City & State Guides

Halal Food on the Gold Coast: The Best Halal Restaurants by Area

· · 12 min read
Halal Food on the Gold Coast: The Best Halal Restaurants by Area

The Gold Coast is one of Australia’s great halal food surprises — and one of its premier halal holiday destinations. This sun-soaked strip of beaches and high-rises draws Muslim visitors from across the Middle East, Malaysia, Indonesia and beyond, and the food scene has risen to meet them: halal-certified Persian fine dining, beachfront Middle Eastern grills, halal-certified Indonesian and Malaysian, famous halal seafood, and a booming halal cafe and acai-bowl culture. Add a growing local Muslim community served by the Gold Coast Mosque at Arundel, and you have a coast where eating halal is easy and delicious. Whether you are holidaying in Surfers Paradise, studying at Bond or Griffith, or living locally, this is the deepest area-by-area guide to the best halal restaurants on the Gold Coast.

The Gold Coast is long and spread out along the coast, so we have organised this guide by area and cuisine — the standout Persian and Middle Eastern scene, the Surfers Paradise and Broadbeach beachfronts, and Southport and the suburbs — plus dedicated sections on halal cafes and butchers. Most of it is a short drive along the highway or light rail.

Always confirm halal status before you order

Halal status can change — a venue may gain or lose certification, change owners, or serve halal options only on part of its menu. This guide is a starting point based on current listings and reviews, not a certification. Before ordering, confirm directly with the venue whether they are fully halal-certified, Muslim-operated, or serve halal options only, ask about the meat supplier, and check whether alcohol or pork is handled on site. Request separated cooking when it matters.

TL;DR: Where to Find Halal Food on the Gold Coast

The Gold Coast’s signature halal cuisine is Persian: the halal-certified Shiraz (Surfers Paradise), Rumi (Broadbeach) and Baba Joon lead a strong Persian and Middle Eastern scene, alongside Mecca Bah, Turkish Alachati and manoush specialist Ya3ani. Surfers Paradise and Broadbeach also deliver halal-certified Indonesian (Little Bali) and Malaysian (Kopitalk), plus Indian. Southport and Labrador — near the Gold Coast Mosque at Arundel — add famous halal seafood (Charis Seafoods), halal Chinese and Uyghur, and the halal butchers Mabrouk & Sons and Gold Coast Halal Meats. For cafes, Flamingco (100% halal at Pacific Fair) leads a big halal brunch and acai-bowl scene. Always confirm each venue’s current status yourself.

Is the Gold Coast Halal-Friendly? What "Halal" Means Here

The Gold Coast is genuinely halal-friendly — and unusually, it is driven as much by tourism as by its resident community. As a major holiday destination for Muslim travellers from the Gulf, Malaysia, Indonesia and elsewhere, the coast has developed an impressive range of halal-certified restaurants, including upscale Persian dining you would struggle to match in bigger cities. The local Muslim community, though smaller, is well-established and growing, served by the Gold Coast Mosque at Arundel (run by the Islamic Society of Gold Coast) and by a dedicated halal certifier, Oceania Halal Services. Halal directories now list dozens of halal and Muslim-friendly venues across the coast. But “halal” on a Gold Coast menu can mean three different things.

  • Fully halal-certified or 100% halal: the venue is entirely halal, often Muslim-owned — the strictest and most reassuring category (Shiraz, Rumi, Kopitalk and Little Bali are examples).
  • Muslim-owned / Muslim-operated: run by Muslim owners using halal meat, but not necessarily formally certified. Generally trusted — but still worth confirming.
  • Halal options available: a mainstream restaurant or cafe that uses halal-certified meat for some dishes, but may also serve pork or alcohol on the same premises (some Persian venues have a licensed bar, for instance). Fine for many diners; check if strict separation matters to you.

Throughout this guide we note which venues are commonly described as certified or 100% halal where we can, but you should always verify the current status yourself. Now, let’s start with the Gold Coast’s calling card — its Persian and Middle Eastern restaurants.

