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We ate well in Hanoi. Like, really well.
I had one mission during my visit to Hanoi: eat and drink my way across the city – from sampling classic plastic-stool street food spots to hunting down the most unique coffee I could find – and I like to think I succeeded!
This is my no-fluff guide to the best Hanoi restaurants, street food, cafes, and bars.
If you’re anything like me, you’ll be lowkey anxious about missing out on any must-try Northern Vietnamese specialities during your visit, so I’ve got you covered. Name a niche dish and I’ve got a pick below for you to sample it at its best!
I still think about our first meal in the city: cha ca, a fish dish I had never even heard of from a restaurant just across from our hotel, where you cook the fish yourself at the table. We still aren’t totally sure if you can even order other things there, but frankly you don’t need to.
And obviously, it wouldn’t be Hanoi without pho. But have you heard about pho cuon, a Hanoi specialty you won’t find anywhere other than Truc Bach, which IMO is 10x better?? We loved pho cuon so much we went back for it three times during our week in Hanoi.
These are just a few of the must-try Hanoi food experiences you’ll find details about below. I cannot wait to share them with you!!
If you’d rather skip the screenshots and notetaking, I made a Google Map with all my picks. It’s organized, regularly updated, and way easier than digging through 47 open tabs (trust me, I speak from experience).
Ok, ready? Let’s eat.
Wanna explore Hanoi like a local?
Here’s a mini guide to help you explore beyond the tourist track!
Where to stay:
Must-do activity:
How to get around:
My favorite neighborhoods:
Stay connected:
More on Hanoi:
Delve into Vietnam
Don’t forget to check out the rest of my Vietnam posts and guides if you’re still planning your perfect trip!
Real Talk:
Vietnam—like so many parts of Southeast Asia—is feeling the pressure of overtourism. And while I want to believe that if you’re here on my blog, you’re the kind of traveler who cares about leaving places better than you found them… I still have to say it:
Don’t be an asshole when you travel. Not in Vietnam, not in Southeast Asia, not anywhere.
I’ve seen too many visitors treat locals like background characters or behave like the region exists solely for their vacation. So here’s your friendly-but-firm reminder:
If you’re going to make locals’ lives harder, just stay home.
Where to Eat Street Food in Hanoi
I’m starting off with street food, because Hanoi is the city for casual food stalls and cheap bites. You can get a good sit-down meal anywhere, but you come to Hanoi to sit on little plastic stools in the street and get served a steaming bowl of delicious food you may or may not know the name of.
This kind of spot will be your bread and butter in Hanoi. After Singapore, where every evening required a reservation to make sure we weren’t disappointed, the street food culture of Hanoi was such a welcome change – something amazing is always available, likely right down the block from your hotel!
1. Pho Cuon Chinh Thang
📍 Truc Bach | Must-Try | Innovative Street Food Only Available in Hanoi
Pho cuon was my FAVORITE food we ate at in Hanoi, and Pho Cuon Chinh Thang – where it was invented – was my favorite restaurant. Genuinely.
Pho cuon is basically a deconstructed version of pho — instead of soup, you get fresh rice noodle sheets wrapped around beef and herbs, and you dip it into a sauce. Tastes like pho, but in a completely different form!
But wait! There’s more! The same restaurant invented pho chien phong, which is possibly even more special: what they call “inflated fried pho pillows” topped with stir-fried beef and veggies. Basically, a delicious savory pastry that soaks up all the juice from the stir fry. It’s… so good. I need you to run and get it as a matter of the utmost priority.
This one’s a bit outside the Old Quarter, so it’s more of a deliberate stop, but that did not stop us from going like three times while we were in Hanoi. It was also the literal first place we went after we landed. Like, dropped the bags off and walked straight to this restaurant. 10/10 decision.
Genuinely obsessed with this place. I think about it all the time. Starting a petition to get one to open in London immediately.
Worried About Missing Hanoi’s Best Food Spots?
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Hanoi’s food scene can feel overwhelming in the best possible way. This Michelin Guide walking tour helps you try iconic local dishes, discover neighborhood gems, and learn what actually makes Northern Vietnamese food special — all without spending your trip glued to Google Maps.
