Planning 3 days in Ho Chi Minh City? This itinerary covers Saigon’s best — from street food and history to one experience most guides never mention: making your own perfume at NOTE – The Scent Lab. Whether it’s your first visit or your third, these three days balance iconic landmarks with the hidden gems that make HCMC unforgettable. This HCMC itinerary 3 days guide covers everything you need to know.
Ho Chi Minh City — Saigon to locals and most travelers — rewards those who go beyond the checklist. Yes, visit the War Remnants Museum. Yes, eat pho for breakfast. But the moments you’ll remember years from now are the ones no guidebook predicted: a conversation with a xe om driver, a side street you turned down by accident, the afternoon rain that changed your plans for the better.
This itinerary leaves room for those moments. It’s structured enough to ensure you see the essentials, and loose enough to let Saigon surprise you.
Budget for 3 Days in Ho Chi Minh City
Before diving into the day-by-day plan, here’s what 3 days in HCMC actually costs per person:
| Category | Budget Traveler | Mid-Range | Comfortable |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accommodation (3 nights) | $18-36 (hostel) | $75-135 (3-star) | $150-270 (4-star) |
| Food (3 days) | $15-24 (street food) | $36-60 (mixed) | $75-120 (restaurants) |
| Transport (3 days) | $9-15 (Grab bike) | $15-30 (Grab car) | $30-60 (car + taxi) |
| Activities | $15-30 | $40-80 | $80-150 |
| Coffee + drinks | $3-6 | $9-15 | $24-45 |
| 3-Day Total | $60-111 | $175-320 | $360-645 |
The sweet spot for most travelers is the mid-range column: comfortable hotels, a mix of street food and sit-down restaurants, Grab rides, and 2-3 paid experiences. Vietnam offers remarkable value — you can eat world-class food for $3 and take a Grab across the city for $2.
Day 1: District 1 — History, Street Food, and the Walking Street
Morning: The Essential Landmarks
Start at the War Remnants Museum (8 AM, before the heat and crowds). Allow 2 hours. This is one of the most powerful museum experiences in Southeast Asia — harrowing, important, and essential context for understanding modern Vietnam.
Walk to Notre-Dame Cathedral and the Central Post Office (10-15 minutes on foot). The post office is a functioning building — send a postcard home from the old wooden writing desks.
Lunch: Pho and Banh Mi
This is Saigon. Eat on the street. Pho Le (413 Nguyen Trai) for southern-style pho. Banh Mi Huynh Hoa (26 Le Thi Rieng) for the city’s most famous sandwich. Expect queues — they move fast.
Afternoon: The Cafe Apartment + Nguyen Hue Walking Street
Head to 42 Nguyen Hue — the Cafe Apartment. Start with coffee at a rooftop cafe, then explore the building’s hidden treasures: pottery, boutiques, and more beyond coffee. Finish by walking the Nguyen Hue pedestrian boulevard as it starts to fill with families and street performers in the late afternoon.
Evening: Street Food Tour by Motorbike
Book an evening motorbike food tour (5:30-9 PM). You sit on the back while a local driver takes you through District 4, Chinatown, and hidden alleys. You’ll eat 5-7 dishes you’d never find on your own. This is the single best way to feel Saigon on your first night.
Day 2: Thao Dien
+ Perfume Workshop + Mekong Delta

Morning: Mekong Delta Day Trip
Depart early (7-8 AM) for a half-day Mekong Delta trip to Ben Tre. Floating markets, coconut candy workshops, sampan rides through narrow canals. Choose a small-group operator (6-10 people). You’ll be back by 1-2 PM.
Afternoon: Perfume Workshop at NOTE – The Scent Lab
Head to Thao Dien (District 2) — Saigon’s leafy, cafe-lined expat neighborhood. At 34 Nguyen Duy Hieu, NOTE – The Scent Lab’s flagship studio awaits. In 90 minutes, you’ll create a custom perfume from Vietnamese ingredients — guided by a trained workshop instructor. No experience needed.
This is the experience that turns your trip into a tangible memory. Your formula is saved permanently.
From the studio window on the 4th floor, you can see Nguyen Hue stretching toward the river — motorbikes circling the roundabout below, tourists taking photos on every landing.
“It was my first time. I truly enjoyed the cozy atmosphere and hands-on experience.”
“The perfume workshop was such a fun and unique experience! The instructor explained everything.”
Evening: Thao Dien Dinner
Stay in Thao Dien for dinner. The neighborhood has some of Saigon’s best international and Vietnamese restaurants. Walk the tree-lined streets. This is a different Saigon — quieter, greener, more reflective. The perfect mood after a creative afternoon.
Day 3: Cu Chi
Tunnels + Your Choice

Morning: Cu Chi Tunnels
Depart at 7:30 AM for the Cu Chi Tunnels (70 km northwest). A guided half-day tour takes you through the underground tunnel network used during the Vietnam War. Sobering, fascinating, and physically immersive — you’ll crawl through actual tunnel sections. Return by 12:30-1 PM.
