Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

Evergreen city guide with quick facts, travel, business, and culture.

Overview

Ho Chi Minh City — still universally called Saigon by its residents — is Vietnam's commercial capital and largest metropolis, around 9 million people in the city itself and another 8 million in the surrounding metro region. It is the historic heart of southern Vietnam, capital of French Cochinchina from 1862 and of the Republic of Vietnam from 1955 to 1975. The colonial core in District 1 — Notre-Dame Cathedral Basilica, the Saigon Central Post Office (Auguste Foulhoux, 1886–91), the Saigon Opera House (1900) and the grand hotels of Lam Son Square — sits a few blocks from the Reunification Palace, the War Remnants Museum and Bến Thành Market. Vietnam's e-Visa is open to most travellers and Tan Son Nhat International Airport (SGN) is just 7 km from District 1; Metro Line 1 (Bến Thành – Suối Tiên) opened on 22 December 2024.

District 1 colonial core

Notre-Dame Cathedral, Saigon Central Post Office (Foulhoux 1886–91), Saigon Opera House, Continental, Caravelle, Rex hotels and the Lam Son Square cluster.

Reunification Palace and war museums

Independence Palace (1962–75 capital seat), the War Remnants Museum (28 Võ Văn Tần) and the most comprehensive Vietnam War photo-journalism collection in the country.

Cholon and Chinese Saigon

District 5 — Bình Tây Market (1928), the great Cantonese, Hokkien and Hakka pagodas, Cha Tam Catholic Church and the historic merchant quarter.

Mekong Delta and Củ Chi day trips

Mỹ Tho, Bến Tre and Cần Thơ in the Mekong Delta; Củ Chi tunnels (50–70 km north-west); the Cao Đài Holy See in Tây Ninh.

Southern Vietnamese cuisine and Saigon coffee

Cơm tấm, bánh xèo, gỏi cuốn, hủ tiếu, southern phở, the Saigon bánh mì at Hùynh Hoa and Bánh Mì 37, and cà phê sữa đá from a sidewalk plastic stool.

Pagodas, churches and religious Saigon

Jade Emperor Pagoda (1909), Mariamman Hindu Temple, Tan Định pink cathedral, Vĩnh Nghiêm Pagoda and the Cao Đài tradition's reach into Saigon.

History

The site of Ho Chi Minh City was inhabited as a Khmer fishing village called Prey Nokor for centuries before the southward Vietnamese expansion (the Nam tiến) reached it in the late 17th century — Vietnamese chronicles record the establishment of a customs post at Sài Gòn in 1698 under the Nguyễn lords. France, allied with Spain, attacked the Vietnamese citadel of Saigon on 17 February 1859; the city was ceded by the Treaty of Saigon in 1862, and from 1862 onwards Saigon was the capital of French Cochinchina and the principal port of the Indochinese Union. The classic colonial city — Notre-Dame Cathedral (1880), the Saigon Central Post Office (Auguste Foulhoux, 1886–91), the Hôtel Continental (1880), the Opera House (1900), the Hôtel de Ville (1908) — was largely built between 1880 and 1910. Saigon was the capital of the State of Vietnam (1949–1955) and then of the Republic of Vietnam (South Vietnam) from 26 October 1955 until 30 April 1975, when North Vietnamese tank 843 rammed the gate of the Independence Palace. The city was renamed Hồ Chí Minh City on 2 July 1976 by the National Assembly of the reunified Socialist Republic of Vietnam, although Saigon is still the everyday name and the IATA code (SGN) for the airport. The Đổi Mới economic reforms of 1986 reopened the city's commerce; HCMC has since become Vietnam's commercial capital, hosting the Ho Chi Minh Stock Exchange (founded 2000), the country's largest banks and the bulk of foreign direct investment. Metro Line 1 — Vietnam's first urban metro line — opened in HCMC on 22 December 2024.

