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Na Na Curry operates from a Bedok North Housing Board block, serving fish curry and related dishes at prices that have kept the queue moving for years. Back-to-back Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 and 2025 places it inside a small tier of Singapore hawker stalls where everyday affordability and formal culinary acknowledgement coexist. Chef Yap Hock Kee runs the stall; the neighbourhood keeps returning.
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- Address
- Blk 204 Bedok North Street 1, #01-393, Singapore 460204
- Phone
- +65 9844 6169

Bedok's Hawker Logic
Na Na Curry is a Singaporean Curry House in Bedok, Singapore, known for Bib Gourmand recognition in 2024 and 2025 and a price point around $10 per person. Singapore's Housing Board estates are not where most visitors begin their eating itinerary, but they are where much of the city's most practised street cooking happens. Bedok North is a residential district that runs on regulars, and Block 204's hawker centre operates on the same social contract as thousands of similar complexes across the island: cooks who have spent years refining a single dish, prices calibrated to the surrounding neighbourhood, and a lunchtime rhythm that has little tolerance for indecision. Na Na Curry sits inside that system, and the Michelin Bib Gourmand awarded in both 2024 and 2025 represents the inspectors confirming what the queue outside already suggested.
It does not carry the star designation, but it is the Michelin Guide's formal signal for quality cooking at a price point accessible to most diners. In Singapore, where the guide has tracked hawker stalls since 2016, that recognition carries particular weight because competition at the affordable end of the market is dense. Stalls like Hill Street Tai Hwa Pork Noodle and 545 Whampoa Prawn Noodles have shown that a hawker stall holding Michelin recognition year after year is not a novelty act; it is a stall that has cleared a sustained quality bar while keeping prices at street-food levels.
The Queue as Entry Point
Na Na Curry operates on the walk-up model that governs most of Singapore's hawker culture, which means arrival time and patience are the two variables within your control. The Bib Gourmand listing draws visitors beyond the immediate neighbourhood, so the queue that once moved at a pace set by local regulars now includes travellers who have made the MRT journey specifically. Morning arrival, before the lunch rush, is the practical move for anyone without flexibility in their schedule.
That dynamic is not particular to this stall. Across Singapore's Bib Gourmand hawker tier, the post-listing queue extension is a known pattern. A Noodle Story at Amoy Street Food Centre and 91 Fried Kway Teow Mee both see the same effect: recognition brings an audience that extends beyond the stall's organic catchment, and the queue lengthens accordingly. Planning a visit to Na Na Curry now requires treating the wait as part of the logistics, not an inconvenience to be avoided.
Curry in the Hawker Context
Fish curry at a Singapore hawker stall operates within a tradition that draws on Indian, Malay, and Peranakan cooking threads. The gravy is typically built on a spice paste, the fish cooked in the sauce rather than separately, and the result served with rice or bread depending on the stall's orientation. At the price point Na Na Curry occupies, the single-dollar sign range, the comparison set is broad: nearly every hawker centre in Singapore has some version of curry on offer. What separates a Bib Gourmand listing from the general market is consistency and depth of flavour across repeated visits, qualities that inspectors weigh over multiple anonymous checks rather than a single occasion.
Chef Yap Hock Kee has maintained that standard across at least two consecutive inspection cycles, which is the more telling credential. A single award might reflect a good year; back-to-back recognition through 2024 and 2025 is a more durable signal.
For context on how the curry tradition plays out across the wider region, the approach shares structural similarities with street-food curry formats found at places like Air Itam Sister Curry Mee in George Town. The Southeast Asian street-food curry category is wide enough to contain significant variation in spice profile, protein choice, and serving format, but the underlying commitment to a single dish done consistently is a thread that connects them.
Placing Na Na Curry in Singapore's Eating Spectrum
Singapore's restaurant scene runs from Zén's four-dollar-sign European contemporary tasting menus to single-dollar hawker plates, and both ends have credibility. The city has more Michelin-recognised hawker and street-food stalls than almost any comparable market, which reflects a deliberate guide policy of treating affordability as compatible with culinary rigour rather than separate from it. Na Na Curry occupies the accessible end of that spectrum without apology, and the price range places a meal here at a fraction of what a comparable Bib Gourmand recognition in a European city would typically signal.
For visitors building a multi-day eating itinerary, the Bedok North visit pairs logically with other hawker-led meals rather than with the fine-dining tier.
Street-food travel across the region produces comparable situations: 888 Hokkien Mee in George Town, A Pong Mae Sunee in Phuket, and Anuwat in Phang Nga each sit outside the obvious tourist circuits and reward the effort of a deliberate detour. The same applies here. Ah Boy Koay Teow Th'ng, Air Itam Duck Rice, and Ali Nasi Lemak Daun Pisang in George Town, or Banana Boy in Hong Kong, demonstrate that the street-food stall format generates serious cooking across the region when a cook has committed to a single preparation over years.
Planning Your Visit
Address: Blk 204 Bedok North Street 1, #01-393, Singapore 460204. Reservations: Walk-in only; no booking system. Budget: Single-dollar-sign price range; expect to spend well under SGD 20 per person. Timing: Arrive before the midday lunch peak to reduce wait time; the Bib Gourmand listing has extended the queue beyond the immediate local catchment. Getting there: Bedok MRT station on the East-West Line is the nearest interchange; the hawker centre is a short walk from the station. Dress: No dress code; hawker-centre casual is the norm across all of Singapore's street-food venues.
City Peers
Comparable venues nearby, for context on price, style, and recognition.
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Na Na CurryThis venue — the venue you are viewing | Singaporean Curry House | $$ | |
| Hjh Maimunah (Jalan Pisang) | Authentic Malay & Indonesian Nasi Padang | $$ | KAMPONG GLAM |
| True Blue Cuisine | Authentic Peranakan | $$$ | BRAS BASAH |
| Indocafé | Authentic Peranakan & Nyonya Cuisine | $$$ | GOODWOOD PARK |
| Heng Kee | Chinese Curry Chicken Noodles | $$ | TEBAN GARDENS |
| Cumi Bali | Authentic Indonesian | $$$ | CHINATOWN |
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Casual hawker stall atmosphere, no air-con, vibrant and bustling with long queues.














