Ho Chi Minh City.
Ho Chi Minh City is what happens when a 320-year-old port town decides it wants to be the financial capital of Southeast Asia. Officially renamed in 1976 after reunification, the locals still call it Saigon — and that informal name carries the weight of the city’s identity. Where Hanoi conserves, Saigon expands. Where Hanoi reflects, Saigon trades. Where Hanoi is a 1,000-year base camp, Saigon is the engine.
10 million people, 8 million motorbikes, 24 districts, one French colonial spine running through District 1.Saigon is the youngest big city in Asia — and the one most willing to tell you what it wants.
The luxury infrastructure is mature here. Park Hyatt Saigon, opened 2005, anchors the Lam Sơn Square. The Reverie Saigon — the only Leading Hotels of the World property in the city — pushed Vietnam into the global ultra-luxury conversation in 2015. Anan Saigon earned the country’s first Michelin star in District 1. The southern food culture is broader, sweeter, and more international than the north.
The heat is real. Saigon sits 10° north of the equator and doesn’t have a winter — daily highs run 88–95°F year-round, humidity 80%+ from May to November. The trip works on a Saigon-rhythm: pool morning, museum afternoon, dinner late, drink later, sleep late. The motorbike traffic looks chaotic until you understand it. The colonial bones in District 1 — Notre Dame Cathedral (1880), the Central Post Office (Eiffel, 1891), the Opera House (1900), the Reunification Palace (1966) — are where the city’s history lives.
Then you eat your way through the night — bánh mì from a District 3 corner, phở at a 1960s family stall, a Michelin tasting at Anan, a cocktail at Layla, a rooftop at the Reverie. The order changes. The volume doesn’t.
Before you arrive.
US Consulate General HCMC. 4 Lê Duẩn, District 1. Tel: +84 28 3520 4200. Keep both on file.
1698 to today.
Saigon orbits District 1 — the French colonial core. Lam Sơn Square sits at the center, with Park Hyatt on one side, the Opera House on another, Notre Dame Cathedral and the Central Post Office two blocks north. The Reunification Palace, where the war ended on April 30, 1975, is six blocks south. This is the spine of the trip — 2 km of walkable colonial Vietnam — every Aman, Park Hyatt, Reverie guest stays inside this square mile.
District 3 is the residential cousin — leafy boulevards, mid-century villas, the better banh mi corner. District 2 / Thảo Điền is the expat enclave with the international restaurants. District 7 / Phú Mỹ Hưng is the modern financial district. The 95% of Saigon visitors never leaves District 1, and 90% of why they came is in District 1. The other districts are bonus chapters.
Reunification Palace + War Remnants Museum.
You cannot understand Vietnam without understanding the war that ended here. This half-day is the cultural anchor of the trip — the two stops that put Saigon’s present in context.
Start at the Reunification Palace. The presidential palace of South Vietnam from 1966 to April 30, 1975 — the morning a North Vietnamese tank crashed through the front gates, ending the war and creating modern Vietnam. The palace is preserved exactly as it was that morning — the war room with the maps still pinned, the helicopter on the roof, the underground bunker, the radio room. The tank that broke the gates sits in the courtyard.
Walk 10 minutes north to the War Remnants Museum. This is not an easy room. It is the Vietnamese account of the 1955–1975 American War — Agent Orange exhibits, weapon displays, photo galleries of children born after the war into chemical-warfare birth defects. The Pulitzer-winning photographs by Eddie Adams and Nick Ut are on the walls. It is necessary. It is also the most important museum in Vietnam.
End at Ben Thanh Market for a lighter beat — lunch at a stall, coffee, a slow walk back to the hotel.
- WHEN
- Half-day · 9am Palace, 11:30am War Remnants, 1pm Ben Thanh. Palace open 7:30am–4pm.
- ROUTE
- Reunification Palace → War Remnants Museum (10 min walk) → Ben Thanh Market (15 min walk).
- ENTRY
- Reunification Palace ₫65,000. War Remnants ₫40,000. Both cash.
