Malaysian Food — What to Eat and What It Costs
Malay, Chinese, and Indian food collide in one of Asia's most underrated food scenes.
Malaysia's food scene is a genuine three-way fusion — Malay, Chinese, and Indian cuisines sitting side by side, often in the same hawker center — and it's cheap: a hawker meal runs $1.50–4, a casual restaurant $4–9, a nice dinner out $12–25 per person. Don't miss nasi lemak, char kway teow, laksa (assam or curry style), roti canai, and satay. Because Malaysia is Muslim-majority, halal food is the easy default almost everywhere, which simplifies things considerably for a lot of travelers.
If Thailand's food scene is famous, Malaysia's is criminally underrated — and arguably more interesting, because you're not getting one national cuisine, you're getting three (Malay, Chinese, Peranakan/Nyonya, and Indian) stacked on top of each other in the same city block, sometimes the same hawker center. This is what to actually order, roughly what it costs, and the one practical note — halal availability — that makes trip-planning genuinely easier here than almost anywhere else in the region.













































