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🕌 Muslim Travel in Taiwan · Updated 2026

Eating Halal in Taiwan —
the honest guide that actually helps

A MICHELIN Bib Gourmand beef noodle shop halal-certified since 1957. Taiwan's only CMA-certified fried chicken chain. Indian, Moroccan and Persian restaurants right in central Taipei. The options exist — you just need to know where to look.

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The reality

Taiwan and halal food — what nobody tells you upfront

Taiwan is paradise for pork lovers — and that's precisely what makes it a place where Muslim travellers need to plan ahead more carefully than most. Standard Taiwanese restaurants routinely use lard for stir-frying, rice wine for braising, and pork-bone broth as a base. None of those things are obvious on a menu board, and staff don't always flag them unless you ask directly.

The good news is that since 2019 the Taiwanese government has partnered with the Chinese Muslim Association (CMA) to push halal certification hard. Taipei now has dozens of CMA-certified restaurants across multiple cuisines, the Grand Mosque hosts a vibrant Friday food market, and the Taiwan Tourism Bureau maintains an official searchable directory spanning over 23 pages of certified establishments across the island.

This guide pulls together the verified restaurants (with real MRT stops), the mosques, the grocery spots, the hidden pitfalls, and the apps — everything you actually need for a comfortable, well-fed trip to Taiwan.

🏅
CMA-Verified
Every restaurant in this list is CMA-certified or verifiable from reliable independent sources
🚇
MRT Stops Included
Every listing gives the nearest MRT station and exit number so you can navigate without data
🕌
3 Key Mosques
Taipei, Kaohsiung and Taoyuan — locations, prayer times and what to expect at each
📱
3 Essential Apps
The apps that Muslim travellers in Taiwan rely on to find halal options in real time
Certification System

Taiwan's four halal certification levels — what each one means

The Chinese Muslim Association (CMA) is Taiwan's primary halal certifying body. Look for its logo at the entrance or on the menu. The four designations differ in ownership and scope.

HR
Halal Restaurant

Fully halal operation with Muslim ownership. All ingredients, preparation processes and spaces meet halal standards. The highest-confidence designation.

MFR
Muslim Friendly Restaurant

Non-Muslim owner but same ingredient and process standards as HR. Common in Taiwanese local restaurants that want to serve Muslim visitors.

MFT
Muslim Friendly Tourist Restaurant

Designed specifically for Muslim tourists — often in tourist zones, with multi-language menus, a prayer area or directions to the nearest mosque.

HK
Halal Kitchen

A halal-certified kitchen inside a hotel, shopping mall or large venue. Not usually a standalone restaurant; produces halal food for guests of the building.

How to verify: Look for the CMA logo at the restaurant entrance or on printed menus. You can also search the Taiwan Tourism Bureau's official halal directory by region and certification type.

Restaurants in Taipei

10 halal restaurants in Taipei we actually recommend

Verified against CMA certification records and independent sources. Always check current opening hours before visiting — hours can change.

🍜1
Halal Chinese Beef Noodles (Da'an)
MICHELIN Bib Gourmand — 7 consecutive years

The most celebrated halal restaurant in Taiwan. Open since 1957, it uses freshly slaughtered halal-certified Taiwanese beef every day. Choose between a rich red-braised broth loaded with spices, or a cleaner clear broth. Bowls run NT$155–215. The dining room is small and queues form early — arrive before 11:30 am.

📍Address: No. 1, Alley 7, Lane 137, Yanji St, Da'an District
🚇MRT: Sun Yat-sen Memorial Hall (Exit 1), 5-min walk
🕐Hours: 11:30–14:00 and 17:00–20:30 (closed public holidays)
💵Price: NT$155–250 per bowl
🥩2
Chang's Beef Noodles (張家清真黃牛肉麵館)
Halal Restaurant — CMA certified

A classic halal beef noodle shop a short walk from Ximen station. Besides the signature noodles, the scallion pancake (NT$40) and cold soy milk (NT$20) are beloved staples. Prayer mats are available inside. The Muslim owners personally oversee every step of preparation.

📍Address: 21 Yanping S Rd, Zhongzheng District
🚇MRT: Ximen (Exit 6), 5-min walk
🕐Hours: 10:00–19:30 daily
💵Price: NT$120–200 per bowl
🍖3
Lao Chang Muslim Beef Noodle Restaurant
Halal Restaurant — Muslim owned, 70+ years

Next door to Chang's on the same street, open for over 70 years. The standout is braised short rib soup (NT$200) — bone-in beef simmered in a clean broth that builds deep flavour without heavy spicing. Seating is limited; aim for an off-peak afternoon visit.