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2. Xoi Yen
📍 Old Quarter | Sticky Rice | Anytime Staple
Xoi is the name of the dish (sticky rice), and Xoi Yen is the xoi restaurant that we fell in love with. To be honest, we probably wouldn’t have even found out about this dish if it weren’t for our Hanoi Kids tour guides who recommended it.
Once we tried it for lunch on their recommendation, we ended up having it for breakfast for the next few days. We legit couldn’t get enough. It’s literally just sticky rice topped with things like pork, egg, pâté, fried shallots, etc., but it’s SO MUCH MORE (emotionally).
It’s filling, cheap, and easy and I highly recommend eating it with the coconut water that they serve in a giant green coconut after cutting it open right there.
3. Bun Cha Hang Quat
📍 Old Quarter | Grilled Pork | Hanoi Classic
Bun cha is the Hanoi dish, and this spot is one of the best places to try it without it feeling overly polished or touristy. You’ll sit on low stools in a narrow alley while smoky grilled pork is cooked right in front of you—the smell alone is enough to sell it (to be fair, you can say that about most places in Hanoi).
You’ll be treated to a bowl of grilled pork in a slightly sweet and slightly tangy broth, rice noodles, and a mountain of herbs to build each bite yourself. Reading that description back it occurs to me that this sounds like pho, and I guess it’s kind of similar on paper… but it’s also totally different. Just trust me. This bun cha basically singlehandedly revived me when I was dying of a two-day headache.
Go early or be ready to wait—they’re busy for a reason.
Did You Know
This is what Anthony Bourdain and Obama ate together at Bun Cha Huong Lien. We didn’t try this one because it was (and usually is) swarmed with tourists, but I’m sure it’s a fun time. They’ve preserved the table Bourdain and Obama sat at, which is so kitschy and fun to me that it might have been worth it just to see it.
4. Banh Cuon Ba Xuan
📍 Old Quarter | Rice Noodle Rolls | Northern Classic
This is a nice change of pace from heavier dishes. Banh cuon are these thin, silky rice noodle rolls filled with pork and mushrooms, served with herbs and dipping sauce. They’re a classic Northern Vietnamese dish, and are the inspiration for pho cuon (which we’ll get to later).
It’s a less flashy or trendy option, and a more local experience than a lot of the other classic Vietnamese dishes. You can eat it any time of day, but the first half of the day is when it’s most common.
I freaking love this dish. It’s become one of my staple items to order when I get Vietnamese food now in London.
5. Pho Gia Truyen
📍 Old Quarter | No-Frills Classic | Noodle Soup
Pho is, famously, one of the more well known and globalized Vietnamese dish exports, and it was actually first invented not too far from Hanoi, in Nam Dinh. All of that leads to one conclusion: you need to try pho in Hanoi. And this is where you should do it.
This is one of those places where you just commit to the experience — show up, order a bowl (there are only three variations), eat it, and go. No one’s hanging around, no one’s over-explaining anything, and that’s kind of the whole point.
The broth is super clean and savory in that way that makes you appreciate how delicate pho actually tastes here compared to what you’re used to.
Insider Tip
Pho is mostly an early morning breakfast dish in Vietnam, with Pho Gia Truyen doing its biggest business between 6am and 11am.
You can definitely get pho at other times of day, but we found that this particular spot was inconsistently open in the evenings. Google Maps says you can expect it open from 5pm to 9:30pm throughout the week, but the one night we wanted it for dinner the place was shuttered.
Pho Gia Truyen does get busy, so don’t expect a calm, sit-down meal. But if you want a proper Hanoi pho moment, this is it.
6. Bun Rieu Pho Co
📍 Old Quarter | Local Fave | Tomato-Based Soup
If you want to branch out beyond pho, bun rieu is a great option to try. It’s a tangy, tomato-based broth with rice noodles, served with these strange fried dough things that you dip in the broth—lighter than it sounds and still really flavorful.
This spot is right in the Old Quarter and known for doing it well, so it’s an easy add if you find yourself wanting another noodle situation. I will say, I found the fried dough to be a little bit stale and oily, but I have no idea how common that is, or if we just got a bad batch.