The Gold Coast's Signature: Persian & Middle Eastern

If one cuisine defines halal dining on the Gold Coast, it is Persian. The coast is home to some of the best Persian restaurants in Australia — polished, halal-certified venues where char-grilled kebabs, saffron rice and slow-cooked stews are done beautifully. Leading the pack is Shiraz Persian Restaurant + Bar in Surfers Paradise, a genuine local icon with thousands of glowing reviews, alongside the upscale Rumi in Broadbeach and the ever-popular Baba Joon Persian Grill. Around them sits a strong wider Middle Eastern scene — Turkish, Jordanian, Lebanese manoush and mezze — much of it halal-certified.

This concentration is no accident: the Gold Coast draws Muslim visitors from across the Middle East and has a settled Persian and Arab community, so demand for authentic, halal-certified Middle Eastern food is high — and the quality shows. Below are the standouts.

VenueAreaCuisineKnown for
Shiraz Persian Restaurant + BarSurfers ParadisePersianHalal-certified — the Gold Coast’s favourite Persian, char-grilled kebabs and saffron rice
Rumi Persian RestaurantBroadbeach & SurfersPersianHalal-certified Persian fine dining — kebabs, stews and elegant plating
Baba Joon Persian GrillSurfers ParadisePersianCasual, top-rated Persian grill — generous and great value
Mecca BahBroadbeach areaMiddle EasternMezze, tagines and Middle Eastern grills; serves halal meat
AlachatiGold CoastTurkishWell-rated Turkish grills, pide and mezze
Ya3ani Manoushi & FalafelSurfers ParadiseLebanese / Middle EasternHalal manoush, falafel and acai bowls — fresh and light
La JordaniaGold CoastJordanianJordanian grills and mezze with a shisha lounge
Afghani Charcoal Kebab HouseSurfers ParadiseAfghanCharcoal kebabs and Afghan grills near the strip

Signature dishes to try

  • Chelo kabab koobideh — Persian charcoal-grilled minced lamb skewers with saffron rice and grilled tomato.
  • Joojeh kabab — saffron-marinated grilled chicken, a Persian favourite.
  • Barg — tender char-grilled lamb or beef fillet over rice.
  • Fesenjan & khoresh — rich Persian stews of walnut, pomegranate and slow-cooked meat.
  • Manoush & falafel — Lebanese flatbread and crisp chickpea fritters at Ya3ani.
  • Mezze & shisha — hummus, grills and a shisha to finish at the Middle Eastern lounges.
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Persian fine dining — and a note on the bar

For a special halal dinner on the coast, Shiraz and Rumi are hard to beat — halal-certified food, beautiful rooms and a real occasion feel. Order a mixed kabab platter with saffron rice, a khoresh stew to share, and ask for tahdig (crispy rice) if it is available. One thing to note: some of these upscale Persian venues have a licensed bar serving alcohol alongside their halal-certified food, so if strict separation matters to you, confirm the arrangements when you book.

Persian and Middle Eastern food is the coast’s calling card, but the beachfront strips of Surfers Paradise and Broadbeach serve up much more — including halal-certified Indonesian and Malaysian. That is where we head next.

Surfers Paradise & Broadbeach: Beachfront Halal

The bright, buzzing strips of Surfers Paradise and Broadbeach are the tourist heart of the Gold Coast — and, thanks to the coast’s status as a halal-holiday hotspot, they are packed with halal options beyond the Persian restaurants. This is where you will find halal-certified Indonesian and Malaysian, Indian, charcoal chicken and more, much of it a short walk from the beach or the light rail. For a Muslim family on holiday, you can eat well here for a whole week without repeating a cuisine.

Two names stand out. Little Bali Street Food brings halal-certified Indonesian and Balinese street food to Surfers Paradise, and Kopitalk — a 100% halal, Muslim-owned Malaysian restaurant inside the Sovereign Resort — serves laksa, barramundi and even a Malaysian buffet. Add Indian and charcoal chicken, and the beachfront has all bases covered.

