of-house consistently performs at a level that matches the kitchen's ambition. The team explains the episodic structure without over-narrating it, which is the right call for a menu that benefits from some discovery. For returning diners, this means you can engage more directly with the menu's references rather than waiting for the explanation , the service adjusts accordingly. That's the difference between a restaurant that runs a script and one that reads the table.
For context on how Korean contemporary cooking sits globally, the format Nae:um operates in shares structural DNA with restaurants like Restaurant Ki in Los Angeles, NaNum in Berlin, and GiwaKang in Seoul , all working in the same idiom of Korean culinary identity expressed through contemporary tasting menu structure. In Singapore specifically, there is no direct comparison at the same price tier. That scarcity is a reason to book sooner rather than later.
Booking Nae:um
Securing a table at Nae:um requires planning. This is a hard reservation: demand consistently outpaces availability, and the restaurant's Asia's 50 Best ranking at #45 means international diners compete for the same seats as locals. Book four to six weeks out for weekday dinner; weekend slots require more lead time, particularly for Friday and Saturday evenings. If you're visiting Singapore with a fixed itinerary, make this one of your first reservations , not your last.
Reservations: Hard to secure; book four to six weeks in advance minimum, longer for weekend evenings. Budget: $$$ (mid-to-upper tier tasting menu pricing). Address: 161 Telok Ayer St, Singapore 068615, in the Telok Ayer conservation area. Google Rating: 4.6 from 254 reviews. Awards: Michelin 1 Star (2024), Asia's 50 Best Restaurants #45.
How It Compares
Pearl Picks: More Korean Contemporary
If Nae:um is fully booked or you want to explore the Korean contemporary format in other cities, these are worth considering: Na Oh in Singapore offers a different register of Korean-influenced cooking. Further afield, Baroo in Los Angeles and ANJU in Saint-Gilles work in adjacent territory. In Korea itself, Sogonggan in Busan and LAB XXIV by Kumuda represent the category at source. For the broader Singapore dining picture, see our full Singapore restaurants guide, and if you're planning a full trip, our Singapore hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the rest. For a reference point on how tasting menu service at the top tier should feel, Le Bernardin in New York remains the benchmark for front-of-house matching kitchen ambition , Nae:um operates in a different format but shares that standard of alignment between service and cooking. Other Singapore fine-dining options worth comparing: Odette, Les Amis, and Zén each anchor different corners of the city's tasting menu market.
Compare Nae:um
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Nae:um | $$$ | — |
| Zén | $$$$ | — |
| Jaan by Kirk Westaway | $$$ | — |
| Iggy's | $$$ | — |
| Summer Pavilion | $$ | — |
| Waku Ghin | $$$$ | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Nae:um good for a special occasion?
Yes, and it's one of the stronger cases for a special occasion dinner in Singapore. A Michelin star earned in 2024 and a rank of 45 on Asia's 50 Best Restaurants give the meal genuine weight, and chef Louis Han's episodic, seasonally changing menu adds a sense of occasion that a static à la carte room can't replicate. If you want something more European in register, Jaan by Kirk Westaway is the closer comparison — but for Korean contemporary at this level, Nae:um is the booking.
Can Nae:um accommodate groups?
Group bookings at a restaurant of this format and size require direct contact well in advance — the room's cream-and-birch, low-key aesthetic suggests an intimate setting rather than a large banquet space. Groups of four or more should reach out to the restaurant directly at naeum.sg to confirm availability and any private dining options. This is not a venue to attempt with a party of six on short notice.
Can I eat at the bar at Nae:um?
There is no confirmed bar counter dining option in the available information for Nae:um. The restaurant's format centres on a tasting menu experience in a calm, furnished dining room — counter or bar seating as an alternative entry point is not documented. Book a table through naeum.sg if you want to be sure of a seat.
Is Nae:um good for solo dining?
