REVIEW · HO CHI MINH CITY
Ho Chi Minh City Street Food Private Tour With Dancing Bar
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Vietnam Package Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Street food and nightclubs in four hours. That mix is what makes this Ho Chi Minh City street food tour feel like more than a meal. I like the street-food-first rhythm and the chance to end in dance clubs like Lush and Supper Club. One drawback to plan for: food, drinks, and alcohol aren’t included, so your actual spend depends on what you order.
This tour is built around a simple idea: you’re walking the night with an English-speaking guide and getting moved around with good transportation. I also like the local-student angle, which tends to make the night feel more like hanging out with people who know the streets than following a rigid script. In the feedback I reviewed, a guide named Queenie got strong praise for taking people to many places and running the tour well, while one negative note mentioned a guide named Jack and felt the overall value was weak.
Because it’s a late-night walking route with popular nightlife blocks, it’s not the best match if you dislike crowds or tight spaces. Also, it’s for people who can handle moderate walking, light sun protection needs, and standing around for photos and food tasting.
In This Review
- Key things I’d notice before you book
- How This 4-Hour Ho Chi Minh City Night Plan Actually Feels
- Street-Food First: Why the Start Matters
- The Gangs or Bùi Viện Stops: Beer, Sidewalk Seating, and People-Watching
- Bùi Viện Walking Street: Music, Food Energy, and Photo Stops
- The View Rooftop Bar: Optional Elevation Without Overthinking It
- Dancing at Lush and Supper Club: When the Night Turns Loud
- Price and Logistics: Is $35 Per Person Actually Good Value?
- Comfort, Safety, and Rules That Affect Your Night
- Mixed Feedback: How I’d Use the Ratings to Decide
- Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Should Skip It)
- Should You Book This Ho Chi Minh City Street Food and Dancing Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Ho Chi Minh City street food and nightlife tour?
- What is the price per person?
- What’s included in the tour?
- Are food and alcoholic beverages included?
- Where are the pickup and drop-off locations?
- What should I bring for the night?
- Who is the tour not suitable for?
- Can I cancel for a full refund?
Key things I’d notice before you book

- Street-food tastings built into a nightlife route instead of a daytime-only food crawl
- Sidewalk beer stops around Bùi Viện and The Gangs, using the same casual setup you see locally
- Club time in Lush and Supper Club, aimed at people who want to dance, not just watch
- Optional rooftop time at The View Rooftop Bar for photos and sky-high views
- Hotel pickup and drop-off in District 1, so you’re not hunting transport after the night
- Mixed reviews on value, with guide quality mentioned by name (Queenie positively)
How This 4-Hour Ho Chi Minh City Night Plan Actually Feels

Think of this as a fast-moving “after dark” sampler. You start with walking and food tasting, then you shift toward bars and nightlife blocks, and you finish with dancing at popular clubs. It’s scheduled as a 4-hour experience, so you’ll want to arrive ready to keep moving.
You’ll get an English-speaking guide and hotel pickup and drop-off. Pickup is in District 1 (the tour lists two pickup options within that area), and the drop-off is also in District 1. If you’re staying outside District 1, you’ll want to confirm it’s still convenient, because the route is clearly designed around central meeting points.
A quick reality check: this isn’t a “sit and sip” tour. You’re doing a moderate amount of walking, and the nightlife areas are exactly the kind of places where sound, crowds, and curbside activity get intense. If you’re the type who gets flustered in busy streets, this can wear you down faster than a daytime walking tour.
You can also read our reviews of more food & drink experiences in Ho Chi Minh City
Street-Food First: Why the Start Matters

The tour is designed to begin with iconic Vietnamese street food. That matters because it sets the tone before bars and clubs take over. If you go straight to nightlife venues on an empty stomach, you’ll spend the first hour trying to catch up with food instead of enjoying the route.
During the street-food portion, you’re not just sightseeing. The tour includes food tasting, plus a guided component like photo stops and sightseeing along the way. The message here is practical: the guide helps you navigate what to try and when, so you’re not relying on luck in the moment.
What to expect from this part: you’ll be out on streets where food is served quickly and eaten casually. That style is part of the charm, but it also means you should come with basic patience. Expect fast service, shared sidewalk vibes, and the kind of informal energy that makes Bùi Viện famous after dark.
The Gangs or Bùi Viện Stops: Beer, Sidewalk Seating, and People-Watching