- WE ARRANGE
- Private historian guide — a Vietnamese veteran’s daughter who narrates both with depth most guides can’t.
Cu Chi Tunnels day trip.
An hour northwest of Saigon, the Vietnamese countryside hides 200 km of hand-dug tunnels — the Cu Chi Tunnel system that the Viet Cong used to wage guerrilla war from 1948 (against the French) through 1975 (against the Americans). The tunnels were a small city underground: living quarters, kitchens (with chimneys that diffused smoke through the soil), hospitals, weapon factories, command posts. Multi-level systems went 10 meters deep. The tunnels were so effective the Americans dropped 240,000 tons of bombs on the region trying to destroy them — and never did.
The visit is part demonstration, part walk-through. Guides show the bamboo-spike traps the Viet Cong used, the camouflaged tunnel entrances (some no wider than 30 cm), the kitchens, the firing positions. The tour includes a section of tunnel widened for tourists where you can crawl through 40 meters of the original passage. Athletes will get through it without issue; claustrophobics should opt out.
The morning is sobering, athletic, and culturally clarifying. It pairs with Hero 1 (Reunification Palace + War Remnants) as the second half of the war-history anchor of the trip.
- WHEN
- Full day · 7am departure, 1pm return. Cooler in the morning, less midday crowd.
- WHERE
- Cu Chi District · 70 km northwest of Saigon · 60–75 min by private car.
- ENTRY
- ₫150,000 (~$6).
- BRING
- Closed shoes, long pants (tunnels are dirty), water.
- WE ARRANGE
- Private historian guide (English-fluent, often a veteran’s family member), private car (Mercedes V-Class), Mekong Delta extension if you want it.
The French District 1 walk.
District 1 is the French colonial spine of the city — most of it built between 1860 and 1910, when Saigon was the capital of French Cochinchina. The afternoon walk threads four buildings that define the architectural argument of the city.
Start at Notre Dame Cathedral, completed in 1880. Twin neo-Romanesque bell towers, red brick imported from Marseille, stained glass from Chartres. Mass is still held in Vietnamese and French. (Note: the Cathedral has been under restoration since 2017 and may have scaffolding — interior closed periodically.) The square out front is the photo.
Cross the street to the Central Post Office, completed 1891. Designed by Gustave Eiffel the same year he finished the tower in Paris. Steel-and-glass vaulted ceiling, two enormous wartime maps painted on the back walls (1892 maps of Vietnam-Cambodia + Saigon telegraph lines), wood phone booths still in use. The most photographed interior in Saigon for a reason.
Walk south down Dong Khoi Street (formerly Rue Catinat) to the Opera House, completed 1900. Three-story Beaux-Arts facade, the same architects as the Petit Palais in Paris. Still hosts ballet and orchestra performances 4 nights a week.
End at the Hotel Continental across from the Opera. Opened 1880, immortalized as the setting of Graham Greene’s The Quiet American. Have a drink on the verandah at sunset. The “Continental shelf” — where war correspondents wrote dispatches in the 1960s — is still in use.
- WHEN
- Half-day · best 3pm–6:30pm. The Post Office closes 6pm; sunset on the Continental verandah is 6:15pm.
- ROUTE
- Notre Dame → Central Post Office → Dong Khoi Street → Opera House → Hotel Continental.
- DISTANCE
- ~1.5km · 3 hours with stops.
- WE ARRANGE
- Private architectural historian guide (the Saigon Architecture Foundation specialists), Opera House ticket if a performance falls in your nights.
Mekong Delta day trip.
The Mekong River — the 12th longest river in the world — fans into 9 distributaries before reaching the South China Sea, which is why the Vietnamese call the southern delta Cửu Long (“9 Dragons”). Saigon sits at the top of that fan. The Delta is the rice basket of Vietnam, the floating-market culture you’ve seen in every Vietnam photo essay, and the most distinct cultural ecosystem in southern Vietnam.
The TBT play is a private day to Mỹ Tho or Cần Thơ — 70 km south of Saigon. Mỹ Tho is closer (90 min by car), works for half-day trips. Cần Thơ is 3 hours away and only worth it as a full day or with an overnight at the Azerai Cần Thơ (sister hotel to Aman, on its own private island in the Hậu River).
