Restaurant in Singapore, Singapore
Zai Shun Curry Fish Head
250ptsMichelin fish head curry, hawker prices.

About Zai Shun Curry Fish Head
Zai Shun Curry Fish Head holds a 2025 Michelin Bib Gourmand for its fish head curry — velvety, umami-rich, and priced at hawker rates. Run by chef Ong Cheng Kee in a Jurong East coffee shop, it is the kind of destination that rewards food-focused visitors willing to travel west for one of Singapore's most credentialled bowls of curry.
Who Should Book Zai Shun Curry Fish Head
If you are the kind of eater who tracks down Michelin Bib Gourmand winners in housing estate coffee shops, Zai Shun Curry Fish Head in Jurong East is worth the trip. This is not a venue for a special-occasion dinner with table service and a wine list. It is a hawker stall run by chef Ong Cheng Kee, operating at the $ price tier, where the measure of quality is entirely in the food. The 2025 Bib Gourmand recognition confirms what regulars in the west of Singapore have known for years: the fish head curry here competes with anything in the city at any price point.
The Venue and the Experience
Zai Shun sits in a void deck coffee shop at 253 Jurong East Street 24, Block 01-205. Walk in and you will see the kind of setting that defines Singapore hawker culture at its most functional: plastic stools, shared tables, fluorescent lighting, trays carried by diners rather than servers. There is no ambience in the conventional sense, and that is entirely the point. The visual experience here is the food arriving at the table — a clay pot or deep bowl of curry, red-orange and aromatic, with a whole fish head half-submerged in the sauce. The flesh, according to the Michelin citation, is velvety and loaded with umami, hot and spicy, and intended to be eaten with steamed rice.
Beyond the eponymous dish, the stall offers additional fish preparations and stir-fries. The menu is focused rather than broad, which at this format and price level is a strength: Ong Cheng Kee has built the operation around doing a small number of things at a high level rather than spreading effort across a long menu.
Service Philosophy and Value
At the $ price tier, the service model is self-directed. You order at the counter or flag down staff, carry your own food, clear your own table. There are no servers in the restaurant sense. What you are paying for is the cooking, full stop. This is where Zai Shun's Bib Gourmand status becomes meaningful: the award specifically recognises venues offering good food at moderate prices, and at hawker prices, the ratio of quality to spend here is difficult to match in Singapore's dining market. You will spend a fraction of what lunch at Summer Pavilion costs and walk away having eaten fish that serious food travellers describe as reference-level.
The Google rating of 4.4 across 1,652 reviews signals consistent execution at volume. That kind of score, across that many reviews, at a hawker stall, is harder to sustain than a Michelin star at a fine-dining restaurant where covers are controlled and reservations managed. It tells you the kitchen is not having occasional good days — it is reliable.
Booking and Logistics
No reservation system. This is a walk-in hawker stall. Arrival timing matters more than booking strategy: hawker stalls in Singapore that carry Michelin recognition develop queues quickly, particularly at peak lunch hours on weekdays and through the weekend. Arriving early in the lunch window or during the late lunch lull (post-1:30 PM) is a practical approach. The address , 253 Jurong East Street 24 , is in the western residential belt, reachable by MRT via Jurong East station, then a short walk or taxi. It is not centrally located, which is exactly why it retains the character of a neighbourhood stall rather than a tourist-facing operation.
Know Before You Go
- Address: 253 Jurong East St 24, #01-205, Singapore 600253
- Price tier: $ (hawker pricing)
- Awards: Michelin Bib Gourmand 2025
- Google rating: 4.4 / 5 (1,652 reviews)
- Booking: Walk-in only , no reservations
- Getting there: Jurong East MRT, then a short walk or taxi
- Leading timing: Early lunch or post-1:30 PM to avoid peak queues
- Dress code: None , hawker casual
Explore More Singapore and Regional Street Food
If Zai Shun sits in your itinerary alongside other Michelin-recognised hawker stops, Hill Street Tai Hwa Pork Noodle and 545 Whampoa Prawn Noodles are both worth anchoring in the same trip. For char kway teow, 91 Fried Kway Teow Mee is the reference point. A Noodle Story and Adam Rd Noo Cheng Big Prawn Noodle complete the picture for Singapore's hawker tier. Further afield in the region, 888 Hokkien Mee and Air Itam Sister Curry Mee in George Town, Ah Boy Koay Teow Th'ng, Air Itam Duck Rice, and Ali Nasi Lemak Daun Pisang represent the same hawker discipline across the Causeway. Thailand's equivalents include A Pong Mae Sunee in Phuket, Anuwat in Phang Nga, and Banana Boy in Hong Kong rounds out the regional street food circuit.
For the full picture of where to eat, drink, and stay in Singapore, see our full Singapore restaurants guide, Singapore hotels guide, Singapore bars guide, Singapore wineries guide, and Singapore experiences guide.
FAQ
What should a first-timer know about Zai Shun Curry Fish Head?
- Order the fish head curry as your anchor dish , it is the item that earned the 2025 Bib Gourmand and the one the kitchen is built around.
- Arrive early in the lunch service or after the peak to manage wait times.
- Bring cash; hawker stalls in Singapore increasingly accept PayNow and e-wallets, but cash remains reliable.