After the food, the tour shifts to a beer stop at a sidewalk bar. The provided description is clear about the feel: cold beer on plastic stools, the kind of setup locals use. That’s useful for your budget and your expectations. You’re not paying for fancy table service. You’re paying for time with a guide and an itinerary that keeps you moving.
The highlights point to two likely anchor areas for this part of the night: The Gangs or the Bùi Viện street area. Bùi Viện is the kind of street where lights, music, and foot traffic blend into one long after-dark scene. Even if you’re not a party person, it’s a great place to get your bearings fast about how Saigon night life actually works.
A consideration: this segment can be noisy and crowded. If you’re hoping for quiet conversation or a calm atmosphere, you may find the sidewalk bar experience a bit chaotic. If you’re okay with a fun, social vibe, this is where the tour starts to feel like you’re really in the city’s nighttime rhythm.
Bùi Viện Walking Street: Music, Food Energy, and Photo Stops

The tour calls out Bùi Viện Walking Street specifically, and that’s the right word for what you’ll find: a walking corridor filled with food and music. This block is famous for night energy, and the guide’s job is basically to help you see it in an organized way instead of wandering in random circles.
You should expect more than one street-level moment here: chances to keep photos moving, time to take in the scene, and food-related stops connected to the overall tasting plan. The tour also includes a guided tour and sightseeing, so the guide isn’t just “show up, point, leave.” You’ll get context along the way, even if it’s not a museum-style narrative.
If you want a more Instagram-friendly experience, plan to bring your camera and use comfortable settings. The tour lists no flash photography, so you’ll want to rely on natural light and your phone or camera’s normal low-light performance.
The View Rooftop Bar: Optional Elevation Without Overthinking It
One of the highlights mentions The View Rooftop Bar as optional, with stunning views. Rooftops are a smart addition to a street-food-and-clubs tour because they give you a break from the density of the street. It also helps your photos: you get a wider city view instead of only street-level angles.
Since it’s labeled optional, don’t treat it as guaranteed. If you’re short on energy or you’re more focused on dancing, you might skip the rooftop and spend more time in the nightlife zone. If you do go up, think of it as a photo and view window, not a long meal stop.
Remember the tour’s core rules: moderate walking, late-night energy, and no flash photography. Rooftop bars can be crowded too, so it’s still a social space. Go with the mindset of quick and fun rather than expect an empty viewpoint.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Ho Chi Minh City
Dancing at Lush and Supper Club: When the Night Turns Loud

This is where the tour matches its title most directly. The highlights mention Lush and Supper Club as clubs where you can dance. This is aimed at young students and people who want nightlife that goes beyond bars.
Practically speaking, a nightclub portion changes everything: lighting gets darker, sound gets louder, and moving around gets harder. If you’re the type who hates tight spaces or gets anxious with crowds, take the tour’s suitability note seriously. The tour is listed as not suitable for people with claustrophobia, and that makes sense once you enter crowded dance venues.
What I like about adding specific clubs instead of vague “we’ll see where you go” is that it signals a consistent goal. Still, it’s not a private VIP table situation. You’re there to experience the scene, not to be treated like a celebrity.
Price and Logistics: Is $35 Per Person Actually Good Value?