VenueAreaCuisineKnown for
Little Bali Street FoodSurfers ParadiseIndonesian / BalineseHalal-certified — nasi goreng, satay and Balinese street food
KopitalkSurfers Paradise (Sovereign Resort)Malaysian100% halal, Muslim-owned — laksa, barramundi and a Malaysian buffet
Malay HouseGold CoastMalaysianHalal-certified — seafood curry laksa and fried barramundi
The Tandoori PlaceSurfers ParadiseIndianTandoori grills and North Indian curries with halal meat
Surfers Paradise Halal ChickenSurfers ParadiseCharcoal chickenHalal charcoal and fried chicken near the strip
ManihaniSurfers ParadiseIndianPopular halal Indian curries and biryani

Beachfront dishes to try

  • Nasi goreng & satay — Indonesian fried rice and peanut-sauce skewers at Little Bali.
  • Curry laksa — Malaysian spicy coconut noodle soup at Kopitalk or Malay House.
  • Nasi lemak — coconut rice with sambal, egg and sides, the Malaysian classic.
  • Tandoori & butter chicken — clay-oven grills and rich curries at The Tandoori Place.
  • Fried barramundi — a local halal favourite, Malaysian-style with chilli sauce.
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Eating halal on a Gold Coast holiday

The Gold Coast is one of the easiest places in Australia to holiday halal. Base yourself in Surfers Paradise or Broadbeach and you are within walking or light-rail distance of halal-certified Persian (Shiraz), Indonesian (Little Bali), Malaysian (Kopitalk), Lebanese manoush (Ya3ani) and more. Many venues are used to Muslim visitors and will happily confirm halal status and separated preparation. For theme-park days, pack snacks or plan a halal dinner back near the strip, as on-site park food is generally not halal.

The beachfront is where the tourists eat, but the coast’s resident Muslim community centres a little inland — around Southport and the Gold Coast Mosque at Arundel — where you will find famous halal seafood and more. That is next.

Southport & Labrador: Seafood & the Mosque

Away from the tourist strips, the coast’s resident Muslim community centres around Southport and Labrador, near the Gold Coast Mosque at Arundel. This is everyday-halal territory — and it has a treat you will not find in most cities: halal seafood by the water. Southport also has the second-largest cluster of halal restaurants on the coast, spanning halal Chinese, Uyghur, charcoal chicken and Indian, and it is home to the area’s main halal butchers (covered later).

The star is Charis Seafoods at Labrador, on the Broadwater — reputedly Queensland’s biggest seafood retailer, and a Gold Coast institution for fresh halal fish and chips, calamari and prawns eaten outdoors by the water. Below are the Southport and Labrador highlights.

VenueAreaCuisineKnown for
Charis SeafoodsLabrador (Broadwater)SeafoodFamous halal fish and chips, calamari and prawns by the water
KINGS Steak & SeafoodLabradorSteak / seafoodHalal steak and seafood — a popular local favourite
Deep South ChickenSouthportChinese100% halal-certified Chinese and lamb dishes
Uyghur CuisineSouthportUyghurHalal Central Asian noodles and cumin lamb
Charcoal Chicken LabradorLabradorCharcoal chickenWell-loved halal charcoal chicken
Curry Express / Swaad E IndiaSouthportIndianHalal Indian curries and tandoori
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Halal fish and chips on the Broadwater

One of the most quintessentially Gold Coast halal experiences is a feed of fresh fish and chips at Charis Seafoods in Labrador, eaten at the outdoor tables overlooking the Broadwater as the pelicans wait for scraps. Grab grilled or battered fish, calamari and prawns — the seafood is halal — and enjoy a laid-back, affordable, very Queensland meal. It is family-friendly and a world away from the glitz of Surfers, in the best way.

