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    Restaurant in Singapore, Singapore

    Seroja

    1,945Pearl Points

    Singapore's hardest table, for good reason.

    Seroja, Restaurant in Singapore

    About Seroja

    Seroja is chef Kevin Wong's seafood-focused tasting menu restaurant at Duo Galleria, built around the culinary traditions of the Malay Archipelago. Ranked #40 on Asia's 50 Best Restaurants (2025) and holding a Michelin star and Black Pearl Diamond, it is one of Singapore's hardest reservations and one of its most compelling at the $$$ price tier. Book six to eight weeks out minimum.

    Book Before You Think About It

    Seroja is among the hardest reservations in Singapore right now. With a spot at #40 on Asia's 50 Best Restaurants (2025), a Michelin star, and a Black Pearl Diamond rating, tables are gone weeks before most diners realise they want one. The single leading timing move for a first-timer: check for cancellations mid-week, particularly Tuesday or Wednesday evenings, when demand is marginally softer than weekend sittings. If you are planning around a special occasion, start at least six to eight weeks out.

    What You Are Booking

    Seroja, which opened in 2022 at Duo Galleria on Fraser Street, is chef Kevin Wong's seafood-focused tasting menu restaurant built around the culinary traditions of the Malay Archipelago. Wong trained at prestigious establishments in France, the U.S., and Singapore before opening here, and the result is a menu where local produce, spices, and technique sit at the centre rather than as decoration. The plating is meticulous — visually precise in a way that signals intention rather than style for its own sake. For a first-timer, expect a progression of dishes that read as Singaporean and Malaysian in their flavour logic, refined through a fine-dining format. This is not fusion in a loose sense; it is a considered reimagining of a specific culinary region.

    The tasting menu comes with optional food and wine or non-alcoholic beverage pairings. For a first visit, the pairing is worth considering — the kitchen's use of spices and indigenous ingredients can be challenging to match independently, and the pairing is designed to track the menu's regional arc.

    When to Visit and What Changes Seasonally

    Seroja's tasting menu rotates with seasonal availability, which matters for repeat visitors more than first-timers, but there is one practical angle worth noting: the kitchen's reliance on local and regional produce means the menu shifts with what is available across the Malay Archipelago. Visiting in the dry season months (roughly February through April) tends to coincide with a broader range of fresh seafood availability in the region. If you visited twelve months ago and found a dish you want to revisit, verify with the restaurant before booking specifically around it , the menu will have moved.

    For first-timers, the seasonal angle is less about chasing a specific dish and more about understanding that what arrives at the table reflects a genuine sourcing philosophy rather than a fixed greatest-hits menu. This is a meaningful distinction from restaurants that use seasonal language as marketing. Seroja's trajectory on the Asia's 50 Best list , from #142 in 2023 to #165 in 2024 before jumping to #40 in 2025 , suggests the kitchen has been developing, not coasting, which gives confidence that whatever the current menu holds will reflect the team's current leading work.

    Is It Worth the Price?

    At $$$, Seroja sits in the same price bracket as Jaan by Kirk Westaway and Meta, and below the $$$$ tier occupied by Zén. Given its award trajectory and current regional ranking, Seroja is delivering at a price point that has not yet fully caught up with its reputation , which is a reasonable case for booking now rather than later. The comparable argument: if you have already done Odette and want something that works in a specifically Southeast Asian register rather than a European fine-dining framework, Seroja is the clearer choice. If you are new to Singapore tasting menus altogether, Seroja and Les Amis represent the two most credential-backed options at this price tier, with very different culinary identities , French classical versus Malay Archipelago , so the decision comes down to what you want to eat, not which is better.

    Practical Details

    Address: 7 Fraser St, #01-30/31/32/33 Duo Galleria, Singapore 189356. Google rating: 4.7 from 190 reviews. The Duo Galleria location is accessible via Bugis MRT. Dress code is not formally published, but the award context and price point suggest smart casual at minimum. Check the restaurant's current booking channels directly , no online booking URL is confirmed in Pearl's data at this time.

    For a broader view of where Seroja sits in Singapore's dining scene, see our full Singapore restaurants guide. You can also explore Singapore hotels, bars, and experiences to build a fuller itinerary around your visit.

    Seroja's award peers in other cities , restaurants operating at a similar level of seafood-focused tasting menu ambition , include Le Bernardin in New York City and Aponiente in El Puerto de Santa María, both of which share a commitment to seafood as the primary creative material rather than a supporting element.

    The Verdict

    Book Seroja if you want a tasting menu grounded in Malay Archipelago traditions, executed with the technical precision that justifies its award record. It is the strongest argument in Singapore for fine dining that is genuinely regional in identity rather than European in framework with local accents. At $$$, it remains one of the better-value propositions relative to its current ranking. The difficulty is getting a table , start earlier than feels necessary.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Seroja good for a special occasion?

