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    Restaurant in Singapore, Singapore

    Labyrinth

    1,520Pearl Points

    Singapore's best argument for mod-Sin fine dining.

    Labyrinth, Restaurant in Singapore

    About Labyrinth

    Labyrinth holds a Michelin star, a World's 50 Best ranking (#37 in Asia, 2025), and one of Singapore's most sought-after reservations. Chef LG Han's set menu reconstructs Singaporean hawker classics using high-quality local ingredients and precise technique. At $$$, it is the strongest option in the city for modern Singaporean cuisine — book several weeks ahead and expect near-impossible availability on short notice.

    Getting a Table Is the First Test — Here's Whether It's Worth Passing

    Labyrinth is among the hardest reservations in Singapore to secure, and the demand is not manufactured. Ranked #37 in Asia's 50 Best Restaurants 2025 and #97 globally on the World's 50 Best list, it holds a Michelin star and appears on the Tatler Asia-Pacific Leading Restaurants 2025 list. Opinionated About Dining placed it #65 in Asia for 2025, and it has held consistent positions on that list since at least 2023. For a first-timer, the booking difficulty is the most important thing to understand before anything else: plan weeks ahead, prioritise a weekday dinner window, and treat the Friday or weekend lunch sittings (12 PM–2:30 PM) as a secondary option if evening slots are gone.

    The restaurant is located at 8 Raffles Avenue, #02-23, Esplanade Mall — a short walk from Marina Bay, inside a shopping and arts complex that also draws visitors for the theatres. The address is easy to reach by MRT (Esplanade station) and is well-served by taxis and ride-hailing apps. Once you are inside, the room delivers: sharp, precise lighting cuts through a dark interior, creating a focused, almost theatrical atmosphere that signals this is not a casual evening out. Service is described across credible sources as well-organised and knowledgeable, which matters for a first visit when you need the team to guide you through what the menu is doing.

    What Labyrinth Actually Does

    Chef LG Han's approach is to take Singaporean dishes , the kind built from childhood memory and street-food familiarity , and reconstruct them using high-quality local ingredients and contemporary technique. This is not fusion in the diluted sense. The starting point is always something recognisable to anyone who has grown up eating in Singapore: laksa, chilli crab, chicken rice, the canon of hawker-stall classics. The result is a set menu that frames those flavour references within a fine-dining structure. For first-timers without deep familiarity with Singaporean food culture, that context matters: you will get more out of the experience if you arrive knowing what the originals taste like, because the pleasure of the menu is partly in the gap between memory and transformation.

    Labyrinth is classified under Innovative cuisine, which is accurate but undersells the specificity of what Han is doing. This is not innovation for its own sake. The sourcing is local and deliberate, and the Tatler listing notes the restaurant "showcases nostalgic influences from food he grew up eating." That grounding keeps the menu from feeling abstract. Google reviewers rate it 4.6 from 519 reviews, a number that reflects a broad audience not just critics, and suggests the experience lands for people beyond the awards circuit.

    Wine at Labyrinth

    The wine program at Labyrinth is worth addressing directly, because it is a relevant factor in the overall cost calculation at this price tier. For a set-menu restaurant at the $$$ level with strong umami-forward, spice-inflected Singaporean flavour profiles, the pairing question is genuinely interesting. The kitchen works with ingredients , fermented elements, aromatic herbs, chilli heat, coconut-based bases , that challenge conventional European wine pairings. A thoughtful list at Labyrinth would need to navigate between wines with the acidity and textural weight to hold up against those flavours, and the restraint not to overwhelm them. If you are planning a first visit, ask about the pairing option when booking: at this level and with this much accumulated recognition, a wine pairing or drinks pairing is likely available, and given the complexity of the menu, it is the more efficient way to experience the full programme rather than selecting by the glass without guidance. Verify current pairing availability and pricing directly with the restaurant, as specific programme details are not confirmed in our data.

    Who Should Book

    Book Labyrinth if: you want a fine-dining set menu built around Singaporean culinary identity rather than an imported European framework; you are bringing someone unfamiliar with Singapore who would benefit from tasting the country's flavour language in a structured context; or you are a repeat visitor to Singapore who has already covered the city's European-leaning tasting menus and want something rooted in local sourcing and memory. It is also a strong choice for solo diners or couples , the counter and intimate room format suit smaller parties more naturally than larger groups.