The Suburbs: Nerang, Robina & Beyond

Beyond the coast and Southport, the growing residential suburbs — Nerang, Robina, Mermaid and around — have their own scattering of halal options, handy if you live inland. Expect Malaysian, charcoal chicken, kebabs and the odd halal-friendly chain, with new spots appearing as the Muslim community grows.

VenueAreaCuisineKnown for
Little MalaysiaNerangMalaysianHalal Malaysian favourites — laksa, roti and nasi lemak
Kebab & Coffee HouseGold Coast suburbsKebabsReliable halal kebabs and snack packs
Nando’sVariousPortuguese chickenHalal chicken at participating stores — confirm by outlet

With the coast, Southport and the suburbs covered, let’s finish with two everyday essentials: the Gold Coast’s booming halal cafe and acai-bowl scene, and where to buy your halal meat.

Halal Cafes, Brunch & Acai on the Gold Coast

The Gold Coast is one of Australia’s brunch and acai-bowl capitals, and its halal cafe scene has boomed right alongside — perfect for a light, healthy start before the beach. There is a fully halal, Muslim-owned cafe at Pacific Fair, halal-friendly brunch spots along the coast, and a whole culture of acai bowls piled high with fruit and granola. Here is where to go for a halal daytime bite or something sweet.

CafeAreaKnown for
Flamingco CafeBroadbeach (Pacific Fair)100% halal, Muslim-owned — burgers, Arabic breakfast (shakshuka) and acai bowls
Velaa CafeSurfers ParadisePopular halal-friendly cafe for brunch and coffee
Andonis Cafe & BarGold Coast (multiple)All-day brunch with halal meat options and huge acai bowls
Goji Granola Bar & CafeRobina & Burleigh HeadsFamous for massive acai and granola bowls
Bam Bam BakehouseMermaid BeachCult bakery-cafe with halal-friendly treats (the almond croissant is a favourite)
The Cardamom PodBroadbeachBeloved vegetarian cafe — smoothie bowls, vegan treats and acai
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The Gold Coast halal brunch and acai run

For a healthy halal start to a beach day, Flamingco at Pacific Fair is fully halal and does everything from shakshuka to acai bowls. For acai specifically, Goji Granola in Robina and Burleigh piles them high, and Andonis does big bowls alongside a halal-meat brunch menu. Vegetarian cafes like The Cardamom Pod sidestep the meat question entirely. As always, confirm halal status for any meat dishes at the halal-friendly (rather than fully certified) spots.

Halal Butchers on the Gold Coast

Cooking at home is the cheapest way to eat halal, and the Gold Coast’s halal butchers are concentrated around Southport and Labrador, close to the community and the mosque. Expect fresh halal beef, lamb, chicken and goat, and in some cases house-made sausages.

ButcherAreaNotes
Continental Halal Meats (Mabrouk & Sons)Southport (Beale St)Family-owned, well-loved halal butcher supporting local community projects
Gold Coast Halal MeatsLabrador (Brown St)Fresh halal meat with house-made sausages
Oceania Halal ServicesArundelHalal red-meat processing and certification, affiliated with the Gold Coast Mosque

Beyond dedicated butchers, several Asian and Middle Eastern grocers around Southport and the coast sell halal meat and pantry staples, and some major supermarkets stock halal-certified chicken — check the label for a recognised certification mark. For more on supermarket ranges, see our guide to shopping at ALDI Australia.

The Gold Coast's Halal Scene by the Numbers

The Gold Coast’s halal food scene is shaped by two forces at once — a growing resident Muslim community and a booming stream of Muslim tourists — and the result punches well above the city’s size.

FactDetail
Australia’s Muslim population (2021 census)Around 813,000 people, about 3.2% of the country
A halal-tourism hotspotThe Gold Coast draws many Muslim visitors from the Gulf, Malaysia and Indonesia, driving demand for halal-certified dining
Signature cuisinePersian — the coast has some of the best halal Persian restaurants in Australia
Gold Coast MosqueAt Arundel, run by the Islamic Society of Gold Coast
Local certifierOceania Halal Services, affiliated with the Gold Coast Mosque
Where the community livesConcentrated around Southport, Labrador and the northern suburbs

That mix of tourism and community is exactly why the Gold Coast offers both upscale, halal-certified fine dining for visitors and honest, everyday halal food for locals — often in the same few suburbs.