📍Address: 23 Yanping S Rd, Zhongzheng District
🚇MRT: Ximen (Exit 6), 5-min walk
🕐Hours: 11:00–19:30 (closed Mondays)
💵Price: NT$130–220 per bowl
🥐4
Uncle Ma's (馬叔餅舖)
Halal Restaurant — Taipei Grand Mosque certified

A halal Taiwanese breakfast spot a short walk from the Grand Mosque — freshly made shaobing (sesame flatbread, NT$65) and beef dumplings (NT$150). Opens at 7 am, closed Fridays for Jumu'ah. Seating is tight; takeaway works just as well for a mosque-area morning stroll.

📍Address: 67-2 Linyi St, Zhongzheng District
🚇MRT: Dongmen (Exit 1), 8-min walk
🕐Hours: 07:00–18:00 (closed Fridays)
💵Price: NT$40–150 per item
🫕5
Yunus Halal Restaurant
Halal Restaurant — CMA certified, prayer space on site

A Thai-Middle Eastern halal restaurant with a dedicated prayer room in the basement — making it one of the most practically complete halal dining options in Taipei. Good for groups, with generous seating and a menu that spans Thai curries through to rice dishes and fusion plates.

📍Area: Da'an District, near Taipei Grand Mosque
🚇MRT: Da'an (Exit 5)
💵Price: NT$150–350 per dish
🕌Special: Prayer room in basement
🍛6
Tandoor Indian Food
Muslim Friendly — independently verified 4.8 stars

Consistently rated one of the best Indian restaurants in Taipei — chicken and lamb curries, tandoor-baked naan, biryani, and a solid selection of vegetarian dishes. Located a few minutes from Zhongxiao Dunhua station, it makes an ideal dinner stop after exploring the Xinyi shopping district or Taipei 101. Confirm halal sourcing directly when you book.

📍Address: 10 Lane 73, Sec. 2 Dunhua S Rd, Da'an
🚇MRT: Zhongxiao Dunhua (Exit 3)
💵Price: NT$200–450 per person
🥗7
Tajin Moroccan Cuisine
Halal Restaurant — Muslim owned

One of the rare Moroccan restaurants in Taipei — tagine, couscous and grilled meats in a warm, living-room atmosphere. The Muslim owners handle every step themselves. Seating is limited; reservations are strongly recommended. A refreshing change of pace if you're craving something other than Asian food mid-trip.

📍Address: 26 Lane 81, Sec. 1 Anhe Rd, Da'an
🚇MRT: Da'an Park (Exit 6)
💵Price: NT$300–600 per person
🍗8
Masala Art
Halal Friendly — verified by multiple sources

An Indian restaurant near Yuanshan MRT — beef and chicken curries, tandoor items, and a broad vegetarian menu. Spacious and well-suited to families or larger groups. Convenient if you're heading to or from the northern tourist belt (Taipei Zoo, Maokong gondola, Beitou hot springs).

📍Address: 8 Yumen St, Zhongshan District
🚇MRT: Yuanshan (Exit 2)
💵Price: NT$180–380 per dish
🥙9
1001 Nights Kitchen
100% Halal certified

Persian cuisine is almost impossibly rare in Taiwan, which makes this Zhongzheng restaurant a genuine find — kebabs, Persian rice dishes and Middle Eastern flavours prepared by Muslim owners who source every ingredient carefully. Centrally located, it's a natural stop after visiting Longshan Temple or the CKS Memorial Hall.

📍Address: 1 Sec. 1 Xinyi Rd, Zhongzheng District
🚇MRT: Chiang Kai-shek Memorial Hall (Exit 2)
💵Price: NT$200–400 per person
🍗10
Fried Chicken Master
Taiwan's only CMA-certified fried chicken chain

The only chain in Taiwan serving the iconic Taiwanese-style fried chicken cutlet with full CMA halal certification — so you can finally try the country's beloved street-food staple without worry. Chicken breast starts at NT$49. Main branch on Luosifu Rd; second branch in Nangang. Frozen products available in select 7-Eleven stores.

