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    Restaurant in Singapore, Singapore

    Long Kee Wanton Noodle

    100Pearl Points

    Cheap, fast, no fuss

    Long Kee Wanton Noodle, Restaurant in Singapore

    About Long Kee Wanton Noodle

    A smart pick for a quick Singapore street-food breakfast or early lunch, especially if low spend and noodle focus matter more than atmosphere. Long Kee Wanton Noodle works better for solo diners and pairs than for special occasions, with enough Michelin recognition to justify attention without turning the meal into a production.

    Is Long Kee Wanton Noodle worth it? Yes, if the goal is a direct Singapore street-food stop at a low price point rather than a long meal. The verified basics are simple: Long Kee Wanton Noodle is listed as Street Food, priced at $, with casual dress and morning-to-early-afternoon hours on select days.

    The case for adding it to an itinerary is not that it replaces a destination dinner. It is that it can work as a practical Singapore meal when timing, value, simplicity matter. It is open from 6 AM to 1 PM on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday, Sunday, closed on Monday and Friday.

    A morning noodle stop that makes sense when value is the priority

    Long Kee Wanton Noodle is best understood as a low-commitment street-food option. This is not the pick for diners who want a more formal restaurant experience. It is the pick for someone who wants a casual Singapore meal with a $ price level and a clearly limited service window.

    It also has confirmed Michelin Plate recognition for 2025, which adds a useful signal for travelers sorting through casual dining options in Singapore. For comparable planning, consider Kang Le Fishball Noodles, Hoe Kee Kitchen, Loong Kee Yong Tau Fu, Sin Huat Seafood Restaurant, or Soh Kee Cooked Food, depending on what kind of casual meal you want.

    Who should go, who should choose elsewhere

    Go if you want a casual, inexpensive street-food meal in Singapore and can make the listed hours work. The strongest fit is a diner who values price and simplicity over atmosphere, extended service, or special-occasion pacing.

    Choose elsewhere if you need dinner, a long meal, or a more formal restaurant experience. Long Kee Wanton Noodle is closed on Monday and Friday, on operating days the verified hours end at 1 PM, so it should be planned as a morning or early-day stop rather than an evening anchor.

    How to think about the detour

    The main tradeoff is timing. If your itinerary has room during its operating window, Long Kee Wanton Noodle can be an easy value-focused stop. If your schedule is built around dinner or a more leisurely meal, it is not the right fit.

    For broader planning, use our full Singapore restaurants guide alongside our full Singapore hotels guide. The verdict: go when the hours in Singapore are convenient; do not force it as a formal dining anchor.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Long Kee Wanton Noodle good for a special occasion?

    It is better treated as a practical Singapore street-food stop than a special-occasion venue. The verified profile is casual, $ priced, suited to a simple meal during its operating hours.

    Is Long Kee Wanton Noodle good for solo dining?

    Yes, it can make sense for solo dining if you want a casual, low-priced street-food meal in Singapore. The verified hours are 6 AM to 1 PM on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday, Sunday.

    What are alternatives to Long Kee Wanton Noodle in Singapore?

    Other Singapore options to compare include Kang Le Fishball Noodles, Hoe Kee Kitchen, Loong Kee Yong Tau Fu, Sin Huat Seafood Restaurant, Soh Kee Cooked Food. Each is a different choice, so use them as broader Singapore dining alternatives rather than exact substitutes.

    Is Long Kee Wanton Noodle worth the price?

    Yes, if your priority is value. Long Kee Wanton Noodle is listed at $ and has confirmed Michelin Plate recognition for 2025.

    Can I eat at the bar at Long Kee Wanton Noodle?

    There is no verified bar information for Long Kee Wanton Noodle. Treat it simply as a casual street-food venue in Singapore.

    Is the tasting menu worth it at Long Kee Wanton Noodle?

    There is no verified tasting-menu information for Long Kee Wanton Noodle. The confirmed details are Street Food cuisine, $ pricing, casual dress, limited daytime hours on operating days.

    How far ahead should I book Long Kee Wanton Noodle?

    No verified booking guidance is available. Plan around the confirmed hours: closed Monday and Friday; open Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Saturday, Sunday from 6 AM to 1 PM.

    Location

    505 Jurong West Street 52, #01-185, Singapore 640505

    Singapore, Singapore

    Compare Long Kee Wanton Noodle

    Long Kee Wanton Noodle Singapore and similar venues
    VenueLocationCuisineAwardsPrice
    Long Kee Wanton NoodleSingaporeStreet FoodMichelin Plate (2025)$
    Soh Kee Cooked FoodSingaporeStreet Food, $
    Sin Huat Seafood RestaurantSingaporeStreet Food, $$
    Kang Le Fishball NoodlesSingaporeStreet Food, $
    Hoe Kee KitchenSingaporeStreet Food, $
    Loong Kee Yong Tau FuSingaporeStreet Food, $

    How Long Kee Wanton Noodle Singapore compares with similar nearby venues.

    Cross-shop these if the route does not work

    If Long Kee Wanton Noodle is inconvenient, choose Kang Le Fishball Noodles for another low-price noodle option, or Loong Kee Yong Tau Fu if yong tau fu fits the craving better than wanton noodles. For a more substantial meal, Sin Huat Seafood Restaurant is the stronger alternative, but expect a different price tier and a less quick-hit format.

    How it compares with nearby street-food peers

    Against Soh Kee Cooked Food, Kang Le Fishball Noodles, Hoe Kee Kitchen, and Loong Kee Yong Tau Fu, Long Kee Wanton Noodle sits in the same low-price, low-ceremony lane. Choose it when the craving is specifically for wanton noodles and the meal needs to be quick. Choose Kang Le Fishball Noodles or Loong Kee Yong Tau Fu when a fishball or yong tau fu format sounds more appealing than wanton noodles.

    Sin Huat Seafood Restaurant is the bigger shift: still street-food-adjacent in category, but higher in price tier and more suited to diners who want a heavier seafood meal. Long Kee is better value for a casual morning or early lunch. Sin Huat makes more sense when the meal is the main event and the budget can stretch.

    For ambiance, none of these should be treated like a polished restaurant booking. The practical distinction is ease and purpose: Long Kee is the quick noodle stop, Soh Kee Cooked Food and Hoe Kee Kitchen are similarly casual alternatives, Sin Huat is the more substantial spend. If convenience is the deciding factor, pick the stall that fits the day's route rather than crossing Singapore for a single casual meal.

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