Culture

Saigon is the capital of southern Vietnamese cuisine — sweeter, herb-forward, more reliant on raw vegetables and the darker southern fish sauce than the northern (Hanoi) tradition. The Saigon dishes that are unmistakably southern: cơm tấm (broken rice with grilled pork chop, shredded pork skin and a Vietnamese egg meatloaf — Saigon's working lunch); bánh xèo (the giant turmeric pancake folded over shrimp and pork, wrapped in herbs at the table); gỏi cuốn (fresh rice-paper rolls); hủ tiếu (Cambodian-Chinese-influenced rice-noodle soup, especially the Mỹ Tho variant); and chè (the catch-all term for sweet dessert soups, particularly strong in District 5). The Saigon bánh mì — thinner-crusted, lighter than the northern version, with pâté, head cheese, Vietnamese ham, pickled daikon-and-carrot, cilantro and chillies — is the city's signature street sandwich; Hùynh Hoa on Lê Thị Riêng (District 3) is the most-photographed stall, Bánh Mì 37 Nguyễn Trãi is its rival, and Bánh Mì Phượng (the Hoi An original) has central Saigon outposts. Phở exists here but is a Hanoi import; the Saigon version is sweeter, served with bean sprouts and basil added at the table — Phở Hòa Pasteur is the canonical address. Cà phê sữa đá — iced coffee with sweetened condensed milk — was perfected in Saigon's French-Vietnamese cafés in the 1950s and 1960s and is now globally famous; the slow-drip phin filter is the standard. Bia Sài Gòn and 333 are the southern beers (the Hà Nội beer brand is the northern equivalent); craft beer has surged since 2015 with Pasteur Street Brewing, Heart of Darkness and East West as the visible names. Vegetarian Buddhist food (cơm chay) is widespread, especially around the pagodas — mostly modest, very inexpensive, and excellent. Festivals: Tết Nguyên Đán — Lunar New Year (late January or February, dates vary): the city's biggest annual closure week, with peach-blossom and apricot-blossom (mai vàng — the southern version) markets in the run-up and family observances rather than public spectacle, Reunification Day (30 April) — civic parades, fireworks over the Saigon River and reduced museum prices, Mid-Autumn Festival — Tết Trung Thu (15th day of the 8th lunar month, September–October): lantern processions and mooncakes, especially in Chợ Lớn, Vietnamese National Day (2 September) — fireworks at Bạch Đằng riverfront, Nguyễn Huệ Walking Street (every Friday and Saturday evening, year round) — the pedestrianised 700-metre boulevard from City Hall to the river, Ho Chi Minh City International Travel Expo (ITE HCMC, September) — Vietnam's largest tourism trade fair, at SECC in District 7. Museums: War Remnants Museum (28 Võ Văn Tần) — the country's most-visited museum, comprehensive Vietnam War photo-journalism, open daily 07:30–16:30, Reunification (Independence) Palace — preserved 1962–75 government seat, with cabinet rooms, war-command bunker and tank 843 in the courtyard, Ho Chi Minh City Museum (Bảo Tàng Thành Phố Hồ Chí Minh) — Saigon city history in the 1885 Gia Long Palace on Lý Tự Trọng Street, Vietnam History Museum (Bảo Tàng Lịch Sử Việt Nam) — Indochinese archaeology and dynastic Vietnam, in the 1929 Société des Études Indochinoises building next to the Saigon Zoo, Fine Arts Museum (Bảo Tàng Mỹ Thuật) — Vietnamese painting, sculpture and applied arts, in the 1934 Hứa Bổn Hòa mansion, Áo Dài Museum (Saigon Skydeck, Bitexco Tower) — the Vietnamese national dress, on the 49th floor, Cu Chi Tunnels — 50–70 km north-west of HCMC, two visitor sections (Bến Đình and Bến Đước).

