Restaurant in Singapore, Singapore
Adam Rd Noo Cheng Big Prawn Noodle
250ptsTwo Bib Gourmands. One dollar. Go early.

About Adam Rd Noo Cheng Big Prawn Noodle
Two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand awards (2024 and 2025) make Adam Rd Noo Cheng Big Prawn Noodle one of Singapore's most credentialed hawker stalls at the single-dollar price tier. Run by Jack Teo at Adam Road Food Centre, this is the call for serious prawn noodles without the queue or price premium of Michelin-starred alternatives. Arrive before 11am and bring cash.
Verdict
If you have one hawker meal in Singapore, Adam Rd Noo Cheng Big Prawn Noodle is a serious contender for that slot. Two consecutive Michelin Bib Gourmand awards (2024 and 2025) confirm what regulars at Adam Road Food Centre already know: this stall, run by Jack Teo, delivers quality that punches well above its price point. At a single-dollar price tier, the value calculus is almost impossible to argue with. Book it for a weekday morning if you want to eat without queuing in the midday heat.
Why It Works
The Bib Gourmand is Michelin's marker for meals that offer good cooking at a price under roughly SGD 45 per head. At Adam Rd Noo Cheng, you are spending a fraction of that. Consecutive awards across 2024 and 2025 signal consistency, not a one-year fluke, which matters enormously at hawker level where stall quality can drift fast when ownership or suppliers change. Jack Teo's continued presence keeps the product stable.
The address, 2 Adam Road, places this stall inside Adam Road Food Centre, a mid-sized hawker complex in the Bukit Timah corridor. The centre draws a neighbourhood crowd rather than a tourist bus, which means the atmosphere is functional and unpretentious. Expect plastic stools, shared tables, and the visual shorthand of every serious hawker operation: a small wok station, a broth pot that has been running since early morning, and a queue that tells you immediately whether you timed your arrival correctly. That queue is the most useful piece of information you will gather on arrival. Arrive before 11am or after 2pm if you want a seat without a wait.
For food explorers who track Southeast Asian street food seriously, this stall sits in a lineage of prawn noodle specialists that includes 545 Whampoa Prawn Noodles and the broader Hokkien noodle tradition represented by spots like Ah Hock Fried Hokkien Noodles. Singapore's prawn noodle format typically presents either a dry version (noodles tossed with sambal and lard) or a soup version (noodles in a shell-based prawn-pork broth). Both are ordered here by number of prawns rather than bowl size, which is the standard pricing mechanism at this tier. Come with a clear preference or ask the stall what the current house recommendation is.
The Google rating of 3.4 from 279 reviews deserves a direct note. At hawker stalls, low Google scores often reflect complaints about queue length, portion size expectations calibrated to Western dining norms, or a single bad visit during an off-hour. They rarely reflect the cooking itself, particularly when the Michelin inspectors — who eat anonymously and repeatedly — have awarded the stall two consecutive years. Weight the Michelin credential above the Google aggregate for any assessment of food quality. For logistics (wait times, opening hours), the Google reviews remain useful.
Compared to other Bib Gourmand stalwarts in the city, Adam Rd Noo Cheng competes directly with Hill Street Tai Hwa Pork Noodle, which holds a full Michelin star and draws longer queues and higher prices as a result. If you want the Michelin-validated hawker experience with a shorter wait and a lighter spend, Adam Rd Noo Cheng is the more practical call. For noodle variety beyond prawn, A Noodle Story and 91 Fried Kway Teow Mee offer different formats at a comparable price tier.
No booking method is listed, which is standard for hawker stalls in Singapore. You queue, you order, you pay. There is no reservation system, no dress code, and no minimum spend. Bring cash as a default; card acceptance at hawker centres is inconsistent, though increasingly common. Hours are not confirmed in the available data, so check Google Maps or call ahead for current operating times before making a special trip.
For visitors building a broader Singapore itinerary, see our full Singapore restaurants guide, our Singapore hotels guide, and our Singapore bars guide. If you are tracking Michelin-recognised street food across the region, comparable hawker-level quality can be found at 888 Hokkien Mee in George Town and A Pong Mae Sunee in Phuket, both worth adding to a Southeast Asia food itinerary. Other regional references worth noting for context: Ah Boy Koay Teow Th'ng, Air Itam Duck Rice, Air Itam Sister Curry Mee, Ali Nasi Lemak Daun Pisang, Anuwat in Phang Nga, and Banana Boy in Hong Kong.
The Bottom Line
Two Bib Gourmand awards at a single-dollar price point make this an easy yes for anyone who tracks serious street food. Arrive early, bring cash, and calibrate your expectations to a hawker context rather than a restaurant one. The food is the reason to come. Everything else is secondary.
Compare Adam Rd Noo Cheng Big Prawn Noodle
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adam Rd Noo Cheng Big Prawn Noodle | $ | Easy | — |
| Zén | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
| Jaan by Kirk Westaway | $$$ | Unknown | — |
| Iggy's | $$$ | Unknown | — |
| Summer Pavilion | $$ | Unknown | — |
| Waku Ghin | $$$$ | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Adam Rd Noo Cheng Big Prawn Noodle good for solo dining?
Yes — hawker stalls are the natural format for eating alone in Singapore, and this one is no exception. Grab a single bowl at a single-dollar price point, find a seat at the shared tables, and you're done. No reservation, no social friction. It's one of the more comfortable solo meals you can have in the city.
What are alternatives to Adam Rd Noo Cheng Big Prawn Noodle in Singapore?
For street food at a similar price tier, other Bib Gourmand-listed hawker stalls across Singapore offer a comparable value case — compare Hill Street Tai Hwa Pork Noodle if you want the city's most-decorated noodle bowl (one Michelin star, longer queues). If you're weighing this against a full sit-down meal, Zén or Waku Ghin are a different category entirely: fine dining at 50x the price. Adam Rd Noo Cheng wins on value; those venues win on occasion.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Adam Rd Noo Cheng Big Prawn Noodle?
There is no tasting menu here — this is a hawker stall at Adam Road Food Centre. You order a bowl, you pay single-dollar prices, you eat. The Michelin Bib Gourmand (2024 and 2025) recognises exactly that format: good cooking at accessible prices, not a multi-course experience.
What should I order at Adam Rd Noo Cheng Big Prawn Noodle?
The big prawn noodle is the reason to come — it's the dish that earned two consecutive Bib Gourmands under chef Jack Teo. Specific menu variations and add-ons are not documented in the venue record, so check the stall board on arrival. Bring cash; card payment is not confirmed.
Does Adam Rd Noo Cheng Big Prawn Noodle handle dietary restrictions?
The stall's dietary accommodation policy is not documented, and the core dish is a prawn-based noodle soup. If you avoid shellfish or have serious allergen concerns, this is not the right call — the format of a hawker stall does not typically allow for substitutions or allergy management at the level a sit-down restaurant might. Confirm directly at the stall before ordering.
Is Adam Rd Noo Cheng Big Prawn Noodle good for a special occasion?
Only if the occasion is 'eating the best version of a hawker classic.' There's no ambience to speak of beyond a shared food centre, no wine list, and no booking process — you queue and you eat. For a birthday dinner or anniversary, Waku Ghin or Jaan by Kirk Westaway are the right calls. For a deliberate food-focused trip to one of Singapore's most-awarded hawker stalls, two Bib Gourmands make it a worthwhile stop.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Singapore
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