Also, I know the reviews on Google are not selling this particular place, but it was literally packed with 20-something locals when we went, which was good enough for us. No one spoke English, and we were the only white people in sight. Also, a very nice boy saw me dying of heat and angled a fan towards me, probably worrying he would have to watch a white lady faint while trying to enjoy his meal. I appreciated it, whatever the reason.
7. Com Trung Viet Trung
📍 Truc Bach | Rice & Egg Dish | Big Portions & Cozy
We stumbled across this place while visiting Bookworm Hanoi next door (an excellent spot for English-language books in Hanoi, btw!). Daniel was intent on giving it a try as it was the first time we’d seen this dish anywhere in Hanoi.
Com trung is simple but hearty and delicious: basically a pile of rice topped with the creamiest, most decadent scrambled eggs you can imagine. Then, if you want, you can choose a stewed meat to add as well; we went with chicken (not the most common meat in Hanoi!) and finished it off with kimchi, which added an excellent tang to the otherwise very rich flavor profile.
I wouldn’t necessarily make a trip just for this food stall, but if you’re already exploring Truc Bach or even just Bookworm Hanoi, then this is definitely a convenient and yummy stop to make!
Still Overwhelmed by Hanoi’s Food Scene?
👉🏽 Join a Michelin Guide street food tour! 👈🏽
It’s one of the easiest ways to try Hanoi’s must-eat dishes without stressing about where to go, what to order, or whether you’ve accidentally wandered into a tourist trap. This highly-rated Hanoi food tour takes you through local neighborhoods to sample iconic Northern Vietnamese specialties alongside a local guide.
BONUS: Banh Mi 25
📍 Old Quarter | Handheld | Southern Classic
Banh Mi 25 is one of the most well-known banh mi spots in Hanoi, and yeah—it’s popular with tourists, but it’s also just a very solid, easy option.
It’s the one we went for because, to be honest, there aren’t a ton of amazing banh mi options in Hanoi. The sandwiches are cheap, flavorful, and consistent, which is kind of what you want from a quick grab-and-go stop.
The thing about Hanoi is that it isn’t really the banh mi city (that’s more of a Saigon thing), so this is less about chasing the “best ever” and more about having a reliable version if you’re craving it. And if you’re heading south later in your trip, I’d just skip it and wait to be honest.
Best Hanoi Restaurants for a Sit-Down Meal
Don’t worry — Hanoi isn’t only plastic stools and chaotic street corners. Sometimes you want a slower dinner, air conditioning, or just a meal where no one’s balancing six bowls of pho on a motorbike beside you.
These are the Hanoi restaurants I’d recommend when you want something a little more polished without losing the flavors and energy that make eating in Hanoi so special.
9. KOTO Van Mieu
📍 City Center | Upscale Favorites | Social Enterprise
KOTO is one of those places that feels genuinely good to support. Not in a performative way, but in a “this is actually doing something meaningful” way. It trains and employs at-risk youth, and somehow still manages to serve really solid, well-executed Vietnamese food in a calm, unfussy setting.
It’s just outside the Old Quarter near the Temple of Literature, so it works perfectly as a break from the chaos of a long tour day.
Expect classic Vietnamese dishes done well, and a bit more refined than if you found them in a street food stand. The service was friendly, and the space felt a little more relaxed than most of what you’ll find in the center.
10. Cha Ca Thang Long
📍 Old Quarter | Hanoi Specialty | Iconic Local Institution
Okay, first things first: Cha Ca Thang Long has no Google Maps presence. According to their website, they were targeted in a cyberattack (?????) so they had to remove their listing. I don’t know. Anyway. They’re on Tripadvisor still, and don’t let the possible sketchiness of their past exploits dissuade you from going. Because this place was so good we went back a second time!
Our hotel actually recommended this place to us, because it was literally across the street.
There’s basically no menu at Cha Ca Thang Long. On our first visit, we sat down, they asked what we wanted to drink, and then suddenly someone appeared with a wok. You’re supposed to cook the dish yourself at the table, but seeing how confused we were, they ended up doing it for us the first time.
Cha ca is basically a pan of turmeric-marinated fish, cooked with piles of fresh herbs, rice noodles, peanuts, and sauces, and you assemble bites as you go. It was very funny when we had no idea what we’d gotten ourselves into, and then we were stunned into silence by how good the food was.