How to Verify a Halal Certificate

If certification matters to you, it helps to recognise Australia’s main halal certifying bodies. A genuine certificate will name one of these authorities, and their certification marks are protected under Australian trade-mark law.

  • ANIC — the Australian National Imams Council
  • AFIC — the Australian Federation of Islamic Councils
  • Halal Australia
  • Halal Certification Authority Australia (HCAA)
  • SICHMA — the Supreme Islamic Council of Halal Meat in Australia
  • Oceania Halal Services — a Gold Coast-based certifier affiliated with the local mosque
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Certified, Muslim-owned, or halal options — and how to check

A displayed logo can be confirmed as genuine and current by contacting the certifying body, which keeps registers of the businesses it certifies. But many excellent Muslim-owned venues use halal meat without paying for formal certification, so a missing logo does not mean a place is not halal. On the Gold Coast, note that some upscale venues serve alcohol alongside halal-certified food; when it matters, ask about the meat supplier, certification, and whether pork or alcohol is on the premises.

Real-Life Examples: Eating Halal on the Gold Coast

Here is how eating halal actually plays out across the Gold Coast.

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Example 1: A halal holiday in Surfers Paradise

Base yourself in Surfers and eat your way around the world without a car. Start with a manoush and acai bowl at Ya3ani, grab halal-certified Indonesian street food at Little Bali for lunch, and book a special Persian dinner at Shiraz. Another night, a Malaysian feast at Kopitalk in the Sovereign Resort. Fit in a halal brunch at Flamingco in Pacific Fair between beach and theme-park days. It is one of Australia’s easiest halal holidays.
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Example 2: A local family in Southport

Living around Southport or Labrador, you have the essentials close by. Do the week’s meat shop at Mabrouk & Sons or Gold Coast Halal Meats, grab a fresh halal fish-and-chips feed at Charis Seafoods on the Broadwater, and pick up halal Chinese at Deep South or charcoal chicken at Labrador for an easy dinner. The Gold Coast Mosque at Arundel anchors it all.

Craving a specific cuisine? The Gold Coast covers a lot: Persian (Shiraz, Rumi, Baba Joon); Middle Eastern and Turkish (Mecca Bah, Ya3ani, Alachati); Indonesian (Little Bali); Malaysian (Kopitalk, Malay House, Little Malaysia); Indian (The Tandoori Place, Manihani); halal Chinese and Uyghur (Deep South, Southport); and halal seafood (Charis). For a holiday coast, that is a remarkable spread.

How to Find Halal Food Anywhere on the Gold Coast

  • Follow the local halal food pages. Instagram and Facebook accounts like Halal Food Brisbane & Gold Coast and Halal Food – Gold Coast post new openings, halal-certified spots and honest reviews.
  • Use halal directories and guides. Queensland Halal Eats, HalalHQ and Zabihah let you search halal venues by area, and the official Queensland tourism site lists Muslim-friendly restaurants.
  • Search by area on Google Maps. “Halal restaurants + [Surfers Paradise / Southport / Broadbeach]” almost always turns up nearby options with hours and reviews.
  • Look for the certificate, and just ask. Certified venues usually display their certificate; if unsure, ask staff about the meat supplier, certification and separated cooking.

Frequently Asked Questions

Final Thoughts

For a holiday coast, the Gold Coast delivers a genuinely excellent halal food scene — anchored by some of the best Persian dining in the country, backed by halal-certified Indonesian, Malaysian and Middle Eastern, famous halal seafood, and a thriving cafe culture. Use this guide as your map, confirm halal status directly with each venue, and follow the local halal food pages to keep up with new openings. Exploring halal food elsewhere in Queensland or beyond? See our companion guides to halal food in Brisbane and Sydney.

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