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Ho Chi Minh City

Ho Chi Minh City

Home Vietnam DestinationsHo Chi Minh City
Gate8 Global Team

Ho Chi Minh City (still commonly called Saigon, especially in central District 1) deserves 2–3 days. It's Vietnam's biggest, most modern, most humid city — a good place to end a north-to-south trip. Spend a day around Ben Thanh Market and the War Remnants Museum, an evening on a rooftop bar, and a day trip to the Cu Chi Tunnels or the Mekong Delta.

Ho Chi Minh City hits differently than Hanoi — younger, faster, more skyscrapers, more traffic (yes, more), and a genuine buzz of a city that's grown up fast. Most travelers land here at the end of a north-to-south trip and find it a satisfying, energetic close.

How many days do you need?

Two to three days for the city itself, plus at least one more if you're doing the Cu Chi Tunnels or a Mekong Delta day trip (most travelers do one, not both, unless they have real time to spare). One day for District 1's central sights, one for markets and museums, and a day trip to round things out.

Ho Chi Minh City

Where to stay

AreaBest forVibe
District 1 (Dong Khoi / Nguyen Hue)First-timers, easy walking accessCentral, upscale, closest to major sights
District 3A quieter, more local base still close inResidential, good food, short taxi to District 1
Pham Ngu Lao ("backpacker area")Budget travelers, nightlifeLoud, cheap, dense with hostels and bars

What's actually worth seeing

  1. Ben Thanh Market — the classic central market for souvenirs, street food stalls, and a crash course in negotiating (start around 40–50% of the first quoted price).
  2. The War Remnants Museum — a sobering, essential stop covering the Vietnam War (called the American War locally) from the Vietnamese perspective; give it at least 90 minutes.
  3. The Reunification Palace — the former South Vietnamese presidential palace, preserved largely as it was in 1975, a striking mid-century time capsule.
  4. A rooftop bar in District 1 — the skyline view is genuinely worth one evening's splurge, even on a backpacker budget.
Ben Thanh Market in Ho Chi Minh City
Ben Thanh Market, Ho Chi Minh City

Day trips: Cu Chi Tunnels or the Mekong Delta

The Cu Chi Tunnels (roughly 1.5 hours away) are the more famous half-day option — a network of underground tunnels used during the Vietnam War, now partly widened for visitors to crawl through. The Mekong Delta (roughly 2 hours away) is the fuller-day alternative: river life, floating markets like Cai Rang, and fruit orchards by boat. Both are bookable as group tours from any hotel or tour desk in District 1.

Mekong Delta boat trip near Ho Chi Minh City
A boat trip through the Mekong Delta's canals
Cai Rang floating market
Cai Rang floating market, Mekong Delta
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Book the Cu Chi Tunnels and Mekong Delta as separate day trips, not a rushed combo tour — both regions deserve their own dedicated day, and the combined "see both in one day" tours mostly mean sitting on a bus.

What it costs

ItemApprox. cost
Guesthouse, per night$18–35
Street food meal$1.50–4
Cu Chi Tunnels half-day tour$15–35
Mekong Delta full-day tour$25–55

Mistakes worth avoiding

  • Skipping the War Remnants Museum because it sounds heavy — it's one of the most genuinely important stops in the country, and most visitors come away glad they went.
  • Not agreeing on a taxi price or insisting on the meter before getting in — use Grab instead to avoid the issue entirely.
  • Underestimating the humidity — Ho Chi Minh City runs hot and sticky nearly year-round; plan indoor midday breaks rather than pushing through it.

Stay in District 1 for the easiest walking access

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Where to stay in Ho Chi Minh City — hotels

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Questions people actually ask

Is Ho Chi Minh City the same as Saigon?
Yes — Saigon was the city's name before 1975 and is still used constantly in everyday speech, especially for central District 1; Ho Chi Minh City is the official name used on maps and addresses.
Cu Chi Tunnels or the Mekong Delta — which day trip is better?
Cu Chi Tunnels for history and a shorter half-day commitment; the Mekong Delta for a fuller day of river life, floating markets, and a change of pace from city sightseeing. Both are excellent — pick based on how much time you have.
Is Ho Chi Minh City safe for tourists?
Yes, generally safe in terms of violent crime. The more common issues are bag-snatching from passing motorbikes (keep bags on your inside shoulder, away from the road) and standard tourist-area pickpocketing — easy to avoid with normal awareness.

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