
Kang's Wanton Noodle
Street Food · CHATSWORTH, Singapore
Restaurant in Singapore, Singapore
The Read
Hawker-Counter Precision
Price
$
Dress
Casual
Why go
Kang's Wanton Noodle is a practical yes for a low-spend Singapore street-food meal, especially for solo diners or pairs who want wanton noodles without a long sit-down format. The Michelin Plate recognition adds confidence, but this is better for a quick, focused stop than a polished special occasion.
About Kang's Wanton Noodle
In Singapore's casual dining landscape, the better question is rarely whether a low-spend noodle stop is “worth it”; it is whether it fits the meal you are planning. Kang's Wanton Noodle is a street-food venue with $ pricing, casual dress, confirmed Michelin Plate recognition in 2024. Treat it as a simple, low-ceremony stop rather than a venue for a long, dressed-up meal.
Choose this for a casual street-food stop, not a dressed-up occasion
The verified appeal here is direct: Kang's Wanton Noodle is listed as street food, priced at $, and suited to casual dress. That makes it a practical pick when the group wants something informal in Singapore rather than a restaurant built around ceremony.
First-timers should be clear about the trade-off. The experience should be approached as casual and focused, not pampering. If the occasion requires a more formal setting, look elsewhere. If the priority is a low-pressure street-food meal, this is a sensible option. For a broader planning pass, use Our full Singapore restaurants guide, then compare other casual Singapore options such as Boon Tong Kee Kway Chap‧Braised Duck, Dudu Cooked Food, No.18 Zion Road Fried Kway Teow, Sin Huat Seafood Restaurant, Zhi Wei Xian Zion Road Big Prawn Noodle.
Seasonality matters less than timing and appetite
This is not a venue where verified seasonal details should drive the decision. The more useful planning question is whether the published hours fit your day. Kang's Wanton Noodle is listed from 8:30 AM to 1:30 PM on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Sunday; 8:30 AM to 1 PM on Saturday; and closed on Thursday.
For a special occasion, the recommendation is conditional. Kang's Wanton Noodle is a better fit for someone who wants a casual Singapore street-food meal than for someone expecting a longer, more polished sit-down experience. If the day includes a hotel stay or drinks before or after, pair the meal with planning from Our full Singapore hotels guide or Our full Singapore bars guide rather than expecting this stop to carry the whole occasion.
The Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 gives useful reassurance, but the value is still in keeping expectations simple. Do not build the day around it unless a casual street-food stop is the point of the plan. It works better as one modest, focused meal within a larger Singapore itinerary.
Build the rest of the day around contrast
The smartest way to use this stop is as the casual anchor in a day with other venues around it. If Kang's Wanton Noodle covers the informal part of the plan, another Singapore dining room can carry the slower or more comfortable part. For comparison within casual dining, consider Boon Tong Kee Kway Chap‧Braised Duck, Dudu Cooked Food, No.18 Zion Road Fried Kway Teow, Sin Huat Seafood Restaurant, or Zhi Wei Xian Zion Road Big Prawn Noodle.
The take
The Take
The Vibe
Kang's Wanton Noodle sits squarely in the hawker tradition on Zion Road, offering a focused, unpretentious experience that reads as a local discovery. The stall's Michelin Plate recognition underlines food that is worth seeking without altering the straightforward character of the place. Bowls center on technical details — noodle spring, the balance of lard in the dressing, the wantons and the char siu — rather than on decoration. The setting is communal and functional, where regulars defend precise textures and flavours; it feels like a classic piece of Singapore street food culture with a hidden-gem reputation.
Best For
Kang's is ideal for quick solo lunches, pragmatic casual hangouts and anyone chasing an exacting bowl of wanton noodles. The midday crowd is made up of nearby residents and office workers who move through briskly, so lunch visits are transactional and fast-paced. Evening service is comparatively calmer, allowing diners a slightly more relaxed experience. This is not a venue for long-form celebratory dining; instead it serves practical, high-quality hawker cooking best appreciated by those who prioritize technique and authenticity over atmosphere.
Ordering Tips
When ordering, prioritize the Wanton Noodles with Char Siew — the stall is noted for its char siu and the interplay between noodle chew, dressing and the wantons. Pay attention to the noodle spring and the balance of sauce or broth; those are the defining variables here. If you want to focus on the dumplings, the Wanton Soup showcases them plainly. Visit at off-peak evening hours for a calmer pace; at lunchtime be prepared for queues and a faster, more transactional rhythm that encourages eating quickly.