The morning includes: Cái Răng floating market at dawn (Cần Thơ) — 400+ floating vessels trading produce, the boats hoist what they’re selling on a pole so you can read the market from a distance. River-village stops (rice-paper making, coconut-candy production, traditional river musicians). Lunch on a sampan in a coconut creek. Return to Saigon by 6pm.
- WHEN
- Full day · 6am departure, 7pm return. Or 2-day with overnight at Azerai Cần Thơ.
- WHERE
- Mỹ Tho (90 min south) for half-day · Cần Thơ (3 hours south) for full-day floating market.
- BRING
- Sun protection, hat, swim if you want, light rain jacket.
- WE ARRANGE
- Private car + driver + English-fluent guide, private sampan (not the group boats), Azerai overnight option, lunch on the river.
Skip Bùi Viện.
Saigon’s backpacker bar strip. Beer pong, hostel-tier nightlife, hawkers in your face every 20 meters. It is not the Saigon we book. Cocktail at Layla, the rooftop at Caravelle, or the lobby bar at Park Hyatt are the right after-dinner moves.
The cathedral is under scaffolding.
Notre Dame Cathedral has been under exterior restoration since 2017. Scaffolding wraps most of the facade — the interior is closed periodically. Still photogenic from the front square; just calibrate expectations. The Post Office across the street is the unobstructed photograph.
Don’t book the group Cu Chi day trip.
The 40-passenger bus tours from District 1 are 90-minute drives both ways with strangers, rushed tunnel sections, and no historian-level guide. Private car + private historian guide is the right way — same itinerary, half the time, real depth.
Where you sleep matters.
Park Hyatt Saigon
French-colonial style, opened 2005, sitting directly on Lam Sơn Square — the cultural heart of District 1. 252 rooms across 5 floors, white plaster facade, shuttered balconies, central courtyard pool framed by frangipani trees. The interiors are Saigon’s old French Indochina translated for the 21st century.
This is the standard. The Opera House is across the street. Notre Dame is 8 minutes’ walk. The Continental sits two blocks east. The Park Hyatt is where heads of state stay in Saigon. It’s where Kafele stays in Saigon.
- Park Suite — Lam Sơn Square view, marble bath, separate dressing room
- Square One — modern Italian + Vietnamese, the lobby restaurant
- Opera — French bistro, terrace looking onto the Square
- Xuân Spa — 6 treatment rooms, signature Vietnamese herbal ritual
- The courtyard pool — Park Hyatt’s secret garden behind the lobby
- Park Lounge afternoon high tea — French + Vietnamese pastries
The Reverie Saigon
Vietnam’s only Leading Hotels of the World member. Opened 2015 on floors 6–39 of the Times Square Tower in District 1. The interiors are a deliberate Italian-baroque statement — Murano-glass chandeliers, Visionnaire furniture, Bisazza mosaics, marble from Carrara. Some of the suites have furniture appraised in the high six figures. It is the most stylistically loud luxury hotel in Saigon, and the right choice for clients who want to feel the wealth, not just observe it.
This is the hotel for clients who land in Saigon to make a statement. Floor-to-ceiling Saigon River views from the 39th floor. Six restaurants on site.
- Reverie Suite — top-floor signature suite, 280 sqm, panoramic Saigon River
- R&J — Italian by the Reverie’s own chef, Michelin-trained
- Long @ Times Square — Cantonese, the dim sum is the order
- Café Cardinal — French patisserie + lobby café
- The Spa du Soleil — full hammam, traditional Italian therapies
- The infinity pool on the 6th floor terrace
Hotel Continental Saigon
Opened in 1880 — the oldest hotel in Saigon. Graham Greene wrote The Quiet American from Room 214 here in the 1950s. The hotel sits directly across from the Opera House, two blocks from Notre Dame, four blocks from Park Hyatt. The verandah bar (the famous “Continental shelf”) was where war correspondents wrote dispatches in the 1960s.