A tasting menu format at the $$$ price point is one of the more solo-friendly formats in fine dining — you're not splitting a shared menu or navigating group dynamics. Nae:um's intimate room and episodic menu make solo dining a reasonable choice here. That said, confirm with the restaurant directly at naeum.sg whether single-seat reservations are readily available, as demand for a #45-ranked Asia's 50 Best restaurant means tables of any size fill quickly.
Is Nae:um worth the price?
At $$$, Nae:um sits in the same tier as Singapore's other serious tasting menu rooms, and the credentials back the price: a 2024 Michelin star and a rank of 45 on Asia's 50 Best are not soft claims. Chef Louis Han's seasonally changing menu rooted in Korean food culture adds a point of difference that justifies a repeat visit in a way that more static menus do not. If $$$ tasting menus are in scope for you, this one earns its place.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Nae:um?
The tasting menu is the only format here, and on the evidence of the awards — Michelin star in 2024, Asia's 50 Best rank of 45 — it delivers. Chef Louis Han structures the menu episodically around Korean food memory and seasonal change, which gives it a clear identity rather than a generic fine dining progression. If you want à la carte Korean in Singapore, this is not your room; but for the tasting menu format, Nae:um is one of the few places in the city where Korean contemporary cooking is being taken this seriously.
What are alternatives to Nae:um in Singapore?
For a different cuisine at a comparable prestige level, Jaan by Kirk Westaway offers modern British-influenced tasting menus with its own Michelin recognition, and Waku Ghin at Marina Bay Sands operates at a higher price point with a Japanese-European omakase format. If you want to stay in the Korean contemporary space, Na Oh in Singapore is a closer stylistic alternative. Nae:um's specific combination of Korean cultural reference, seasonal episodic structure, and Asia's 50 Best ranking makes a direct swap difficult, but those three cover the main decision branches.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Singapore
- Burnt EndsTatler's 2025 Restaurant of the Year and a World's 50 Best fixture, Burnt Ends is Singapore's most compelling case for fire-forward cooking. Bookings are near-impossible — plan three to four weeks ahead minimum. At $$$, the combination of Dave Pynt's dry-aged steaks, a four-tonne wood-fired oven, and a sharp, relaxed floor earns the price. Counter seats are the move for returning guests.
- OdetteOdette holds three Michelin stars, a Pearl 3 Diamond rating, and ranked #7 in Asia on the World's 50 Best list in 2025. Julien Royer's French contemporary tasting menu at the National Gallery Singapore draws on Southeast Asian and Japanese produce within a classically French framework. At $$$$ per head with near-impossible booking difficulty, this is Singapore's most decorated table and should be prioritised before you book your flights.
- Les AmisLes Amis holds three Michelin stars, Asia's 50 Best #28, and one of the largest wine cellars in Asia — making it Singapore's most credentialled French fine dining address. The seven-course degustation with wine pairing is the move. Book as far ahead as possible; this is near impossible to secure at short notice.
- Jaan by Kirk WestawayJaan by Kirk Westaway holds two Michelin stars, an Asia's 50 Best #77 ranking, and a Les Grandes Tables du Monde listing — all at the $$$ tier, which makes it one of Singapore's stronger value cases in top-tier fine dining. The "Reinventing British" tasting menu, served on Level 70 with panoramic city views, demands an early reservation: book four to six weeks out minimum.
- ZénZén holds three Michelin stars, 97.5 La Liste points, and an OAD Asia #3 ranking — the credentialing case for booking it is as strong as anything in Singapore. Chef Martin Öfner runs a Scandinavian-European tasting menu out of a Bukit Pasoh shophouse, Wednesday to Saturday only. Book months in advance; this is one of the hardest tables in the city to secure.
- MetaMeta is one of Singapore's strongest cases for a $$$-tier tasting menu: two Michelin stars, a top-40 position in World's 50 Best Asia (2025), and consistent OAD Asia rankings since 2023. Chef Sun Kim's Korean-rooted, globally informed cooking on Mohamed Sultan Road is serious competition for anything in the city at any price. Book weeks ahead — availability is near impossible at short notice.
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