    Be more cautious if: you are looking for à la carte flexibility, prefer a louder, more social atmosphere, or are price-sensitive at the $$$ level. At that spend, you are committing to the set-menu format entirely. For a broader look at how Labyrinth sits within Singapore's restaurant scene, see our full Singapore restaurants guide. If you want to compare across the region, alla prima in Seoul, Soigné in Seoul, Vea in Hong Kong, and MAZ in Tokyo are all operating in the same innovative-cuisine register and worth benchmarking against. Elsewhere in Asia, Fujiya 1935 in Osaka, KAHALA in Osaka, Shimmonzen Yonemura in Kyoto, and Evett in Seoul offer similarly specific national-identity-driven tasting menus for comparison.

    Singapore Context

    Labyrinth sits within a competitive cluster of serious tasting-menu restaurants in Singapore. For Singaporean cuisine specifically at this technical level, it has few direct peers. Nearby, Meta, Thevar, Araya, Chaleur, and Cloudstreet all offer high-craft set menus but with different culinary frameworks. If you are planning a broader trip, our Singapore hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide cover the rest of the city.

    Quick reference: Labyrinth, 8 Raffles Ave #02-23, Esplanade Mall. Dinner Wed–Sun from 6:30 PM; lunch Fri–Sun 12–2:30 PM. Closed Mon–Tue. Price range $$$. Booking difficulty: near impossible on short notice , reserve several weeks in advance.

    Is Labyrinth worth the price?

    Yes, for what it is. At $$$, Labyrinth delivers a Michelin-starred, globally ranked set menu (#37 in Asia's 50 Best 2025, #97 globally) built around a culinary idea , modernised Singaporean classics , that you cannot replicate at this technical level elsewhere. The value question hinges on format fit: if set menus are your preference and Singaporean food culture means something to you, it justifies the spend. If you want flexible ordering or prefer European tasting-menu formats, Jaan by Kirk Westaway or Iggy's may be a better match at the same price tier.

    Does Labyrinth handle dietary restrictions?

    Contact the restaurant directly before booking. Given the set-menu format and the degree of kitchen technique involved, dietary accommodations typically require advance notice , ideally at the time of reservation, not on arrival. The phone number listed in public records is 6223 4098. Given the complexity of the menu's ingredient sourcing, expect that some restrictions can be accommodated and others cannot; confirm specifically rather than assuming.

    Can Labyrinth accommodate groups?

    Small groups of two to four are the natural fit for Labyrinth's room format and set-menu structure. Larger groups are harder to manage at a restaurant of this type , the intimate atmosphere, precise service rhythm, and fixed menu do not naturally scale to party dining. If you have a group of six or more, contact the restaurant directly to ask about private or semi-private arrangements. For large-group celebration dining in Singapore at the $$$ tier, venues with more flexible formats may be a better operational fit.

    What should I wear to Labyrinth?

    Smart casual is the practical baseline for a Michelin-starred, globally ranked restaurant at this price point in Singapore. No formal dress code is confirmed in our data, but the room is dark, precise, and deliberately atmospheric , overly casual dress would feel out of place. For a first visit, treat it as you would any serious tasting-menu dinner: dress as if the meal itself is an occasion, because at Labyrinth's price and recognition level, it is.

    What are alternatives to Labyrinth in Singapore?

    For Singaporean-identity cuisine at a comparable technical level, Labyrinth has few direct competitors. If you want a European fine-dining tasting menu at the same price tier, Jaan by Kirk Westaway and Iggy's are both $$$ options with strong track records and somewhat easier availability. For a step up in spend and ambition, Zén and Waku Ghin operate at $$$$ and represent Singapore's highest tier. Within the innovative-cuisine category specifically, Cloudstreet and Meta are the closest local comparisons worth considering alongside Labyrinth.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Labyrinth worth the price?

    Yes, for the right diner. At $$$, Labyrinth holds a Michelin star, ranks #37 in Asia's 50 Best Restaurants 2025, and #65 in Opinionated About Dining's Asia rankings — credentials that justify the price tier. The case for booking is strongest if you want a tasting menu built around Singaporean culinary identity rather than a European fine-dining template. If that specific angle doesn't interest you, Zén or Waku Ghin offer different but comparable value at a similar spend.

