More in Bishan
Is this your business?

Claim this listing to add loyalty, POS, and marketing tools.

Claim this business

Gim Huat Coffeeshop

4.1(30)on Googlecoffeebishan

24 Sin Ming Rd, Singapore 570024

Dine-inTakeout

Opening Hours

Today (Monday)9:30 AM – 8:00 PM

STAMPEDE Score

Moderate confidence
AExcellent

Score: 85 / 100

Queue wait60
Consistency80
Food quality90
Value for money85

Based on 5 data points · Updated 8 days ago

Editor’s Note

Last updated 30 May 2026

Our take: Gim Huat Coffeeshop offers a diverse hawker experience, with several stalls earning consistent praise.

The Hong Shun Sarawak Noodles, priced at $4.50, are highlighted for their evenly coated, fragrant sauce.

For those seeking vegetarian options, the cai fan stall provides economical meals at $4, though some note the dishes can be a bit oily.

The non-vegetarian cai fan is also popular, with a slightly higher price point of $5 for a more varied selection.

We also note the charcoal-grilled kaya toast and kopi, which are well-regarded and contribute to weekend crowds.

While individual stalls stand out, the overall experience is one of good value and variety.

The prawn noodles and wanton mee from Deng Wen Ji also receive positive mentions for their quality and generous portions.

We think this is a solid choice for a casual meal with multiple options, particularly if you're in the Bishan area.

Best for a quick, affordable, and satisfying hawker fix, especially if you can visit on a weekday to avoid the weekend rush.

Signature

Hong Shun Sarawak Noodles ($4.50)

Best time

Weekdays to avoid weekend crowds

Wait time

Can be crowded on weekends

Price

$ ($4-6/person)

Score: 85 · 5 sources

What customers say

Gim Huat Coffeeshop is praised for its diverse and affordable hawker fare, with specific highlights including the vegetarian caifan, Hong Shun Sarawak Noodles, and Deng Wen Ji wanton mee, often noted for generous portions.

The kopi, tea, and charcoal-grilled kaya toast are also popular, though the venue can get crowded, especially on weekends.

Some dishes, like the vegetarian caifan, are noted for being oily.

Diverse and affordable hawker optionsQuality and value of specific stalls (e.g., Deng Wen Ji, Hong Shun)Popularity of kopi, tea, and kaya toastCrowdedness during peak timesOiliness of some dishes
80% positive10% neutral10% negative

Google Reviews

★★★★★megan· a year ago

The vegetarian food is pretty legit. It’s also quite cheap / economical at 4 dollars with 2 ‘meat’ and 1 vegetable. I don’t know how but I finished eating the brown rice so fast. The curry sauce is cu…

★★★★KW HO· 3 years ago

Hong Shun Sarawak Noodles. I had the classic $4.50 bowl and it was delicious! Every strand of noodles was evenly coated with the light yet fragrant sauce. Very yummy. I’ll be back!

★★★★Javier Joe· 4 months ago

One of the good prawn noodle maned by a young hawker

★★★★★Patty Palmer· a year ago

Charcoal grilled bread or French loaf with thick kaya and butter. Both equally good. Coffee and tea made well and prices right. Gets crowded on weekends

★★★★Steve· 4 years ago

High quality wanton mee from Deng Wen Ji which open recently. They have several branches and the noodles taste very much like Kok Kee but much value for money (x2 portion) for the same price ($5) Nee…

Reviews from Google

More content coming as we discover reviews and videos about this restaurant across the web.

✨ Verified businesses get weekly AI-refreshed content, editorial reviews, and the full marketing suite. Claim this business to unlock.