Afternoon: Choose Your Adventure
Your last afternoon in Saigon. Options:
- Ben Thanh Market — souvenirs, spices, dried fruits. Haggle gently.
- Cooking class — learn to make pho or goi cuon (book ahead).
- Spa and massage — Saigon has world-class spas at Vietnamese prices. A 90-minute massage costs $20-40.
- Chinatown (Cholon) — District 5’s Chinese quarter. Visit Binh Tay Market (more local than Ben Thanh), Thien Hau Temple, and the herbal medicine shops along Hai Thuong Lan Ong street. Grab bike from District 1: 15 minutes.
- Return to Thao Dien or District 1 for the spots you missed on Day 1.
- If you haven’t done the perfume workshop yet — this is your last chance.
Evening: Farewell Saigon
Rooftop drinks at Saigon Saigon Bar (Hotel Caravelle) or anywhere along Nguyen Hue. Watch the city light up one more time. You’ve earned it.
Neighborhoods Guide: Where to Spend Your Time
Saigon is a city of distinct neighborhoods, each with its own character. Knowing which ones suit your style helps you make the most of 3 days:
| Neighborhood | Character | Best For | How to Get There |
|---|---|---|---|
| District 1 (center) | Historic, busy, touristy, walkable | Museums, landmarks, nightlife, walking | Most hotels are here — walk everywhere |
| Thao Dien (D2) | Leafy, cafe-lined, expat-friendly | Brunch, workshops, boutique shopping | Grab from D1: 15-20 min |
| Cholon / D5 | Chinese quarter, chaotic, authentic | Markets, temples, herbal medicine, street food | Grab from D1: 15 min |
| District 4 | Local, gritty, food-obsessed | Street food (best in the city), local bars | Grab from D1: 10 min |
| Binh Thanh | Residential, up-and-coming, trendy | Coffee culture, local life, Landmark 81 views | Grab from D1: 10-15 min |
| District 7 (Phu My Hung) | Modern, planned, Korean/Japanese expats | International food, malls, quiet evenings | Grab from D1: 20-25 min |
Pro tip: Don’t try to see every neighborhood in 3 days. District 1 + Thao Dien + one other (Cholon or D4) is the ideal combination. Save the rest for a return trip — and you will want to return.
Practical Tips
for 3 Days in HCMC

| Getting around | Grab (ride-hailing app) for everything. Download before you arrive. |
| Cash vs. card | Street food and markets: cash (VND). Restaurants and workshops: card accepted. |
| Weather | Hot year-round. Rainy season (May-Nov): afternoon downpours. Carry a light rain jacket. |
| SIM card | Buy at the airport (Viettel or Mobifone). ~$5 for 30 days unlimited data. |
| Safety | Saigon is very safe. Watch your phone on the street (snatch theft exists). |
| Book ahead | Motorbike tour, cooking class, perfume workshop — book 2-3 days ahead. |
Day 4 Extension (If You Have Time)
Got an extra day? Many travelers find that 3 days in HCMC leaves them wanting more. Here’s how to spend a 4th day — focusing on the neighborhoods and experiences you didn’t have time for.
Morning: Cholon — Saigon’s Chinatown
Take a Grab to Binh Tay Market in District 5 (15 minutes from District 1, about 40,000 VND). This is the real market — where locals actually shop, unlike the tourist-oriented Ben Thanh. Walk through aisles of dried goods, traditional medicine, and wholesale fabrics. Then visit Thien Hau Temple (710 Nguyen Trai) — one of the most beautiful temples in southern Vietnam, filled with hanging incense coils that burn for weeks. Stroll down Hai Thuong Lan Ong Street for the herbal medicine shops — the smells alone are worth the trip.
Lunch: District 4 Street Food
Cross into District 4 for what many locals consider the best street food in Saigon. Try banh mi at a street stall on Vinh Khanh Street, followed by hu tieu (southern noodle soup) or bot chien (fried rice cakes). This neighborhood is gritty and authentic — plastic chairs, fluorescent lights, incredible food. Budget: 30,000-60,000 VND per dish.
Afternoon: Landmark 81 + Binh Thanh
Head to Landmark 81 — Southeast Asia’s tallest building. The observation deck offers panoramic views of the entire city (250,000 VND entry). Then walk along the Saigon River promenade in Binh Thanh district. The neighborhood is up-and-coming, with new specialty coffee shops and local restaurants that haven’t been discovered by tourists yet.
Evening: Bui Vien Walking Street
If you haven’t experienced Saigon’s nightlife, head to Bui Vien Walking Street (District 1) after 7 PM. The street closes to traffic and fills with live music, street performers, and plastic-chair bars selling beer for 15,000-25,000 VND. It’s loud, chaotic, and quintessentially Saigon. Stay for one beer or stay for five — no judgment either way.
Money-Saving Tips for Ho Chi Minh City
Vietnam is already affordable, but these tips stretch your dong even further:
- Eat where locals eat: Plastic chairs on the sidewalk = good sign. Air conditioning and English menus = tourist prices. A bowl of pho at a local stall costs 40,000-50,000 VND ($1.60-2). The same pho at a restaurant near Ben Thanh Market costs 100,000-150,000 VND ($4-6). Same recipe, different price tag.