    Does Labyrinth handle dietary restrictions?

    Labyrinth runs a set tasting menu format, which means dietary accommodations require advance notice rather than menu substitution at the table. check the venue's official channels before booking to confirm what is possible — a single set menu leaves less flexibility than à la carte, and the kitchen's sourcing is tightly tied to specific Singaporean ingredients that may be harder to work around.

    Can Labyrinth accommodate groups?

    Labyrinth is located at Esplanade Mall (#02-23, 8 Raffles Avenue) and operates as a tasting-menu restaurant, which suits smaller groups better than large parties. For groups of six or more, contact the restaurant in advance to confirm seating configuration and any private dining options. Booking lead time will be longer for larger parties given overall demand — Labyrinth ranked #37 in Asia's 50 Best 2025.

    What should I wear to Labyrinth?

    The restaurant's aesthetic — described as a black canvas with sharp lighting — signals a formal, considered environment. Dress accordingly: neat, polished attire is the practical call for a Michelin-starred, Asia's 50 Best-ranked tasting menu at this price point. Trainers and casual shorts are likely out of place, though the venue database does not specify an explicit dress code.

    What are alternatives to Labyrinth in Singapore?

    For Singaporean-focused cuisine at a comparable technical level, there is no direct equivalent in Singapore — Labyrinth's mod-Sin angle is specific. If format or spend is the variable: Zén offers Scandinavian-influenced fine dining at the top of the Singapore price range; Waku Ghin is a Tetsuya Wakuda counter experience at Marina Bay Sands aimed at a similar spend; Jaan by Kirk Westaway focuses on British-inflected fine dining with strong seasonal sourcing; Iggy's is a long-running independent with a European-leaning wine-forward menu; and Summer Pavilion at the Ritz-Carlton is the comparison for serious Cantonese rather than innovative cuisine.

    Location

    8 Raffles Ave., #02 - 23, Singapore 039802

    Singapore, Singapore

    Compare Labyrinth

    Quick Value Check: Labyrinth
    VenuePriceValue
    Labyrinth$$$
    Zén$$$$
    Jaan by Kirk Westaway$$$
    Iggy's$$$
    Summer Pavilion$$
    Waku Ghin$$$$

    Comparing your options in Singapore for this tier.

    Also Consider

    At the $$$ price tier, Labyrinth's closest comparison in terms of format and ambition is Jaan by Kirk Westaway and Iggy's. Both are tasting-menu restaurants with serious track records, but the culinary frameworks differ significantly. Jaan focuses on British contemporary cuisine with French technique; Iggy's leans toward Modern European with a wine-forward identity. Neither does what Labyrinth does: a set menu anchored in Singaporean culinary memory and local sourcing. If the point of your meal is to eat something specifically Singaporean at a high technical level, Labyrinth is the clear choice over either. If European fine dining is your preference and you want a more straightforward booking, Jaan or Iggy's are easier to secure.

    For diners considering a step up in spend, Zén and Waku Ghin both operate at $$$$. Zén is the Singapore outpost of the Stockholm three-Michelin-star restaurant and represents the city's most technically demanding European tasting menu. Waku Ghin is Tetsuya Wakuda's Japanese contemporary flagship. Both are exceptional but operate in a different cultural register to Labyrinth — if you are specifically interested in Singapore as a culinary subject, spending more on Zén or Waku Ghin does not get you closer to that. Labyrinth at $$$ is the better answer for that specific objective.

    Summer Pavilion at $$ is a Michelin-starred Cantonese option that provides strong value for Cantonese cuisine but operates in a completely different category. It is not a meaningful comparison to Labyrinth's set-menu format. For diners who want flexibility and a lower spend threshold, Summer Pavilion is worth noting as a separate booking — not as a substitute for Labyrinth, but as a complementary experience across a Singapore itinerary.

    Hours

    Monday
    closed
    Tuesday
    closed
    Wednesday
    6:30 PM-11 PM
    Thursday
    6:30 PM-11 PM
    Friday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 6:30 PM-11 PM
    Saturday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 6:30 PM-11 PM
    Sunday
    12 PM-2:30 PM 6:30 PM-11 PM

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