Tucked into the Old Quarter, it’s a more low-key, no-frills alternative to the more famous (and more touristy) spots — which just makes it way more fun. You’re here for one thing, and they do it well.
11. Gia Restaurant
📍 Ba Dinh | Modern Vietnamese | Fine Dining
Gia Restaurant is the kind of place you go if you want to have a super fancy, fine dining experience in Hanoi.
They take traditional Vietnamese flavors and make them into something more modern and delicate, without losing the soul of the cuisine.
Set in a quiet pocket of Ba Dinh, it’s an obvious shift from the chaos of the Old Quarter. Perfect for anyone looking for a calmer, more polished, and slow evening. Like, I would bring my parents here if they came to Hanoi with me.
Save this for your “one really good dinner” spot in Hanoi.
12. Tam Vi
📍 Ba Dinh | Traditional Northern Vietnamese | Cozy, Nostalgic
Dining at Tam Vi is sort of like stepping into someone’s beautiful Hanoi home. It’s cozy, lived in, welcoming, and feels local. Surrounded by vintage tiles, old cabinets, and handwritten menus, you’ll feel instantly like the food matches that energy. Somehow, despite making the Michelin List for a few years, it manages to be unpretentious and totally worth the trip.
This is where you go for classic Northern Vietnamese dishes done really well — nothing reinvented, nothing trying too hard, just deeply comforting, balanced, and full of flavor.
It’s in a quieter part of Ba Dình, so it naturally feels like a break from the Old Quarter madness.
13. Quan An Ngon
📍 French Quarter (near Old Quarter) | Vietnamese Classics | Crowd-Pleaser
Quan An Ngon pulls together dishes from all over Vietnam into one menu, so it’s ideal when you want to try a bit of everything without overthinking it.
It’s set in a big (slightly chaotic) courtyard with different cooking stations, so you can see a lot of the food being made as you sit, which adds to the whole experience. It’s definitely popular with both tourists and locals, so don’t expect anything hidden or niche, but it does deliver on variety and convenience.
Expect a long menu of all the usual suspects (pho, bun cha, banh xeo, etc.), solid execution across the board, and a lively atmosphere. Not the place for your “best meal in Hanoi,” but a very easy, reliable option when you want range, and don’t want to think too hard about where to find it.
14. Cau Go Vietnamese Cuisine
📍 Old Quarter | Vietnamese Restaurant | Rooftop | Polished but Worth It
Cau Go is one of those places that could feel touristy… but actually earns its spot because the location is so good. You’re right by Hoàn Kiếm Lake, and if you sit upstairs you get that full Hanoi chaos-from-above moment, which is kind of perfect for a first or last night. I’m a total sucker for rooftop, so this may get extra points from me.
The menu is classic Vietnamese with a slightly refined edge: nothing too experimental, just well-executed versions of dishes you’ll recognize.
Expect a more polished setting than most Old Quarter spots, solid food, and a view that makes it feel like an occasion without going full fine dining.
Best Hanoi Cafes for Coffee, Coconut Coffee & Egg Coffee
Oh you want coffee? Say no more. Hanoi is so caffeinated you might just get a contact high. Between how tasty it is, and the jet lag you might have, I imagine you’ll be drinking quite a lot of coffee, so I’ve got you covered.
15. Cafe Giang
📍 Old Quarter | Egg Coffee | Hanoi Original
This is the place for egg coffee (yes you’ve read that correctly)—like, the original.
You walk down a slightly sketchy alley, up some stairs, and suddenly you’re in this crowded, low-lit room where everyone’s drinking what looks like custard.
The egg coffee is thick, sweet, kind of an indescribable taste to be honest… on top of strong coffee.
It sounds weird, it is weird, but it works. Very much a “you have to try it once” situation. I know some people like it as like, their coffee of choice, but once was enough for me.
Did You Know
Egg coffee was invented in the 1940s in Hanoi when Vietnam was dealing with serious milk shortages due to the war.
Instead of milk, a bartender at a hotel started whipping together: egg yolks, sugar, and sweetened condensed milk until it became a thick, creamy, custard foam.
He poured that over strong Vietnamese coffee, and the rest is history.