Planning details
Location
70 Zion Rd, #01-06, Singapore 247792 · Directions
Recognition and awards
Also consider
Also Consider
- Zhi Wei Xian Zion Road Big Prawn Noodle, Street Food, $
- Sin Huat Seafood Restaurant, Street Food, $$
- Boon Tong Kee Kway Chap‧Braised Duck, Street Food, $
- No.18 Zion Road Fried Kway Teow, Street Food, $
- Dudu Cooked Food, Street Food, $
Restaurant context
How It Compares
For value, Kang's Wanton Noodle sits in the same $ street-food lane as Zhi Wei Xian Zion Road Big Prawn Noodle, Boon Tong Kee Kway Chap‧Braised Duck, No.18 Zion Road Fried Kway Teow, Dudu Cooked Food. Pick Kang's when the craving is specifically wanton noodles; pick Zhi Wei Xian if prawn noodles are the stronger pull, No.18 Zion Road Fried Kway Teow when the group wants wok-fried noodles instead.
Sin Huat Seafood Restaurant is the pricier cross-shop at $$, so it makes more sense when the meal needs to feel bigger or more group-oriented. Kang's is easier to justify for a quick solo or pair meal because the spend stays low and the format is direct. For ambiance, none of these should be treated like a polished restaurant choice; the decision is about dish preference, speed, tolerance for a casual street-food setting.
If booking friction matters, the $ street-food peers are the safer lane than Sin Huat for an uncomplicated meal. The cleanest plan is to choose by craving: wanton noodles here, prawn noodles at Zhi Wei Xian, kway chap or braised duck at Boon Tong Kee, fried kway teow at No.18, or Dudu Cooked Food when the group wants another casual hawker-style option.
Explore Singapore
Around this place
Discover more on Pearl
Unlock the full Kang's Wanton Noodle guide in Pearl, including awards, comparisons, FAQs, planning details, and nearby places.
Compare Kang's Wanton Noodle
| Venue | Location | Cuisine | Awards | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kang's Wanton Noodle | Singapore | Street Food | 2024 Michelin Plate | $ |
| Zhi Wei Xian Zion Road Big Prawn Noodle | Singapore | Street Food | 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand2024 Michelin Bib Gourmand | $ |
| Sin Huat Seafood Restaurant | Singapore | Street Food | 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand2024 Michelin Bib Gourmand | $$ |
| Boon Tong Kee Kway Chap‧Braised Duck | Singapore | Street Food | 2024 Michelin Plate | $ |
| No.18 Zion Road Fried Kway Teow | Singapore | Street Food | 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand | $ |
| Dudu Cooked Food | Singapore | Street Food | 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand2024 Michelin Bib Gourmand | $ |
How Kang's Wanton Noodle Singapore compares with similar nearby venues.
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions
What should a first-timer know about Kang's Wanton Noodle?
Go for a low-cost street-food meal in Singapore, not a dressed-up outing. Kang's Wanton Noodle is a $ venue with Michelin Plate recognition in 2024, so the value case is about a casual stop rather than a formal dining experience.
Is Kang's Wanton Noodle good for a special occasion?
It depends on the occasion. It is better for a casual, low-key meal than for a polished celebration. The street-food category, $ pricing, casual dress code, Michelin Plate recognition in 2024 make it practical rather than formal.
What are alternatives to Kang's Wanton Noodle in Singapore?
For other Singapore options, compare Zhi Wei Xian Zion Road Big Prawn Noodle, Sin Huat Seafood Restaurant, Boon Tong Kee Kway Chap‧Braised Duck, Dudu Cooked Food, No.18 Zion Road Fried Kway Teow.
Is Kang's Wanton Noodle good for solo dining?
Verified solo-dining details are not available here. The confirmed information is that Kang's Wanton Noodle is a casual street-food venue in Singapore with $ pricing, the listed hours run from morning into early afternoon on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, with Thursday closed.
How far ahead should I book Kang's Wanton Noodle?
Verified booking details are not available here. Plan around the published hours: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, Sunday from 8:30 AM to 1:30 PM; Saturday from 8:30 AM to 1 PM; and closed Thursday.
What should I wear to Kang's Wanton Noodle?
Dress casually. The verified dress code is casual, which fits the venue's street-food category and $ price level.
Can I eat at the bar at Kang's Wanton Noodle?
Verified bar-seating details are not available here. The confirmed information is that Kang's Wanton Noodle is a casual street-food venue in Singapore with $ pricing.


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