Highlights
Smoke-free
Electric grills — zero smoke, zero smell
Solo-friendly
Individual grills for 1-2 — perfect for solo
Value
Sets from S$9.80 nett — curated by chefs
About
RE&S Group's casual Japanese BBQ concept. Individual smoke-free electric grills for each diner. No smoke, no smell, no need for a big group.
Chef-curated sets — signature GO Set (beef short plate + steak + tongue) S$15.80. Standard menu is pork-free. Premium Yakiniku-GO Plus at Suntec City with Wagyu. 7 outlets.
Recommended For
Solo Diners
Couples
Meat Lovers
Smell-Sensitive Diners
Casual Dates
Quick Yakiniku
Signature Dishes
START HERE
Yakiniku-GO Set
Beef Short Plate, Oyster Blade Steak, and Beef Tongue — the three most popular cuts. With rice, soup, kimchi/salad.
S$15.80
KARUBI LOVERS
Double Karubi Set
Double the karubi: Beef Short Plate + Boneless Short Rib. Tender, juicy, well-marbled. Crisp edges, juicy centre.
~S$14
VARIETY
Pork Sanshu Mori Set
Three pork cuts: Belly, Collar, Jowl — each different texture/flavour. With rice, seaweed soup, kimchi/salad.
~S$12
Menu & Pricing
* All set prices nett. À la carte available. Dipping sauces provided. RE&S Rewards applicable.
Practical Info
Standard outlets
JEM (Jurong) · Jurong Point · NEX (Serangoon) · Parkway Parade (Marine Parade) · The Seletar Mall (Sengkang) · Hougang Mall
Premium outlet
Yakiniku-GO Plus @ Suntec City — Japanese Wagyu, premium cuts. Reservations available (Suntec only).
Hours
Generally 11am–10pm daily · Hours vary by outlet
Reservation
Suntec City Plus: reservation available. All others: walk-in with QR queue system.
Group
RE&S Group (also: Ichiban Boshi, Ichiban Sushi, Kuriya, Sushi-GO, Shimbashi Soba)
Loyalty
RE&S Rewards — earn & redeem across all RE&S brands
Dietary Info
Not Halal Certified
Standard menu pork-free
Smoke-free dining
Solo-friendly seating
Your Dining Journey
1
Join the QR Queue
QR code queue at most outlets. No reservation at standard outlets (Suntec Plus only). Peak dinner: 10-20 min wait.
2
Pick Your Set & Grill
Personal electric grill ready at your seat. Order the GO Set (S$15.80) — raw meat arrives with rice, soup, salad. Grill to your preferred doneness. No smoke.
3
Explore the Cuts
Liked the GO Set? Try Double Karubi, Lamb Set, or visit Suntec Plus for Wagyu. RE&S Rewards usable across all RE&S brands.
Find an Outlet
7 outlets: JEM, Jurong Point, NEX, Parkway Parade, Seletar Mall, Hougang Mall + Suntec City Plus (premium, reservations). Standard outlets: QR queue walk-in.
📍 All Outlet Locations & Hours
Editor's Note
Yakiniku-GO solves yakiniku's biggest barriers: price, group size, and smoke. Individual grills from S$9.80, solo-friendly, 100% smoke-free. The karubi is the standout. Suntec Plus adds Wagyu for splurges. All three excuses for avoiding yakiniku — removed.
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Why Yakiniku Go in Singapore
Singapore's Japanese food scene is one of the most competitive outside Japan, with hundreds of restaurants ranging from S$5 hawker-style ramen to S$500 omakase. In this crowded landscape, Yakiniku Go has carved out a loyal following by delivering consistent quality at its price point. Whether you are a first-time visitor to Singapore looking for reliable Japanese food, or a resident seeking a trusted regular spot, this chain offers a dependable experience across all its outlets. The standardised recipes mean you get the same quality whether you visit the Orchard outlet or the one in your neighbourhood mall.
For tourists, the multi-outlet presence means there is likely a location near your hotel or on your itinerary. For residents, it means a familiar meal is never far away. Umami Compass recommends checking the individual area pages for outlet-specific details including exact addresses, nearest MRT stations, and local tips.
Ordering Tips
First-timers should start with the signature dish — it is the item the kitchen has perfected and the reason the chain built its reputation. If you are dining with a group, order a variety of items to share and discover your favourites. Lunch sets typically offer better value than ordering à la carte. Check the restaurant's social media for seasonal promotions and limited-time items. Most outlets are walk-in only with no reservations, so arriving slightly before or after peak lunch hours (12–1pm) will reduce waiting time.
Smoke-Free Revolution: The Yakiniku-GO Innovation
The biggest complaint about Japanese BBQ (yakiniku) has always been the smell — that lingering smoky odour that clings to your hair and clothes for hours after dining. Yakiniku-GO has engineered a solution: a smoke-free ventilation system built into every table that sucks smoke downward before it can rise, keeping the air clean and your clothes fresh. This technical innovation removes the primary barrier to casual yakiniku dining and opens it up to lunch meetings, date nights, and spontaneous visits that traditional smoky yakiniku restaurants could never serve. Combined with aggressive pricing — wagyu from S$5.90, making premium Japanese beef accessible at fast-casual prices — the brand has disrupted Singapore's yakiniku scene. You grill your own meat at the table on a gas-powered griddle, choosing from a menu that spans Australian wagyu, US beef, chicken, seafood, and vegetables. The self-service model keeps costs down while preserving the interactive, social aspect of yakiniku dining that makes it one of Japan's most popular eating-out formats.
How to Visit
Most outlets are located in major shopping malls across Singapore, easily accessible by MRT. No reservations are needed — simply walk in. During peak lunch hours (12:00–1:30pm) and dinner hours (6:00–7:30pm), expect short waiting times at popular outlets. Weekday afternoons between 2:00–5:00pm are generally the quietest. Payment methods typically include cash, NETS, Visa, Mastercard, and contactless payments. Many outlets are also available on food delivery platforms such as GrabFood, foodpanda, and Deliveroo for those who prefer to enjoy the food at home.
Understanding the Cuisine
Japanese cuisine is built on a few core principles that elevate even the simplest dishes. Umami — the 'fifth taste' — is central: a deep, savoury satisfaction that comes from ingredients like dashi (stock made from kelp and bonito), soy sauce, miso, and fermented seasonings. Balance is everything: sweet, salty, sour, bitter, and umami are calibrated in each dish to create harmony rather than dominance of any single flavour. Presentation matters: even at casual restaurants, food is arranged with care because the Japanese dining philosophy holds that you eat first with your eyes. Seasonality drives the menu: ingredients are chosen at their peak freshness, which is why you will often see seasonal specials that rotate throughout the year. Understanding these principles helps you appreciate why a seemingly simple bowl of rice and beef can feel like a complete, satisfying meal — every element has been considered.