16. Cong Caphe
📍 Multiple locations | Reliable Chain | Coconut Coffee
You’ll see Cong everywhere—it’s the one with the military-green, retro/communist Vietnamese aesthetic. It’s a chain, but honestly a really good one. They made the best coconut coffee of all the ones I tried in Hanoi, so I returned to Cong a lot.
I’m really glad our tour guides brought us here because if it weren’t for them we would have probably written it off as a lame chain and never gone, but I genuinely freaking loved both the vibe and the drinks.
Officially Obsessed with All Things Vietnamese Coffee?
👉🏽 Join a Hanoi coffee workshop! 👈🏽
If you’ve officially fallen down the Hanoi coffee rabbit hole, this 5-star rated workshop is such a fun next step. You’ll learn how to make iconic Vietnamese coffee drinks yourself while getting a deeper look into the city’s wildly creative café culture.
17. Loading T Cafe
📍 Old Quarter | Aesthetic | Tucked Away
Loading T Cafe is hidden above street level in an old French building, and you feel the shift as soon as you walk in because it’s just so spacious, light and calm.
The menu leans slightly more polished, and they have tons of cute drinks on the menu. They’re known for desserts as well, so it works well as a mid-afternoon stop when you want something a bit more put-together and chill.
18. Blackbird Coffee
📍 Old Quarter | Specialty Coffee
After a few rounds of Vietnamese coffee—which is great, but can be very sweet—this is where you go when you just want something a bit more familiar.
It’s small, low-key, and very focused on what it’s doing. They’ve got solid espresso, flat whites, iced drinks, that kind of thing. They also have a classic pastry section with little buns and croissants.
19. Dream Beans Coffee
📍 French Quarter | Specialty Coffee | Slightly More Polished
Basically the same general lane as Blackbird, just a bit more of a sparse aesthetic, and located in the French Quarter rather than the Old Quarter. I was less impressed with the pastry options here, but they did have a nice granola bowl thing that we enjoyed as a mid morning snack.
20. Nola Cafe
📍 Old Quarter | Hidden | Eclectic
This one is kind of all over the place in the way I love. You walk in and it just… keeps going. There are different rooms, different levels, little staircases, plants everywhere, seating that doesn’t really match. It feels more like someone’s house that slowly turned into a café than something intentionally designed. So obviously I’m obsessed.
It’s also open in the evening as a bar, so you really can’t go wrong with this spot any time of day.
21. Fu Hoo Coffee
📍 Truc Bach | Creative, Community Feel
Cultivating a very creative, hipster vibe, rather than being just another “cute Hanoi café” spot, Fu Hoo is out in Truc Bach, and the whole place has more of a creative/community vibe than a straight coffee-shop vibe.
They host art exhibitions and events pretty regularly, which makes it feel like people actually use the space rather than just passing through for a photo.
The space itself is cozy without trying too hard — lots of wood, plants, tucked-away seating, that kind of thing. Definitely somewhere you could sit for a while with a coffee and decompress a bit.
This was where we had our first coffee of our trip, and we sampled a yummy passionfruit coffee drink while admiring the water out back.
22. Ca Phe B52
📍Ngoc Ha | Plane Wreck View | Local
This cafe is built right next to the remains of a crashed B-52 bomber sitting in a small lake… which as I type it I realize that sounds extremely intense on paper. But somehow I promise it ends up feeling very chill.
It’s out in sleepy, neighborhood-y Ngoc Ha, and the local vibe of this cafe matches! You’ve got people sitting around chatting, older regulars drinking coffee slowly, kids biking around the lake — it’s definitely not a “destination”, which I appreciate.
The coffee itself is very straightforward Vietnamese coffee shop territory, but the setting is what makes it memorable. Also, when we were there we saw the world’s cutest family of cats, so maybe if you’re lucky you’ll see them too.
Best Hanoi Bars for Rooftop Drinks & Cocktails
Hanoi isn’t really a “go out clubbing until 4am” kind of city – it’s more about hidden cocktail bars, low-key craft beer spots, and rooftops where you can watch the city buzz below you with a drink in hand. These were my favorite places to wind down after a long day of eating my way across Hanoi.