- Use Grab bikes instead of cars: A Grab bike across District 1 costs 15,000-25,000 VND (~$1). A Grab car for the same route: 40,000-60,000 VND. Bikes are also faster — they weave through traffic while cars sit in it.
- Drink street coffee: A ca phe sua da from a street stall costs 15,000-20,000 VND (~$0.60-0.80). The same drink at a trendy cafe costs 55,000-75,000 VND. Both are delicious — the street version is more authentic.
- Withdraw large amounts from ATMs: Most Vietnamese ATMs charge 30,000-50,000 VND per withdrawal regardless of amount. Withdraw 3,000,000-5,000,000 VND at once instead of multiple small amounts. Always decline the ATM’s exchange rate — your bank’s rate is better.
- Visit free attractions: Walking Nguyen Hue, exploring the Cafe Apartment building, watching the sunset from the riverfront, people-watching at Ben Thanh Night Market — all free. The best of Saigon costs nothing.
- Book experiences directly: Skip aggregator sites that add 15-20% markup. Book the perfume workshop, cooking classes, and motorbike tours directly from the provider’s website.
- Haggle at markets, not at shops: Bargaining is expected at Ben Thanh and Binh Tay markets. Start at 50-60% of asking price. But don’t haggle at fixed-price shops, restaurants, or workshops — it’s not done and can be considered rude.
- Stay in District 1 or Thao Dien: These neighborhoods save you transport money. Everything you need is walkable or a short Grab ride away. Hotels in District 7 or Binh Thanh might be cheaper, but you’ll spend the savings on Grab rides.
What Travelers Wish
They’d Known

“Cam was very hands-on and guided us every step of the way. A perfect experience if you’re looking for a relaxing and intentional activity in HCMC.”
Read more from 500+ travelers on TripAdvisor.
Make your HCMC trip unforgettable.
Create a custom perfume in 90 minutes — the souvenir you’ll actually use.
Thao Dien · Cafe Apartment District 1 · 4.9★ from 500+ reviews
Already home? Browse NOTE’s ready-made collection — same Vietnamese ingredients.
Find us: TripAdvisor · Instagram · Facebook
Related Reading
- What is a perfume making workshop?
- Last day in Vietnam — perfume workshop experience
- What to do on your last day in HCMC
- First-time Vietnam checklist 2026
Further reading: Ho Chi Minh City travel guide on Wikivoyage | Vietnam Tourism Board — Ho Chi Minh City
Related Articles
- What To Do On Your Last Day In Hcmc
- Things To Do At The Cafe Apartment
- Best Craft Workshops In Ho Chi Minh City
- Things to Do in Ho Chi Minh City — Complete Guide
- Ultimate Things to Do in HCMC
- 7 Experiences to Book Before Vietnam
Frequently Asked Questions
How many days do you need in Ho Chi Minh City?
3 days is ideal for first-time visitors — enough to cover District 1 landmarks, street food, a day trip (Mekong Delta or Cu Chi), and unique experiences like a perfume workshop. Add a 4th day if you want to explore Thao Dien or Cholon (Chinatown) more deeply.
What’s the best 3-day itinerary for HCMC?
Day 1: District 1 (museums, Cafe Apartment, motorbike food tour). Day 2: Mekong Delta morning + perfume workshop afternoon. Day 3: Cu Chi Tunnels + free exploration. Book experiences 2-3 days ahead.
Is there a perfume workshop in Ho Chi Minh City?
Yes. NOTE – The Scent Lab has two locations: Thao Dien (34 Nguyen Duy Hieu) and the Cafe Apartment (42 Nguyen Hue, District 1). 90-minute workshop, 4.9 stars rated, book online.
What’s the best unique experience in Saigon?
A perfume making workshop at NOTE – The Scent Lab is consistently rated among the top unique experiences. You create a custom fragrance from Vietnamese ingredients in 90 minutes. Other top picks: motorbike food tour, cooking class, Mekong Delta day trip.
What should I book in advance for HCMC?
Motorbike food tours, cooking classes, and the perfume workshop should be booked 2-3 days ahead. Cu Chi Tunnels and Mekong Delta day trips: 1 week ahead during peak season.
Which neighborhoods should I visit in Ho Chi Minh City?
District 1 for landmarks and nightlife, Thao Dien for cafes and workshops, District 4 for the best street food, and Cholon (District 5) for authentic Chinese-Vietnamese culture. Focus on 2-3 neighborhoods over 3 days — don’t try to cover everything.
Find NOTE – The Scent Lab
- 42 Nguyễn Huệ (2nd floor, Cafe Apartment) — Google Maps → · TripAdvisor
- 34 Nguyễn Duy Hiệu (Thảo Điền) — Google Maps → · TripAdvisor
How to find us:
- 📍 42 Nguyễn Huệ — Watch direction video on TikTok →
- 📍 34 Nguyễn Duy Hiệu — Watch direction video on YouTube →