📍Main branch: Luosifu Rd, Zhongzheng · Also in Nangang
🚇MRT: Zhongshan (Luosifu branch)
💵Price: NT$49–120 per piece
More dining near the Grand Mosque

The streets around Taipei Grand Mosque (Xinsheng S Rd Sec. 2) have several additional Muslim-run eateries including Kunming Islamic Restaurant, open for over 15 years, and a cluster of small grocery shops and bakeries selling halal products. Friday is the best day to visit — the community food stalls outside the mosque make for one of the most atmospheric food experiences in Taipei.

Beyond Taipei

Other cities in Taiwan — where to find halal food

Taipei has far more options than anywhere else. Other major cities have at least a few verified spots — always cross-check with HalalTrip before heading out.

Kaohsiung

Look near Kaohsiung Mosque on Jianguo Road — the local Muslim community has been here for generations and word-of-mouth restaurant recommendations are reliable. Indonesian worker neighbourhoods around Zuoying also have halal eateries. Search "清真 Kaohsiung" in Google Maps for up-to-date pins.

Taichung

Little India Muslim Restaurant (60 Boguan 3rd St, West District) serves reliable Indian food at reasonable prices. Anatolia Turkish Restaurant is halal-certified with a prayer space — a rare find in central Taiwan and worth seeking out if you're in the city overnight.

Hualien

King of India Indian Restaurant (30 Minguo Rd, Hualien City) is independently verified and a solid dinner after a Taroko Gorge day trip. Hualien has very limited halal options overall — consider packing some sealed halal snacks from Taipei before heading east.

Prayer & Mosques

Key mosques in Taiwan — locations and what to expect

Taipei Grand Mosque

62 Xinsheng S Rd Sec. 2, Da'an District
MRT: Da'an (Exit 5), 8-min walk
Open daily — Friday community food market outside
The largest and oldest mosque in Taiwan, built in 1960. Accommodates hundreds for Friday prayers. The surrounding area has the highest concentration of halal restaurants and Muslim-owned shops on the island.

Taipei Cultural Mosque

Songshan District, Taipei
MRT: Near Songshan Station
A mid-sized mosque serving Taipei's eastern Muslim community. Convenient if you're staying near Raohe Night Market, Taipei Arena or Songshan area hotels.

Longgang Mosque

Taoyuan City
HSR/TRA Taoyuan station then taxi
The mosque closest to Taoyuan International Airport — practical for those in transit or staying in Taoyuan. The Taoyuan Muslim community here is active and welcoming to visitors.

Prayer rooms at airports and public spaces

Both Terminal 1 and Terminal 2 at Taoyuan International Airport have dedicated prayer rooms marked on official airport maps. Kaohsiung International Airport does as well. The Halal TW app shows prayer facilities near your current location throughout Taiwan.

What to watch out for

Hidden non-halal ingredients — the four main pitfalls

Four things to ask about before ordering at any standard Taiwanese restaurant
  • 1.Lard (猪油 zhū yóu) — used to stir-fry vegetables, mixed into pastry dough, and used as a broth base. Even dishes that look vegetarian may have been cooked in lard. Ask: "有豬油嗎?"
  • 2.Rice cooking wine (料理米酒) — used to marinate beef and chicken, and almost always in three-cup chicken. The alcohol doesn't fully evaporate and it's a prohibited ingredient regardless.
  • 3.Pork-bone broth base — noodle shops, ramen spots and hot-pot restaurants frequently use a pork-bone broth that tastes neutral but is pork-derived. A bowl with only beef toppings is still not halal if the broth came from pork bones.
  • 4.Oyster sauce — widely used in stir-fries and braised vegetables. Some brands contain animal derivatives that are not halal-sourced. Worth checking on any vegetable dish at a non-certified restaurant.
📱
Carry a Chinese text card

Save this phrase and show it to staff: 我不吃豬肉,不喝酒,請問有清真食物嗎? (I don't eat pork or drink alcohol — do you have halal food?) It removes ambiguity immediately and most Taiwanese restaurant owners respond helpfully.

Generally safe options

Fresh steamed or grilled seafood without sauce, plain steamed rice, fresh-cut fruit, most bubble teas (check gelatin and milk sources), mango shaved ice, plain corn on the cob at night markets, and packaged items with a CMA halal logo are reliably safe.

🛒
Where to buy halal groceries

The area under the Civic Blvd overpass near Taipei Main Station has Indonesian and Filipino grocery stores selling halal meat, instant noodles and cooking ingredients. Select Carrefour branches carry products with the CMA halal logo. 7-Eleven and FamilyMart have some pork-free packaged items — read labels rather than assuming.

