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Premium Steakhouse With Japanese Wagyu

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Singapore, Singapore

CUT by Wolfgang Puck, Marina Bay Sands Singapore

Price≈$180
Dress CodeSmart Casual
ServiceFormal
NoiseConversational
CapacityMedium
Opinionated About Dining
Star Wine List

CUT by Wolfgang Puck at Marina Bay Sands occupies a specific tier in Singapore's steakhouse market: a celebrity-chef import with a wine program serious enough to earn a White Star from Star Wine List in 2023. The menu architecture follows the classic American steakhouse template, with premium beef cuts at the centre and a supporting cast of starters, sides, and sauces that the format demands.

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CUT by Wolfgang Puck, Marina Bay Sands Singapore restaurant in Singapore, Singapore
About

Where the American Steakhouse Format Meets Singapore's Dining Tier

The basement level of Marina Bay Sands' Shoppes mall is not the most obvious address for a serious dining room, but it is a recognisable one in Singapore's premium restaurant geography. The integrated resort has drawn global operators since its opening, and the dining floor beneath the hotel towers has become its own category: high-volume, internationally branded, and pitched squarely at expense-account and special-occasion traffic. CUT by Wolfgang Puck sits inside that category, but its wine credentials separate it from the surrounding options in a meaningful way. Star Wine List awarded it a White Star in April 2023, a signal that the beverage program has depth beyond the bottle-list padding that often accompanies large-format luxury restaurants.

The American steakhouse is one of the more export-friendly dining formats in the world. Its logic is clear: premium beef, classical preparation, generous sides, and a wine list weighted toward Cabernet Sauvignon and its peers. Wolfgang Puck's CUT brand has carried that format across multiple cities, from Beverly Hills to Dubai, and the Singapore outpost follows the same structural playbook. What that means in practice is a menu organised around beef provenance and grade distinctions rather than seasonal creativity, with starters and sides functioning as satellites to the main event at the centre of the plate. For the category's regular clientele, this consistency is the point. For Singapore's broader dining scene, it occupies a different register than the tasting-menu-led rooms that dominate the city's critical conversation.

Menu Architecture: Beef as the Structural Argument

Steakhouse format's menu architecture is worth examining on its own terms, because it makes an implicit argument about how a meal should be experienced. Unlike the progressive, chef-directed sequences of tasting menus at places like Odette or Zén, the steakhouse places the decision authority firmly with the diner. You choose your cut, your grade, your preparation, your sides, your sauce. The kitchen's job is technical execution and sourcing credibility, not narrative construction. This is a fundamentally different hospitality philosophy, and CUT operates within it deliberately.

At CUT specifically, the beef sourcing spans multiple origins and grading systems, which is characteristic of the brand's approach across its global locations. American USDA Prime, Australian Wagyu, and Japanese A5 Wagyu typically appear on the menu together, giving diners a direct comparison exercise if they want it. This multi-provenance structure is itself an editorial statement: beef is presented as a subject worth studying, not merely a protein option. The sides and starters exist to frame that central argument. The wine list, recognised by Star Wine List, is calibrated to support aged red wine in particular, which is the natural companion to the format.

Singapore's steakhouse market has enough competition to put CUT in a specific peer set. The city supports a range of beef-focused premium rooms, from hotel-based operations like this one to standalone formats. CUT's positioning within Marina Bay Sands places it in the hotel-dining bracket, where the transient guest mix is higher and the local regular clientele is a secondary consideration. That affects everything from service pace to wine-by-the-glass selection to how the menu is written. It is a different set of priorities from, say, the independently operated precision rooms that Singapore's critical community tends to favour, including Les Amis, Jaan by Kirk Westaway, or Meta.

The Wine Program as a Differentiator

The White Star recognition from Star Wine List, published in April 2023, is the most concrete credential in CUT Singapore's public record. Star Wine List's evaluation methodology centres on list depth, producer selection, and format coherence, so a White Star at a large-format hotel restaurant is not a given. It suggests the beverage team has built a list with genuine depth rather than simply stocking recognisable labels at high margins.