At $35 per person for 4 hours, you’re paying for a guide, hotel pickup and drop-off, and good transportation. The tour does not include food, drink, alcoholic beverages, or tips. That’s the key piece for value.
So here’s the math you should do before you book. If you plan to eat and drink during the night anyway, the guide becomes a worthwhile shortcut: you’re buying direction, tastings, and a planned route. But if you assume the price covers most of your eating and drinking, you’ll feel squeezed fast. The tour explicitly excludes alcohol because they don’t know what you drink, which is basically them saying your drink choices are up to you and your budget.
Also watch for this: nightlife tours can feel overpriced when the ride time and walking time feel misaligned with what you expected. One negative review note said a private tour in a car felt like an entire waste of money, so it’s smart to set expectations. You’re paying for coordination. You still need to spend on your own food and drinks.
Given all that, I see this as good value if you want a guided nightlife structure and you’re comfortable treating the night as a small travel budget exercise.
Comfort, Safety, and Rules That Affect Your Night

This tour lists several practical “show up ready” items. Bring comfortable shoes, a hat, camera, sunscreen, and insect repellent. Even at night, you’ll likely be in open-air areas, and those bug bites in Saigon can be aggressive.
Light clothing is recommended, plus hydration is important. The tour also includes a simple reminder to keep belongings secure and to stay aware while you’re moving through busy nightlife streets.
Rules are also part of the experience:
- No smoking
- No flash photography
- No littering
- No touching plants
Those aren’t just formalities. Flash can ruin the vibe and create issues in crowded venues. Littering is a big no in places where streets are already tight and active.
Finally, check the suitability limits:
- Not suitable for pregnant women
- Not suitable for people with claustrophobia
- Not suitable for wheelchair users
That’s not a minor note. Nightlife crowds and club layout are exactly the reason.
Mixed Feedback: How I’d Use the Ratings to Decide

The rating shown is 2.7 across 4 reviews, and that tells you the experience isn’t uniformly perfect. One review gave a very low score and called the tour not worth it, complaining about the value of a private car situation. On the positive side, a guide named Queenie was specifically praised for doing the tour well and taking guests to many places.
So how do you use that? You use it as a planning lens, not as a dealbreaker by itself. This kind of tour can vary more than a daytime museum visit because nightlife is personal. If you want a party-forward route with lots of stops, you’ll probably rate it higher. If you expected food and drinks included, or you hate being moved around quickly, you’ll probably feel the mismatch.
My practical advice: go in expecting a guided route plus nightlife access, then budget for your own eating and drinks.
Who This Tour Fits Best (and Who Should Skip It)
This works well if you:
- Want a guided street-food start and then real nightlife
- Like meeting new people and walking through the busy blocks
- Are comfortable dancing in clubs and handling loud environments
- Stay in District 1 and want pickup and drop-off
This is a tough fit if you:
- Get anxious in crowds or tight spaces (the tour lists claustrophobia as a no)
- Need fully accessible routes (wheelchair users aren’t supported per the listing)
- Expected food and alcohol to be included in the $35
If you’re a solo traveler who likes structured fun, it can be a strong match. If you’re a couple who wants quiet romance, consider whether the Bùi Viện atmosphere is your scene.
Should You Book This Ho Chi Minh City Street Food and Dancing Tour?
I’d book it if your goal is a fun, late-night structure: street food tastings, a sidewalk beer moment, and then club dancing at places like Lush and Supper Club. The hotel pickup in District 1 and the English guide are the practical advantages that make this easier than assembling your own night plan.
I would not book it if you want food and drinks covered in the price, or if you prefer low-noise, slow-paced sightseeing. The tour’s cost is clear enough, but the spending mindset needs to be right: plan to pay for your own meals and drinks during the night.
If you want my simplest decision rule: book it only if you’re ready to treat it as an organized nightlife evening, not an all-inclusive dinner and drinks package.
FAQ
How long is the Ho Chi Minh City street food and nightlife tour?
It runs for 4 hours.
What is the price per person?
The price is $35 per person.
What’s included in the tour?
You get an English-speaking tour guide, hotel pickup and drop-off, and good quality transportation.
Are food and alcoholic beverages included?
No. Food, drink, and alcoholic beverages are not included.
Where are the pickup and drop-off locations?
Pickup and drop-off are in Ho Chi Minh City, specifically around District 1.
What should I bring for the night?
Bring comfortable shoes, a hat, a camera, sunscreen, and insect repellent.
Who is the tour not suitable for?
It’s not suitable for pregnant women, people with claustrophobia, or wheelchair users.
Can I cancel for a full refund?
Yes. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.





