Apps

3 apps that make halal travel in Taiwan much easier

📍
HalalTrip

The largest halal restaurant database with distance from your current location and user reviews from real Muslim travellers. Free on iOS and Android, covers all of Taiwan — not just Taipei. The best starting point for any day out.

🕌
Halal TW

Taiwan-specific, updated most frequently, with data sourced from the local Muslim community. Shows restaurants, mosques and prayer rooms near you. Highly recommended — download it before you leave Taipei for day trips where options are limited.

Zabihah.com

Fewer Taiwan listings than HalalTrip, but the reviews are written by Muslim diners who've personally visited. Particularly useful for restaurants where you want extra confidence before making a reservation or travelling a long way to eat there.

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🕌 NEW · Muslim-Friendly Hotels
5 Taipei hotels where you can pray in your room + real CMA certs

We hand-picked 5 Taipei hotels with genuine CMA Taiwan certifications — Shangri-La Far Eastern (dual MFT+MFR cert 2025), Hotel Royal-Nikko (dedicated halal breakfast kitchen), ILLUME (MFT cert), amba Ximending (halal kitchen on level 5 + alcohol-free rooms), Grand Hyatt (MFT/MFE). Prayer mat + qibla in every room. Halal breakfast available. From NT$4,800/night.

FAQ

Halal food in Taiwan — your questions answered

Is it hard to find halal food in Taiwan?

Harder than in a Muslim-majority country, but far from impossible — especially in Taipei. The Chinese Muslim Association (CMA) has certified dozens of restaurants since 2019, and the scene keeps growing. Download HalalTrip or Halal TW before you go and use them to find options wherever you are. The Grand Mosque area in Da'an is the most reliable neighbourhood for halal dining.

What does CMA stand for and what are the four halal certification levels?

CMA is the Chinese Muslim Association (中國回教協會), Taiwan's primary halal certifying body. The four designations are: HR (Halal Restaurant — fully halal, Muslim-owned), MFR (Muslim Friendly Restaurant — same standards, non-Muslim owner), MFT (Muslim Friendly Tourist Restaurant — geared toward tourist visitors), and HK (Halal Kitchen — inside a hotel or large venue). Look for the CMA logo at the restaurant entrance.

Where are the mosques in Taipei?

Taipei Grand Mosque at 62 Xinsheng S Rd Sec. 2, Da'an District is the largest and most accessible — 8 minutes from MRT Da'an Exit 5. Open daily; Friday sees a community food market outside. Taipei Cultural Mosque is in the Songshan District. Longgang Mosque is in Taoyuan near the international airport, convenient for transit travellers.

Does Taoyuan Airport have a prayer room?

Yes — both Terminal 1 and Terminal 2 have designated prayer rooms clearly marked on the official airport maps. Kaohsiung International Airport also has one. The Halal TW app shows prayer facilities near any location in Taiwan, which is useful once you're moving around the island.

Are bubble tea and Taiwanese desserts halal?

Most bubble tea is safe in practice, but check whether the tapioca pearls use gelatin from non-halal sources, and whether milk powder comes from a halal-certified dairy. Mango shaved ice and douhua (tofu pudding) are generally safe — they're soy-based with no animal derivatives. Read labels on packaged desserts in convenience stores rather than assuming.

Is Taiwanese seafood halal?

Fish, shrimp, squid, oysters and crab are generally considered halal across most madhabs. The caution is in the cooking — seafood stir-fried in lard is no longer halal regardless of what's in it. Grilled fresh seafood without sauce at night markets is the safest option. Always confirm the cooking oil when ordering at a non-certified restaurant.

Can I trust a Taiwanese restaurant when they say "no pork"?

Not without further clarification. Many Taiwanese cooks don't count lard, pork-bone broth or rice wine as "pork" in the way a Muslim would understand the term. Always use a verified CMA-certified restaurant when possible, or show staff the phrase 我不吃豬肉,不喝酒,請問有清真食物嗎 and wait for a specific, confident answer rather than a polite yes.

Are there halal options in cities other than Taipei?

Yes, though considerably fewer. Kaohsiung has options near the Kaohsiung Mosque and in neighbourhoods with large Indonesian worker populations. Taichung has Little India Muslim Restaurant and Anatolia Turkish Restaurant. Hualien has King of India Indian Restaurant. For smaller cities and rural areas, halal options are rare — bring sealed certified snacks from Taipei as backup.

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