For a steakhouse format, this matters more than it might at other restaurant types. The beef-and-red-wine pairing is not incidental to the experience; it is structurally central. A strong wine program at a steakhouse is not an add-on but a completion of the format's logic. Diners who come specifically for aged Bordeaux or California Cabernet alongside premium beef will find the list a serious one. That places CUT in better company than most hotel steakhouses in the region, and it is a credential worth noting when setting expectations. Comparable operations at integrated resorts across Asia, including 8½ Otto e Mezzo Bombana in Hong Kong, have demonstrated that hotel-based dining can sustain serious beverage programs without sacrificing operational scale.

Where CUT Sits in Singapore's Broader Dining Map

Singapore's premium dining tier has expanded considerably over the past decade, and the city now supports a range of formats that would have seemed aspirational at an earlier point. The tasting-menu rooms with Michelin recognition, the chef-driven neighbourhood spots, and the internationally branded hotel restaurants each serve a different purpose and attract a different audience. CUT belongs to the third category, but its wine credentials give it a foothold in the conversation that purely brand-driven operations lack.

The Shoppes at Marina Bay Sands address is accessible by MRT to Bayfront station, which is the most direct approach for first-time visitors. The basement dining level of the Shoppes is a self-contained circuit, and CUT's position at B1-71 places it within a dense concentration of premium dining options. Booking ahead is advisable given the volume of hotel guests competing for the same reservation windows, particularly on weekend evenings. For diners exploring the full range of what Singapore's restaurant scene offers, our full Singapore restaurants guide maps the field across formats and price points, alongside our Singapore bars guide and our Singapore hotels guide for broader trip planning.

For context on how CUT's format travels globally, the Wolfgang Puck brand has placed similar operations in major cities where the American steakhouse format carries premium positioning. The Singapore room is one node in a wider network that includes operations calibrated to local market expectations while maintaining the core format discipline. That consistency is both the brand's commercial logic and its limitation: it is not a restaurant that will surprise you with a seasonal pivot or a chef's personal statement, but it will deliver the steakhouse format at a level of technical and beverage seriousness that the White Star recognition confirms. Diners who want chef-driven creativity in Singapore have strong options across the city; diners who want a serious wine list alongside premium beef, served in a format that gives them control over the meal's shape, have fewer choices at this level.

For reference on how comparable celebrity-chef formats operate in other cities, Le Bernardin in New York and Alain Ducasse at Louis XV in Monte Carlo represent the European-trained equivalent tier, while Alinea in Chicago and Alléno Paris au Pavillon Ledoyen illustrate what the tasting-menu format looks like at maximum ambition. CUT occupies a deliberately different register from all of them, and that clarity of purpose is, in the end, what makes the format work.

Planning Your Visit

CUT by Wolfgang Puck is located at 10 Bayfront Avenue, B1-71 The Shoppes, Marina Bay Sands, Singapore 018956. Bayfront MRT station (Circle and Downtown Lines) provides direct access. Given the Marina Bay Sands hotel traffic and the concentration of dining options in the Shoppes, advance reservations are strongly recommended, particularly for Friday and Saturday evenings. For the wine list specifically, diners intending to explore the program in depth would do well to communicate preferences when booking. Singapore's broader wine and dining resources are covered in our Singapore wineries guide and our Singapore experiences guide.

Signature Dishes
Japanese Wagyu Grilled Over Binchotan CharcoalUSDA Prime Filet Mignon Black Truffle OscarWhole Roasted Maine LobsterMaryland Blue Crab Cake
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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Romantic
  • Elegant
  • Sophisticated
  • Modern
Best For
  • Date Night
  • Business Dinner
  • Celebration
  • Special Occasion
Experience
  • Private Dining
  • Hotel Restaurant
  • Open Kitchen
Drink Program
  • Extensive Wine List
  • Craft Cocktails
  • Sommelier Led
Sourcing
  • Sustainable Seafood
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelConversational
CapacityMedium
Service StyleFormal
Meal PacingLeisurely

Dim, classy New York-style dining room with a comfortably modern aesthetic; romantic ambiance enhanced by polished marble bar and refined cocktail program.

Signature Dishes
Japanese Wagyu Grilled Over Binchotan CharcoalUSDA Prime Filet Mignon Black Truffle OscarWhole Roasted Maine LobsterMaryland Blue Crab Cake