Restored in 1989, the Continental remains the most historically loaded place to sleep in Saigon. 86 rooms, low-rise colonial-villa scale (unlike the Reverie’s tower). For clients who want to step inside literary Vietnam — and the Graham Greene-era France-in-Asia atmosphere — this is the room.
- Room 214 — Greene’s room. Bookable on request.
- The verandah bar — sunset cocktail, the colonial-Saigon postcard.
- Le Bourgeois — French restaurant in the original 1880 dining room
- Continental courtyard — outdoor breakfast under the frangipani
- Direct access to the Opera House (across the street)
- 4-block walk to Park Hyatt — pair the two for a Saigon hotel-crawl evening
Caravelle Saigon
The 1959-opened Saigon classic — the Vietnam war correspondents’ hotel, with Saigon Saigon Rooftop Bar (the most iconic rooftop in the city). Modern tower added 1998. Smart for business stays and clients who want the 10th-floor rooftop view at sunset.
Mia Saigon
Boutique luxury on the Saigon River in District 2 (Thảo Điền). 23 suites, riverside spa, slower pace than District 1. Best for clients on second-visit returning to Saigon who want a quieter base outside the colonial core.
Azerai Cần Thơ
Adrian Zecha’s sister-to-Aman property on a private island in the Hậu River, 3 hours south of Saigon. The only luxury hotel in the entire Mekong Delta. 60 rooms, French-colonial architecture. Pair with Park Hyatt Saigon for a 2-city Vietnam south trip.
The stars and the stools.
The Michelin year.
— Saigon joined the Guide in 2023, alongside Hanoi.Anan Saigon
Chef Peter Cường Franklin’s restaurant in the Cho Cũ wet market — one of Vietnam’s first three Michelin-starred restaurants (2023). A modern Vietnamese tasting menu built on street-food DNA: the foie gras bánh mì, the pho bo tasting, the smoked duck. The dining room sits one floor above the wet market — you walk through the fish stalls to enter.
Mặn Mòi
A 30-seat dining room in District 1 dedicated to the salt-and-savory (“mặn mòi”) palette of Vietnamese home cooking — caramelized fish, slow-braised pork, herb-heavy noodles. Recommended by the Michelin Guide 2024. Smaller scale than Anan, more rooted in domestic flavors.
Hum Vegetarian
A 100% vegan Vietnamese restaurant with three Saigon locations (District 1, District 3 garden, District 7) — the most respected plant-based kitchen in Vietnam. The Saigon expat-elite and Michelin-traveling vegetarians lean on Hum. Even non-vegetarians order here. The Tô Hiến Thành garden location is the move — outdoor pavilion, lotus pond, a 90-minute lunch is the right one.
The Saigon street icons.
— where the locals eat. Plastic stool, no menu, no English.Phở Lệ
413 Nguyễn Trãi, District 5. Saigon-style phở since the 1960s — sweeter broth, fresh bean sprouts and Thai basil on the side, lime wedges, hoisin and chili sauces at the table. The Saigon-vs-Hanoi phở argument is settled here. Open 5am–1am.
Bún Bò Gánh
The Saigon outpost of the Huế-style spicy beef noodle soup. Lemongrass-shrimp paste broth, beef shank, pork knuckle, the chili oil floats on top in a red layer. Bigger flavor than phở and a different beast entirely.
Bánh Mì Huỳnh Hoa
The most famous bánh mì stall in Saigon. Family-run since 1979 from a single corner in District 1. The “special” carries eight layers of Vietnamese cold cuts, two pâtés, fresh herbs, pickled carrot-daikon, chili. Cash only. Line forms by 10:30am. ~₫68,000 each — the cheapest meal you’ll never forget.
L’Usine
The original L’Usine on Đồng Khởi Street — a French-Vietnamese café concept that opened in 2010 and became the Saigon model for the modern Vietnamese coffee shop. The cà phê sữa đá (Vietnamese iced coffee) is the move; the courtyard seating is the secret. Walk in from the alley behind the Hotel Continental.
Want a chef in your suite or villa?