- The stall is at a residential address in Jurong East, not in a tourist-facing food centre , factor travel time into your plan.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Zai Shun Curry Fish Head?
- There is no tasting menu. This is a hawker stall. You order individual dishes at hawker prices.
- At the $ price tier with Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition, the value proposition is strong by any measure , you are paying hawker prices for food that has been independently assessed as worth seeking out.
What should I wear to Zai Shun Curry Fish Head?
- No dress code. Hawker casual is the norm , shorts, t-shirts, sandals are standard.
- The setting is an open-air coffee shop, so dress for Singapore humidity rather than for a restaurant interior.
Can Zai Shun Curry Fish Head accommodate groups?
- Groups are manageable at hawker stalls , shared tables are the format and the fish head curry is designed for communal eating.
- Larger groups (6+) should arrive early to secure adjacent tables; there is no reservation system to hold space.
- At $ pricing, a group meal here is low-cost relative to any sit-down alternative in Singapore.
Does Zai Shun Curry Fish Head handle dietary restrictions?
- The core menu is seafood-forward. Vegetarian and vegan options are not confirmed in the available data.
- For specific dietary needs, contacting the stall directly before visiting is advisable , though no phone number is currently listed in the public record.
Is Zai Shun Curry Fish Head good for solo dining?
- Yes. Hawker stalls are among the most solo-friendly dining formats in Singapore , no awkward table minimums, no pressure on covers.
- A single portion of fish head curry with rice is a complete, affordable solo meal.
- The communal seating means you will share a table with strangers, which is standard practice at hawker centres.
What are alternatives to Zai Shun Curry Fish Head in Singapore?
- For other Michelin Bib Gourmand hawker experiences, Hill Street Tai Hwa Pork Noodle is the benchmark for bak chor mee.
- If you want fish head curry in a sit-down restaurant format, the price tier will step up significantly.
- For high-end seafood and fish in Singapore's fine-dining tier, Summer Pavilion at the $$ tier is the closest thematic comparison, though the format and price are completely different.
Compare Zai Shun Curry Fish Head
| Venue | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|
| Zai Shun Curry Fish Head | $ | — |
| Zén | $$$$ | — |
| Jaan by Kirk Westaway | $$$ | — |
| Iggy's | $$$ | — |
| Summer Pavilion | $$ | — |
| Waku Ghin | $$$$ | — |
A quick look at how Zai Shun Curry Fish Head measures up.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Zai Shun Curry Fish Head handle dietary restrictions?
The cuisine is built around seafood and fish-based curries, so pescatarians are well served. Vegetarians and those avoiding shellfish or fish sauce will find the menu limiting — the signature dish and most stir-fries centre on seafood. There is no documented allergen or dietary accommodation process for a hawker stall of this format, so arrive with a clear sense of what you can and cannot eat.
Can Zai Shun Curry Fish Head accommodate groups?
Groups are a practical advantage here: ordering a fish head and several stir-fries across four to six people makes more sense than a solo visit where you can only cover one or two dishes. There are no reservations — seating is first-come in a shared coffee shop — so larger groups should arrive together and send one person to queue while others secure a table. Groups of eight or more may find seating tight depending on time of day.
What should I wear to Zai Shun Curry Fish Head?
Casual clothes only — this is a void deck coffee shop in a Jurong East housing estate. Anything you would not want splashed with curry broth is the wrong choice. Sandals and a t-shirt are the local standard.
Is the tasting menu worth it at Zai Shun Curry Fish Head?
There is no tasting menu — Zai Shun is a hawker stall. The format is à la carte: you pick dishes at the counter and pay per item. At the $ price tier, ordering the curry fish head plus one or two stir-fries gives you a full meal for a fraction of what a tasting menu elsewhere would cost, and the Michelin Bib Gourmand is awarded precisely for this kind of value-to-quality ratio.
What are alternatives to Zai Shun Curry Fish Head in Singapore?
For Michelin-recognised hawker eating in the same price bracket, Hill Street Tai Hwa Pork Noodle and 545 Whampoa Prawn Noodles are the natural comparisons — both Bib Gourmand recipients with similarly focused menus and walk-in queues. If you want fish head curry specifically, the format and price point at Zai Shun is hard to match at the Michelin level in Singapore. For a step up in setting and price, the gap between $ hawker and $$$ restaurant-format seafood in Singapore is significant.
Is Zai Shun Curry Fish Head good for solo dining?
Workable, but not the optimal format. Solo diners can order a single fish dish or a portion of the curry, but sharing across multiple dishes — which is how the menu is designed — is harder alone. If you are eating solo, go at off-peak hours to avoid competing for seats, and focus on one or two dishes rather than trying to cover the full spread.
What should a first-timer know about Zai Shun Curry Fish Head?
Arrive early — Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition (2025) draws queues, and popular dishes sell out before lunch ends. The eponymous curry fish head is the anchor order: the Michelin listing specifically calls out its velvety flesh and umami-forward spice. At the $ price tier, this is a cash-and-carry hawker operation, so expect to order at the stall, find your own seat, and clear your tray. Bring a group if possible — the stir-fries and fish dishes on the menu are worth ordering alongside the curry.
Recognized By
More restaurants in Singapore
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