23. Ha Noi HomeBrew
📍 Old Quarter | Craft Beer | Casual
Vietnam isn’t really known internationally for craft beer, which honestly makes this place more fun than expected.
It’s a small, easygoing taproom in the Old Quarter pouring beers from local Vietnamese breweries alongside their own stuff, and it feels much more relaxed than a lot of the louder beer spots nearby, which is why I included it! I’m not really a fan of Hanoi’s famous beer street, so this was my alternative.
The staff was genuinely welcoming and happy to talk through the different beers, which helps if you aren’t sure what to sample.
Good place to slow down for a couple drinks without turning the night into a whole production.
24. Le Ciel Bar
📍 Old Quarter | Rooftop | Cocktails
There are a lot of rooftop bars in Hanoi, and a lot of them feel interchangeable (because a lot of them are… oops). Le Ciel stands out mostly because it manages to feel polished without immediately turning into a loud rooftop party situation.
It’s on top of a hotel near Hoan Kiem Lake, so you get the full view over the Old Quarter rooftops, especially around sunset. The thing about rooftop bars, in my opinion, is that you’re there for the view. Let’s be real. Everything positive after the view is just a bonus.
25. The Haflington
📍 Old Quarter | Cocktail Bar | Speakeasy
This is definitely the most “doing the most” bar on the list — hidden entrance, dramatic interiors, elaborate cocktails, the whole thing. And look, maybe you find that to be cheesy. You might even be right!! But I don’t care!!! I love a speakeasy!! We have so little whimsy in our lives, let me have my dramatic speakeasy!
The space is themed almost like an old museum or Victorian study, complete with fossils, books, and low lighting… Basically it felt a bit like New York or London. It’s definitely not cheap by Hanoi standards, but worth it for the whole production.
FAQs about Hanoi Restaurants
What is famous to eat in Hanoi?
Hanoi is one of those cities where you don’t need a “best restaurant” list — you need to know what to eat. The big one is bun cha (grilled pork with noodles and herbs), which is about as “Hanoi” as it gets. Then there’s pho, which is simpler and less over-the-top than what you might be used to, and honestly better for it.
You’ll also see things like banh cuon (soft rice rolls) and xoi (sticky rice loaded with toppings).
And then of course, egg coffee — which sounds questionable but is actually one of those “why does this work so well?” things you kind of have to try.
Where did Anthony Bourdain eat in Hanoi?
The big one everyone talks about is Bun Cha Huong Lien — that’s the spot Anthony Bourdain went to with Barack Obama. It’s a very normal, no-frills place that just happens to now be very famous.
He featured a bunch of Hanoi street food over the years, but this is the one people actually go out of their way to visit.
What did Obama and Anthony Bourdain eat in Hanoi?
They kept it very simple: bun cha, fried crab spring rolls, and beer. That’s it.
It’s such a good example of how food works in Hanoi — nothing fancy, just really well-done, everyday dishes. That meal ended up being one of the most well-known Hanoi food moments because it shows exactly what the city does best.
Is it safe to eat street food in Hanoi?
Short answer: yes, and you should.
Longer answer: just be a little strategic. Go to places that are busy, where food is being cooked fresh and constantly turned over. If locals are eating there, that’s usually your best sign.
Most people eat a ton of street food in Hanoi without any issues — you just don’t want to be the only person at a stall with food sitting out all day.
Where is the Obama restaurant in Hanoi?
It’s Bun Cha Huong Lien, and it’s in the Hai Ba Trung District, just outside the Old Quarter.
They’ve kept the exact table where Obama and Bourdain sat (it’s literally behind glass now), so it’s turned into a bit of a pilgrimage stop.
That said — it’s still just a normal bún chả restaurant at its core, which is kind of the whole point.
Planning Cheat Sheet: Every Link You Need in One Place
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Ready to eat your way through my favorite Hanoi restaurants?
I hope that this post about Hanoi restaurants has been helpful in planning your trip to Vietnam! As I said before, Hanoi is literally teeming with dishes and food spots that, in my opinion, go far too underexplored by most Americans and Europeans.
If you have any feedback or want to share your experience with where to eat in Hanoi, please leave me a comment!
As always you can always find me on Instagram (tag me in your travel content!), Youtube, or Pinterest.
Happy traveling!
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