Practical Info

Safety: Ho Chi Minh City is a low-crime city by international standards — violent crime against visitors is rare. The single most common practical complaint is bag-snatching from motorbikes (drive-by snatching of phones, handbags, cameras) in the central districts. Standard precautions: don't carry your phone in your hand on the street, keep bags on the side away from the road, sit on the inside seat in cafés. Common touristy scams: unlicensed taxis at the airport (use Grab or queue at the official rank), inflated cyclo fares agreed afterwards (negotiate the full price in writing first), and the 'free shoeshine' touts in District 1 who pull a sandal off the foot before quoting. Traffic is the other practical risk — motorbike density is among the world's highest, riders treat lane discipline and red lights as advisory, and pedestrian crossings are not respected automatically. Cross slowly, steadily and in a straight line. Air quality in HCMC is variable but generally better than Hanoi — the southern monsoon flushes the air more frequently. Tap water is not potable; only drink bottled water (around VND 8,000 / €0.30 a litre). Language: Vietnamese is the national language; Southern Vietnamese (Nam Bộ) is the Saigon standard, with a softer pronunciation than Hanoi's and slightly different vocabulary (heo for pig instead of lợn, dứa for pineapple instead of thơm, cá lóc for snakehead fish instead of cá quả). The script is quốc ngữ — the Latin-based Vietnamese alphabet finalised by the Avignon-born Jesuit Alexandre de Rhodes in 1651 building on the work of earlier missionaries including the Italian Cristoforo Borri (whose 1631 *Relatione della nuova missione* remains the first European-language description of Cochinchina). English is widely understood in District 1 hotels, central restaurants, taxis and most museums; French is occasionally still spoken by older Saigonese, particularly in cultural and academic contexts; Chinese (Cantonese, Mandarin and Teochew) is spoken in Chợ Lớn. Useful: xin chào (hello), cảm ơn (thank you), bao nhiêu? (how much?). Most central street signs and major museum captions are bilingual Vietnamese-English; outside the centre, Google Translate's camera mode is useful. Currency: Vietnamese Đồng (VND). Notes are in 500, 1,000, 2,000, 5,000, 10,000, 20,000, 50,000, 100,000, 200,000 and 500,000 denominations; rough conversions: 25,000 VND ≈ €1, 100,000 VND ≈ €4, 500,000 VND ≈ €19. ATMs are dense and most international cards work (Vietcombank, BIDV, ACB and HSBC are reliable; expect a per-withdrawal cap of around 3–5 million VND and a fee of 30,000–50,000 VND). Cards are accepted at hotels, mid-range restaurants and supermarkets, including Visa, Mastercard and contactless. Cash is required for street food, markets, most cyclo rides and many family restaurants. Tipping is not traditionally expected; rounding up at restaurants and 10% at western-style places is appreciated. Small VND notes and coins should be checked — 20,000 and 200,000 notes look similar at a glance.
Travel Overview

