By KakiList Editorial Team·Updated April 2026·Editorial standards
Catering in Singapore requires NEA Food Establishment Licence for commercial kitchens — home-based caterers operating at scale without licences are technically illegal. For halal events, MUIS certification (not 'halal-friendly' claims) matters. Tastings before commit are standard for larger bookings — caterers refusing tastings often have inconsistent quality. Buffet portion sizing is where quality caterers differ from budget operators. KakiList connects you with 132 verified Catering providers serving the Sembawang area. Sembawang has a mix of HDB flats and landed properties, with some older colonial-era homes that may require specialized maintenance. Whether you live near Sembawang MRT or around Sun Plaza, Sembawang Hot Spring Park, our providers serve all parts of Sembawang. Compare providers, read verified Google reviews, and contact them directly via WhatsApp — no middleman fees or hidden charges.
In Sembawang, catering work typically involves bento delivery, cocktail canapés, and live-station catering. Because the estate runs along Sembawang MRT with Sun Plaza nearby, most providers here can cover same-day call-outs across the North zone without long commutes.
See all 132 Catering providers in Singapore →
Contact providers directly for pricing.
Prices are estimates and may vary based on scope, property type, and urgency. Get exact quotes by requesting free quotes.
For HDB/Landed properties in Sembawang, rates track the islandwide average for catering. The main cost variables are job complexity and urgency, not location — though providers based outside the North zone may add a small transport fee.
Local buffet (Chinese/Peranakan): S\$12-38/head basic to mid-tier. Halal MUIS-certified: S\$20-55/head. International/Western: S\$25-75/head. Premium buffet (live stations, imported): S\$55-150/head. Chinese banquet (per table of 10): S\$1,200-2,800. Bento delivery: S\$8-25 per box.
Every commercial food preparation kitchen in Singapore must be NEA-licensed. The licence number should appear on invoices, website, and packaging. Home-based caterers at scale without NEA licence are illegal. For large events (100+ guests), licensing becomes critical — food safety incidents at scale affect many people.
No. "Halal-friendly" or "using halal ingredients" is not the same as MUIS certification — a halal-certified kitchen with dedicated halal-only equipment. Muslim guests need full MUIS certification for confidence, especially for weddings and formal events. For informal or mixed-religious events, "halal-friendly" may be acceptable but guests should know the distinction.
For confirmed bookings, free tastings are typical. Otherwise S\$30-80 token fee. You'd taste 4-8 representative dishes, discuss adjustments, and clarify portion sizing. Reputable caterers welcome tastings as a quality signal. Caterers that refuse tastings or charge excessive fees often run inconsistent quality.
Get clear portion sizing in writing — grams per head or clear serving numbers. Standard is 1.2-1.5 portions per person (accounting for repeat visits). Vague "enough for all" produces buffets running out at the 80% mark. Specify vegetarian, halal, or dietary accommodation numbers separately to ensure adequate options for those guests.