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Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Ho Chi Minh City

Southern Vietnam

Ho Chi Minh City

Sleep in District 1 a few streets back from Bui Vien, pair the War Remnants Museum with the Reunification Palace, take a half-day to the Cu Chi tunnels, and use Grab from Tan Son Nhat to dodge the arrival overcharge.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026

Best length

2-3 nights

Airport

Tan Son Nhat (SGN), ~7km northwest of District 1

Airport to centre

Grab car ~25-40 min depending on traffic; about โ‚ซ150,000-200,000 (ยฃ4-6)

Best base

District 1 for first-timers; District 3 for a calmer local stay

In short

Ho Chi Minh City at a glance

Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon) works best as a 2- or 3-night stop at one end of a Vietnam trip: base in District 1 a few streets back from Bui Vien, pair the War Remnants Museum with the Reunification Palace in one morning, take a half-day to the Cu Chi tunnels, and use Grab rather than street taxis from Tan Son Nhat to skip the classic arrival overcharge.

The short version

  • Two or three nights is enough โ€” Saigon is a southern bookend or a launchpad for the Mekong, not a week-long base.
  • Stay in District 1 a few streets back from Bui Vien for the sights without the all-night backpacker noise; District 3 is calmer and more local.
  • Do the War Remnants Museum and the Reunification Palace as a single morning โ€” they are a 10-minute walk apart in District 3.
  • Book a half-day to the Cu Chi tunnels rather than a full-day combo with the Mekong; crammed together they become a tiring 12-hour coach day.
  • Order a Grab car from Tan Son Nhat instead of taking a street taxi โ€” the metered app price avoids the arrivals-hall overcharge.

Saigon hits you at full volume โ€” six million motorbikes, a war history that the War Remnants Museum delivers without flinching, and a coffee-and-rooftop culture that rewards getting off Dong Khoi. The mistake first-timers make is treating it like Hanoi and giving it the same number of nights; Saigon is more of a southern bookend than a base, a place you do hard for two days and then push out from into the Mekong. The other mistake is the cheap-bed instinct: booking on Bui Vien because itโ€™s central and lively, then losing every nightโ€™s sleep to a street that becomes a nightclub after dark.

Two full days is the honest figure โ€” one for the museum-and-palace morning and a slow District 1 loop, one for the Cu Chi tunnels and a sunset drink. Resist the full-day combo tours that bolt Cu Chi onto the Mekong; jammed together they become twelve hours on a coach for a thin slice of each. Below, the structured planning โ€” where to stay, the airport-taxi trap to dodge, and a realistic budget in pounds โ€” picks up from here.

Plan your Ho Chi Minh City trip

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Ho Chi Minh City

Cu Chi Tunnels

Book the Cu Chi tunnels as a guided half-day from Ho Chi Minh City rather than turning up alone โ€” it sits ~70km northwest with no easy public transport, so the tour is the transport. Pick a small-group half-day to one of two sites: the original Ben Duoc section is quieter and more atmospheric than the crowded, partly reconstructed Ben Dinh that the big buses default to. Allow a full morning: roughly an hour each way plus 2โ€“2.5 hours on site, with an optional crawl through a widened tunnel stretch you can skip if you're claustrophobic.

Half a day ยฃ3.85

Independence Palace

Independence Palace (Dinh ฤแป™c Lแบญp, also called Reunification Palace) is the 1960s presidential palace left exactly as it was when a North Vietnamese tank crashed through the gates on 30 April 1975, ending the war. It sits at 135 Nam Kแปณ KhแปŸi Nghฤฉa in central District 1, a 10-minute walk from the War Remnants Museum, so the two go together as a single morning. Entry is โ‚ซ65,000 (about ยฃ1.85) and you'll want an hour to ninety minutes: the cabinet and reception rooms upstairs, the President's living quarters, the rooftop helipad with its UH-1 helicopter, and โ€” the part most people remember โ€” the windowless basement command bunker of telex machines, radios and 1970s war maps.

About an hour to nโ€ฆ ยฃ1.85

War Remnants Museum

There is no skip-the-line ticket and none is needed โ€” you pay โ‚ซ40,000 (about ยฃ1.15) at the door โ€” so the real decision is timing. Go at the 07:30 opening before the District 1 tour buses arrive around 09:00, and tackle the outdoor aircraft and tank yard first while it's quiet. Pair it with the Reunification Palace ten minutes' walk away to make one heavy but efficient morning, and brace for the third-floor war-photography rooms, which are the whole point and genuinely upsetting.

1.5โ€“2 hours ยฃ1.15

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier โ€” not an exhaustive directory.

