You don’t need a tour guide or a tour company to eat your way through Saigon. What you need is a rough route, a willingness to point at things and say yes, and an appetite that doesn’t give up after the first two stops. This self-guided street food walk covers the most concentrated eating area of the city — starting in District 1 and moving into District 3 — and can be completed in 3–4 hours if you pace yourself, or stretched into a full day if you take breaks at coffee shops along the way.
The route: District 1 → District 3
Stop 1 — Breakfast: Bánh mì cart near Ben Thanh (6:30–7:30am)
Start near the Ben Thanh Market area on Lê Thánh Tôn or Phan Bội Châu, where street carts set up from 6am. Order a classic bánh mì thịt nguội (cold cut bánh mì) or bánh mì trứng (egg). Eat standing up. Cost: 25,000–35,000 VND.
Stop 2 — Coffee: A plastic-stool café (7:30–8:30am)
Walk west on Lê Thánh Tôn toward the residential streets of District 1. Any coffee shop with plastic stools on the pavement will serve cà phê sữa đá for 20,000–25,000 VND. Sit, drink slowly, watch the street wake up. This is mandatory — not optional.
Stop 3 — Mid-morning snack: Bánh cuốn stall (9–10am)
Head toward Hai Bà Trưng Street. Look for a bánh cuốn stall (steamed rice-flour rolls with minced pork) — these are usually set up by 8am and run until noon. Soft, delicate, and completely unlike the dishes you’ve already eaten. Cost: 40,000–55,000 VND.
Stop 4 — Lunch: Cơm tấm in District 3 (11:30am–12:30pm)
Walk or Grab to Võ Văn Tần Street, District 3, for cơm tấm. Order sườn bì chả (grilled pork chop + pork skin + steamed pork egg loaf) with extra nước mắm. Cost: 55,000–75,000 VND.
Stop 5 — Afternoon: Chè (Vietnamese sweet soup) (2–3pm)
Look for a chè stall in the streets around District 3’s residential area. Order chè ba màu (three-colour dessert with mung bean, red bean, and pandan jelly over shaved ice) or chè đậu xanh (mung bean sweet soup). Cost: 20,000–30,000 VND.
Stop 6 — Sunset: Bò né or gỏi cuốn (5:30–6:30pm)
End the walk with bò né (sizzling beef and eggs on a hot plate, served with baguette) from a District 3 stall, or return to District 1 for gỏi cuốn (fresh spring rolls) before heading to a rooftop bar for sunset. Cost: 50,000–80,000 VND.
Total cost for the full walk
Budget approximately 200,000–280,000 VND (~$8–11 USD) for all six stops including drinks. This covers all food and two coffees.
- Best Things to Do in Saigon (Hub)
- Ultimate Saigon Food Guide
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- District 4 Street Food Guide
- How to Eat in Saigon for $5 a Day