For longer stays or special dietary protocols — recovery nutrition, performance macros, post-training meals — we arrange a private southern Vietnamese chef to cook in your suite. Ben Thanh + Bà Hoa market run included. Three meals a day or single dinners. Quietly handled.
How the city moves.
SGN → District 1.
Tân Sơn Nhất International (SGN). 8 km · 25–45 min depending on traffic. Inside the city — closer to District 1 than any other major Vietnamese airport. T1 international, T2 international + domestic.
Private Transfer. Mercedes V-Class booked through Park Hyatt, Reverie or Continental. Meet-and-greet at the gate with a name card, bags, straight to your hotel.
The same driver stays with you throughout your trip. Arranged through your hotel or directly through us.
Once you’re in.
Private car and driver for the whole trip. Same driver every day, English-fluent, on call. Saigon traffic is the worst in Vietnam — your driver navigates, you don’t.
District 1 is walkable in the cool hours — early morning + after 5pm. Park Hyatt to Notre Dame to the Post Office to the Opera is a 1.5 km circuit on foot.
Grab (Vietnam’s Uber) is downloadable — works flawlessly in Saigon. Ride-hail motorbikes (“Grab Bike”) are how locals move — for short District 1 hops they’re 5× faster than a car. We don’t recommend them for clients without insurance.
What you’ll actually do in Saigon.
What you actually need.
Required vs. recommended.
What to pack before you fly.
How Saigon affects the body.
What we tell you that nobody else does.
8 million motorbikes. The street is the system.
Saigon’s traffic is the most distinctive on-the-ground experience in Vietnam — an endless flow of motorbikes that operates on its own logic. Walking across the street isn’t dangerous if you know the rule: walk at a steady pace, don’t stop, don’t run, don’t change direction. The bikes flow around you the way water flows around a rock. Stopping mid-crossing causes the accident because they can’t predict where you’ll go next.
What we do about it: the driver covers the trip. For the District 1 walking afternoon, we brief clients on the crossing protocol on day 1.
Saigon doesn’t have a winter.
Daily highs run 88–95°F every day of the year. April–October the heat index pushes 100°F+. Even January, the coolest month, hits 88°F at midday. Mid-day outdoor experiences become tolerable only with shade, water, and a midday hotel reset.
The fix: early-morning windows for walking, midday spa/pool, evening experiences from 5pm. The city’s rhythm runs on this — locals do too.
May–October afternoon thunderstorms.
Saigon’s wet-season rain isn’t a constant drizzle — it’s a daily 3–5pm thunderstorm that arrives hard, lasts 30–60 minutes, and clears. The streets flood briefly, traffic pauses, the city resets. Plan walks and outdoor experiences for the morning window.
The plan: if booking May–Oct, schedule the boat day and walking afternoons before 2pm. Spa + dinner after the storm. The evening after rain is the coolest hour of the day.
The American War is recent, vivid, and present.
The Reunification Palace and War Remnants Museum present the war from the Vietnamese perspective. The exhibits are graphic — Agent Orange birth defects, prison photographs, weapon displays. This is not a soft museum stop. Some clients find it overwhelming.
The plan: we brief clients before the visit so they know what’s coming. We schedule it for a morning, never after dinner. We follow with a quieter Saigon afternoon — pool, spa, light lunch.
The ways you fly.
What locals notice.
The bespoke details.
Services not on any booking site.
- PRIVATE CHEFIn your suite. Ben Thanh + Bà Hoa market run, southern Vietnamese tasting, recovery macros on request.
- MEKONG DELTA YACHTPrivate 2-night charter — Cần Thơ, Cái Răng floating market at dawn, Azerai overnight optional.
- CU CHI BY SPEEDBOATSaigon River → Cu Chi Tunnels. Private speedboat, coffee onboard, no traffic both ways.
- PRIVATE CYCLO TOURVietnam-style rickshaw with English-fluent guide. The Saigon evening ride through District 1 + Chinatown.
- IN-SUITE WELLNESSMassage, breathwork, IV therapy — sent to your hotel.