Ho Chi Minh City is the kind of metropolis that wears two names openly. Its formal title since 2 July 1976 is Hồ Chí Minh City, but the residents and even the airport code (SGN) still call it Saigon, and the central district (Quận 1, District 1) is universally referred to as Sài Gòn in everyday speech. The city is much larger than Hanoi — around 9 million in the urban core and 17 million in the wider metro region — and much more commercial: Vietnam's stock exchange, the country's biggest banks, the bulk of foreign direct investment, and the headquarters of the great national breweries (Saigon Beer, 333) all sit within a few kilometres of central District 1. The colonial grain is the densest in the country. Saigon was the capital of French Cochinchina from 1862, and the broad boulevards (Đồng Khởi, Lê Lợi, Nguyễn Huệ pedestrianised since 2015), the cast-iron and brick of the Saigon Central Post Office (designed by Auguste Foulhoux and built 1886–1891 — not, as the most-repeated guidebook myth claims, by Gustave Eiffel), the Romanesque-Revival Notre-Dame Cathedral Basilica (1880, now in major restoration scheduled to run through 2027), the Opera House on Lam Son Square (1900, modelled on the Petit Palais in Paris), the Hôtel Continental (1880, where Graham Greene wrote much of *The Quiet American*), the Hôtel Caravelle (1959, base for the foreign press during the Vietnam War) and the Hôtel Rex (whose rooftop bar saw the daily US-press briefings nicknamed the 'Five o'Clock Follies') are all within 500 metres of each other. Three blocks west, the Reunification Palace (still officially Dinh Độc Lập, 'Independence Palace'), the seat of the Republic of Vietnam government from 1962 to 1975, has been preserved as a Cold-War-era time capsule — the bedrooms, war rooms and helipad are exactly as on 30 April 1975, when North Vietnamese tank 843 rammed through the gate. Two blocks north of the palace, the War Remnants Museum (28 Võ Văn Tần, opened September 1975) is the country's most-visited museum and the indispensable single-stop for the war's photo-journalism record. Beyond District 1, Saigon's other essential quarters: District 5 — Chợ Lớn — is the historic Chinese quarter, denser, slightly grittier, with the Bình Tây Market (1928), the great Cantonese, Hokkien and Hakka pagodas (Thiên Hậu, Quan Âm, Phước An Hội Quán), and food that runs Cantonese to Teochew. District 3, just west of District 1, holds the Jade Emperor Pagoda (Phước Hải Tự, 1909, Hanoi's Anthony Bourdain visited but it was Saigon's Barack Obama stopped in May 2016), the Mariamman Hindu Temple, and the embassy quarter. Districts 2 and 7 (Thảo Điền and Phú Mỹ Hưng) are the contemporary, expat-tilted parts of the city, with the riverfront skyline of Landmark 81 (Vietnam's tallest building, 461 m, completed 2018) on one bank and the Bitexco Financial Tower's Saigon Skydeck on the other. The Mekong Delta — Mỹ Tho, Bến Tre, Cần Thơ — and the Củ Chi tunnel network 50 km north-west are the canonical day trips. Vietnamese cuisine in Saigon leans south — sweeter, more herb-forward, more reliant on fish sauce and lime — and the dish identities are different from Hanoi: phở at Phở Hòa Pasteur and Phở Quỳnh; bún bò Huế (Central Vietnamese, but Saigon does it well at Bún Bò Đông Ba); cơm tấm (broken-rice with grilled pork); bánh mì at Hùynh Hoa, Bánh Mì 37 Nguyễn Trãi and Bánh Mì Phượng (Hoi An's most famous, with Saigon outposts); cà phê sữa đá (iced milk coffee, with sweetened condensed milk, born here and not in Hanoi); chè (sweet dessert soups in District 5). Vietnam opened a single-list e-Visa in August 2023 — applicable to citizens of all countries and territories with very few exceptions — and Tan Son Nhat International Airport (SGN, 7 km north of District 1) is the country's busiest airport, with direct flights from Frankfurt, Paris CDG, London Heathrow, Doha, Dubai, Singapore, Tokyo, Seoul, Sydney, Los Angeles and most of Asia. Metro Line 1 (Bến Thành – Suối Tiên) opened on 22 December 2024 — 19.7 km, 14 stations, end-to-end in 30 minutes — connecting District 1 to Thủ Đức (the new university and tech district) and the An Phú interchange where the Long Thành expressway begins. A practical 3-day pattern: day 1 District 1 colonial walk (Notre-Dame, Post Office, Bookstore Street, Lam Son Square, Opera House) plus the rooftop sundown at the Rex or Caravelle; day 2 Reunification Palace, War Remnants Museum and the Bến Thành Market lunch corridor; day 3 either a Mekong Delta day trip (Mỹ Tho or Cần Thơ) or Củ Chi tunnels half-day plus an afternoon in Chợ Lớn. Saigon is hot year-round (26–34 °C) with a clear two-season pattern — dry season December to April (the comfortable window), wet season May to November with afternoon thunderstorms — and Tết (Lunar New Year, late January or February) is the major closure week.

Discover Ho Chi Minh City

The city has been Hồ Chí Minh City officially since 2 July 1976, but its residents have never stopped calling it Saigon and the IATA code for its airport (SGN) keeps the older name in international circulation. The everyday rule of thumb: Saigon refers to the historic central districts (Quận 1 / District 1, and by extension District 3 and parts of Districts 4 and 5); Hồ Chí Minh City refers to the full administrative entity of 22 districts and 9 million residents. Most signs, taxi drivers, restaurants and shop names use Saigon casually, and almost no Saigonese will correct a visitor who says 'Saigon'. The city sits on the Saigon River about 80 km inland from the South China Sea — the river was the artery that built the city's commerce, and the Bạch Đằng riverfront in District 1 has been redeveloped as a public promenade since 2018. The two-season climate (dry December–April, wet May–November) and the 26–34 °C year-round temperature make this a stable destination — there is no winter to plan around, only the timing of the wet-season afternoon thunderstorms (typically 14:00–16:00, brief and intense, then clearing). Saigon's energy is denser, more commercial and more outward-facing than Hanoi's; the colonial grain is heavier; the food is sweeter and more southern; and the conversation is more Cantonese-inflected once you leave District 1.

Diplomatic missions in Ho Chi Minh City

2 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.