District 1 (Dong Khoi / Ben Thanh)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The easiest first-timer base: the museums, Ben Thanh Market, the rooftop bars and the river are all walkable, and Grab pickups are instant. Book a few streets back from Bui Vien, the backpacker strip, or the bass carries until 3am.

Best for: First-timers, short stays, sightseeing on foot

Bui Vien (Pham Ngu Lao)

ยฃ value

The backpacker quarter inside District 1 โ€” cheap beds, cheap beer and a street that turns into a club after dark. Fine for a young group who want the noise, a poor choice if you came off a 12-hour flight wanting sleep.

Best for: Budget travellers, nightlife-first groups

Browse hotels Western District 1

District 3

ยฃ value

Leafier and more residential, with French-era villas, independent cafes and a slower pace, yet still a short Grab from the sights and walking distance to the museum cluster. The better-value local alternative for a calmer stay.

Best for: Calmer evenings, cafes, repeat visitors, value

Browse hotels 5-10 min by Grab

Thao Dien (District 2)

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

The riverside expat neighbourhood with pools, brunch spots and quieter streets, but it is 20-30 minutes from the District 1 sights in traffic. Worth it for a longer, slower stay; wrong for a 2-night first trip.

Best for: Longer stays, families, a resort-feel base

Browse hotels 20-30 min by Grab

Airport to city centre

Ho Chi Minh City airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Grab car from Tan Son Nhat ~25-40 min in traffic about โ‚ซ150,000-200,000 (ยฃ4-6) Walk to the app pickup point; avoids the arrivals overcharge
Grab motorbike (xe om) ~20-30 min about โ‚ซ70,000-110,000 (ยฃ2-3) Light luggage only
Metered Vinasun / Mai Linh taxi ~25-40 min usually โ‚ซ160,000-220,000 (ยฃ5-6) Use these two named firms; insist on the meter
Bus 109 to Ben Thanh / Pham Ngu Lao ~45-60 min โ‚ซ15,000 (about ยฃ0.45) Cheapest, slow with bags
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: December to April is the dry-season sweet spot for Saigon: warm, bright and far easier for walking the District 1 loop and a Mekong day trip than the May-to-October wet months. Avoid Tet (Vietnamese New Year, around mid-February 2026), when much of the city shuts and prices spike.

Southern Vietnam runs hot year-round, with a dry season December to April and a wet season May to October. The rain is usually a short, sharp afternoon downpour rather than all-day grey, so a wet-season visit is still workable if you plan sights for the mornings. June to August brings the heaviest rain; the city itself doesn't have a cold season.

What it costs

There are no nonstop UK flights to Saigon; UK return fares to Tan Son Nhat (SGN) usually run ยฃ600-ยฃ850 in economy with one stop through a Gulf or Asian hub (Doha, Dubai, Singapore, Bangkok), rising around Tet (mid-February). An open-jaw ticket โ€” into Hanoi, out of Saigon โ€” saves backtracking on a north-to-south trip.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 3-night mid-range Saigon stop for one person is roughly ยฃ230-ยฃ330 on the ground before flights: ยฃ120-ยฃ200 hotel share in District 1, ยฃ45-ยฃ70 food and Grab rides, ยฃ25-ยฃ40 for a Cu Chi half-day tour, and ยฃ15-ยฃ20 for museum entries and a rooftop bar. Local entries are tiny โ€” the War Remnants Museum is about ยฃ1.15.

The fastest way to overspend in Saigon is the airport street taxi and the Dong Khoi rooftop bars. Order a Grab from the airport and drink one street back from the tourist towers, and the city is one of the best-value places you'll visit. All dong figures use ยฃ1 โ‰ˆ โ‚ซ35,000 (June 2026).

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Also in Vietnam

See the full Vietnam guide

Ho Chi Minh City FAQs

How many days do you need in Ho Chi Minh City?
Two full days covers the essentials: one for the War Remnants Museum, Reunification Palace and the District 1 walk, and one for a Cu Chi tunnels half-day plus a rooftop sunset. Add a third night if you also want a Mekong Delta day trip, which most people slot in here.
Where should first-timers stay in Ho Chi Minh City?
District 1 a few streets back from Bui Vien is the safest default โ€” central, walkable to the museums and Ben Thanh Market, with instant Grab pickups. District 3 is the calmer, better-value alternative if you want cafes and quieter nights but still a short ride from the sights.
How do you get from Tan Son Nhat airport into the city?
Order a Grab car to the app pickup point rather than taking a street taxi โ€” it's metered, cashless and about โ‚ซ150,000-200,000 (ยฃ4-6) for the 25-40 minute run into District 1. If you'd rather a taxi, use a metered Vinasun or Mai Linh and insist on the meter. The bus 109 is the cheapest option at โ‚ซ15,000 but slow with luggage.

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