    Yes — it is built for it. A seafood-focused tasting menu, meticulous plating, and a credential stack that includes a Michelin star and a spot at #40 on Asia's 50 Best Restaurants (2025) makes Seroja a credible choice for a milestone dinner. Ask about the beverage pairing, alcoholic or non-alcoholic, when booking to complete the format.

    What should a first-timer know about Seroja?

    You are booking a tasting menu, not an à la carte experience. Chef Kevin Wong's format is seafood-focused, rooted in Malay Archipelago culinary traditions, and built around local produce, spices, and technique. The restaurant opened in 2022 and has moved quickly through the rankings, so expect a room that takes the food seriously. Duo Galleria on Fraser Street is easy to reach by MRT.

    How far ahead should I book Seroja?

    Book as early as possible — weeks out at minimum, likely more given its current profile. With a Michelin star, a Black Pearl 1 Diamond, and a #40 ranking on Asia's 50 Best Restaurants (2025), Seroja is among the most in-demand reservations in Singapore right now. Do not treat this as a same-week booking.

    What are alternatives to Seroja in Singapore?

    For a comparable $$$-tier tasting menu, Jaan by Kirk Westaway and Meta are the natural alternatives. If you want to spend less but stay within Singapore-centric cooking, those two are worth comparing. Zén operates at a higher price point ($$$$) and a different European register. Seroja is the most award-credentialed option in the $$$ tier for Malay Archipelago-focused cooking.

    What should I order at Seroja?

    Seroja runs a set tasting menu, so ordering is not the decision — the beverage pairing is. The restaurant offers both food and wine pairings and a non-alcoholic pairing option. Ask about current pairing formats when you book, since the menu rotates with seasonal availability.

    Is Seroja worth the price?

    At $$$, Seroja sits alongside Jaan by Kirk Westaway and Meta, and below the $$$$ tier of Zén. For that price, you get a Michelin-starred, seafood-focused tasting menu with a La Liste Top 80 (2026) ranking and a #40 position on Asia's 50 Best. That award-to-price ratio is hard to match in Singapore at this tier — yes, it is worth it if tasting menus are your format.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Seroja?

    Yes, if you want a kitchen that has a clear point of view. Kevin Wong's menus are built around Malay Archipelago traditions — local produce, spices, and technique — not a generic fine dining template. The format has earned a Michelin star, an OAD Top Restaurants Asia ranking, and a #40 position on Asia's 50 Best (2025) in just three years of operation. That track record makes the tasting menu commitment straightforward to justify.

    Location

    7 Fraser St, #01-30/31/32/33 Duo Galleria, Singapore 189356

    Singapore, Singapore

    Compare Seroja

    Seroja vs. Similar Venues
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking Difficulty
    SerojaSingaporean, Malaysian$$$Near Impossible
    ZénEuropean Contemporary$$$$Michelin 3 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Jaan by Kirk WestawayBritish Contemporary$$$Michelin 2 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Iggy'sModern European, European Contemporary$$$Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Summer PavilionCantonese$$Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown
    Waku GhinCreative Japanese, Japanese Contemporary$$$$Michelin 1 Star, World's 50 BestUnknown

    How Seroja stacks up against the competition.

    Also Consider

    At the $$$$ tier, Zén and Waku Ghin are both harder to book and more expensive than Seroja, but they operate in European and Japanese frameworks respectively. If the culinary identity of the Malay Archipelago is what draws you, neither is a substitute, they are different dining propositions. Zén is the better choice if you want Scandinavian-influenced European fine dining at peak Singapore ambition; Waku Ghin if you want a Japanese-led counter experience with premium ingredient sourcing. Seroja is the right call if regional Southeast Asian cuisine executed at a globally recognised level is the specific outcome you want.

    At the same $$$ price tier, Jaan by Kirk Westaway and Iggy's both offer strong tasting menu experiences in a European register. Jaan is the stronger choice for British contemporary cooking with a Singapore context; Iggy's for a more wine-forward dining experience. Neither competes directly with Seroja's culinary territory, which makes the comparison less about which is better and more about what you are in Singapore to eat. Seroja's current ranking significantly outpaces both on the Asia's 50 Best list, which matters if external validation is part of your decision.

    For diners who want a special-occasion meal at a lower price point, Summer Pavilion at $$ is the most accessible option in this peer group, a Michelin-starred Cantonese restaurant with a very different format and price profile. It is not a like-for-like alternative to Seroja, but if budget is a constraint and Cantonese cuisine works for your group, it is worth considering before committing to the $$$-tier options.

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