Saigon is the kind of city that expands to fill whatever time you give it. One day is enough for a first impression. Three days is enough to feel like you understand the place. Five or more days is when you start discovering the city that locals actually live in. Here’s an honest breakdown of what each trip length allows you to do — and what you’ll have to leave behind.
One day in Saigon
If you have a single day — a stopover, a transit, or a bolt-on to a beach itinerary — prioritise the experiences that have the highest information-to-time ratio and that exist only in this city. In rough order:
- 7am: Breakfast bánh mì and coffee from a street cart (30 minutes)
- 8am: War Remnants Museum — arrive early, allow 1.5–2 hours
- 10am: Walk to Reunification Palace (15 minutes on foot)
- 11:30am: Cơm tấm lunch at a neighbourhood restaurant
- 1pm: Notre Dame Cathedral and Central Post Office (45 minutes)
- 2pm: Jade Emperor Pagoda by Grab (30 minutes)
- 4pm: Coffee in District 3 residential area
- 6pm: Sunset drink on a rooftop in District 1
- 8pm: District 4 for ốc (snails) and bia hơi
This is a full day. It covers the major historical sites and two genuinely local eating experiences. You won’t see everything, but you’ll see the things that matter most.
Three days in Saigon
Day 1: Historical day — War Remnants Museum, Reunification Palace, Notre Dame, Jade Emperor Pagoda. Dinner in District 4.
Day 2: Cu Chi Tunnels day trip (full day, depart 8am return 5pm). Evening: early dinner and rooftop drink to recover.
Day 3: Local Saigon day — Ben Thanh Market (early morning, for the wet market section), District 5 (Chinatown) food walk, afternoon in District 3 coffee shops, evening street food walk.
Three days is the sweet spot for a first visit. You cover the essential history, one major day trip, and have enough time to actually eat properly rather than rushing between landmarks.
Five days and beyond
Days 4 and 5 open up the city’s slower pleasures: the residential neighbourhood of Binh Thanh, the design and café culture of the Thao Dien area (District 2), a morning in one of the wholesale markets (Binh Tay, Tan Dinh), a Mekong Delta day trip, and the leisure of spending two hours at a single coffee shop with a good book. Saigon reveals itself differently to visitors who aren’t rushing, and five days is when that starts to happen.
- Best Things to Do in Saigon (Hub)
- 1-Day Saigon Itinerary
- 3-Day Saigon Itinerary
- Day Trips from Saigon
- Saigon vs Hanoi