Doors before opening hours. After closing.
- REUNIFICATION PALACEPrivate morning visit with a veteran’s-daughter historian guide. Before public hours.
- WAR REMNANTS MUSEUMCurator-led walkthrough — the photo gallery context most visitors miss.
- NOTRE DAME · WHEN OPENPrivate access when the restoration scaffolding permits. Interior tour with a clergy guide.
- JADE EMPEROR PAGODA · BEFORE INCENSEPrivate 6am visit — the temple’s quietest hour, full incense haze.
Doors the city keeps closed.
- MICHELIN RESERVATIONSAnan Saigon — 6 weeks out, the chef’s counter seats first.
- PARTNER GMsPark Hyatt, Reverie, Continental — intros at check-in.
- OFF-LIST PROPERTIESDistrict 3 colonial villas + District 2 riverside homes. Not on any aggregator. Available on request.
- HOTEL UPGRADESQuietly arranged before arrival, not negotiated at the desk.
The fluent people behind every visit.
- PRIVATE GUIDESSaigon historians, French-colonial architecture specialists, food experts — matched to your interest.
- DRIVERSEnglish-fluent. Same driver every day of the trip.
- FIXERSFor complex needs — FV Hospital coordination, last-minute reservations, sensitive errands.
- CULTURAL BRIEFSSent ahead of arrival, tailored to your itinerary — including the motorbike-crossing protocol.
We don’t ship itineraries.
The other guides give you a day-by-day plan. We don’t. A bespoke trip starts with what’s true for you: your training schedule, your dietary protocols, your sleep window, the experience you’d fly for. You answer. We build.
What we ask before we build.
The questions that shape your trip more than any itinerary ever could.
- 01.What time do you wake at home? Do you want to keep that here, or use the jet lag to shift earlier?
- 02.Are you training during the trip? If so — what’s the schedule, what equipment do you need, and what climate adjustments matter?
- 03.Any dietary protocol — macros, recovery nutrition, fasting window, allergens, religious or cultural restrictions?
- 04.The one experience you’d fly for. Is it a meal, a place, a person, a quiet morning, something we haven’t mentioned?
- 05.Density or quiet? Do you want a full city day, or the slow afternoon and the long lunch?
- 06.Anniversary, milestone, recovery trip, work trip — what’s this trip for?
- 07.Solo, couple, family, or group? Each shape differently.
The moments we build around.
Not a checklist — a list of the kinds of anchors that often appear in a TBT-built trip.
- The war-history morningReunification Palace + War Remnants Museum. The cultural anchor — sobering, necessary.
- The Michelin mealAnan Saigon, sometimes paired with Mặn Mòi across two nights. The pacing of the trip orbits this dinner.
- The colonial walkNotre Dame → Post Office → Opera → Continental. 200 years of French Saigon in 90 minutes.
- The slow afternoonThe midday window — pool, spa, hotel reset. The Saigon-rhythm move.
- The onward launchMekong Delta day, Cu Chi Tunnels morning, or Phú Quốc / Đà Nẵng onward. Built into the trip if it fits.
Tell us about you. We build the rhythm.
Sanctum members answer the 7 prompts above. We build the trip from there. Flights, hotels, drivers, Michelin tables, Cu Chi morning, Mekong Delta day, all pre-arranged before you land. No template. No itinerary you didn’t ask for.
REQUEST A SANCTUM ROUTEWhat Saigon taught me.
Want Saigon handled?
Sanctum members can request a custom Saigon route — flights, hotels, drivers, Michelin tables, Cu Chi morning, Mekong Delta day, private chef — pre-booked, the whole rhythm of the trip mapped before you land.
REQUEST A ROUTESaigon is the south hub.
Saigon positions you at the entry to southern Vietnam + Cambodia + southern Laos. Within a 4-hour flight or boat ride, 5 entirely different worlds — the Mekong Delta floating markets, Phú Quốc beaches, Đà Nẵng’s central coast, Phnom Penh’s killing-fields history, Hội An’s lantern-lit old town. Each gets its own dedicated guide.