Saigon’s Finest Tables
Dining in Saigon
Ho Chi Minh City has become, quietly and then all at once, one of the most consequential dining cities in Asia. In 2023, Michelin arrived. By 2025, five restaurants in the city held one-star status — Anan Saigon, CieL, Coco Dining, AKUNA, and Long Trieu — with a growing cohort of Bib Gourmand and Green Star recognitions reinforcing what informed diners had known for a decade: Saigon cooks with the same intelligence and ambition as Tokyo, Paris, or Copenhagen, at a fraction of the price.
The city operates across several distinct dining zones. District 1 — dense, vertical, permanently in motion — is where Michelin restaurants share street corners with pho shops that have been ladling broth since before reunification. The Bitexco Financial Tower and Park Hyatt Saigon anchor the power-dining north end; the markets of Ben Thanh define the south. Across the Saigon River, Thao Dien (now officially Thu Duc City) offers colonial villas converted into intimate fine dining rooms — CieL and La Villa among them — in a neighbourhood with the considered pace of a French provincial town.
Saigon’s dining culture is fast and generous. Reservations at starred restaurants are essential one to three weeks ahead; the most in-demand tables — CieL seats only 15, AKUNA operates Tuesday to Saturday — require forward planning of a different order. Service across the city is warm, precise, and rarely showy. Dress codes at fine dining restaurants expect smart casual at minimum; the Reverie Saigon’s Long Trieu and the Park Hyatt demand more.
Street food remains the city’s soul. Eat a bowl of bun bo Hue at 7am from a pavement stall. Order banh mi from the cart outside your hotel. These are not consolation prizes — they are the foundation that makes the Michelin-starred cooking of Anan Saigon and Bom legible. The city’s finest chefs will tell you the same thing: the market is where it begins.
Thao Dien / District 2 (Thu Duc City) — The village that became a dining destination. Tree-lined streets, colonial villas-turned-restaurants. CieL, La Villa, The Deck Saigon. Quieter, more romantic, requires a taxi.
District 3 — Local professionals and the creative class. Coco Dining, Nén Light. More residential, less tourist-facing — which is precisely the point.
Binh Thanh (Landmark 81) — The vertical frontier. S79 on the 79th floor offers a dining experience that is as much about altitude as it is about cuisine.
Price — Tasting menus at starred restaurants run 2,500,000–3,500,000 VND per person (approximately USD 100–140). Mid-range fine dining: 800,000–1,500,000 VND. Outstanding value by any global benchmark.
Dress Code — Smart casual at most fine dining venues. The Reverie Saigon (Long Trieu) and Park Hyatt (Square One) expect more. No shorts or flip-flops at starred restaurants.
Tipping — A 5–10% tip is appreciated but not obligatory. Many restaurants add a 5–10% service charge. Tipping in cash is preferred. At street food stalls, tipping is unusual and unnecessary.