Herbs, chilli, fish sauce and a squeeze of lime: few cuisines cut through Hong Kong's summer heat like Vietnamese food. Brought here across five decades, the city's best Vietnamese restaurants now run from Michelin Bib Gourmand sit-downs to takeaway bánh mì counters and one genuinely ambitious tasting menu.

Here are eight we return to, spread from Sheung Wan to Causeway Bay. Every address, dish and price was cross-checked against the restaurants' own listings and Hong Kong food press in July 2026.

The short version: For a sit-down meal, Ăn Chơi (Michelin Bib Gourmand) and Chôm Chôm. For a quick fix, Bánh Mì Nếm and casual chain BÊP. For a feast, Cô Thành and Hue specialist An Nam. For fine dining, SEP. Budget roughly HK$70–300 per head, more for tasting menus.

In This Guide

  1. Hong Kong's Vietnamese scene, mapped
  2. Modern sit-down: Ăn Chơi & Chôm Chôm
  3. Feasting: Cô Thành & BÊP
  4. Where is the best bánh mì in Hong Kong?
  5. Regional & refined: An Nam & SEP
  6. A neighbourhood classic: Saigon Etoile
  7. At a glance
  8. FAQ

Hong Kong's Vietnamese scene, mapped

Vietnamese food arrived in Hong Kong with the refugee waves of the mid-1970s, and the community's "Little Saigon" still centres on Sheung Wan (上環), where several of the best kitchens sit within a few lanes of each other. On the island you will also find Vietnamese spots dotted through Central (中環), Wan Chai (灣仔), Causeway Bay (銅鑼灣) and Tin Hau (天后).

The range is wide. There is fast, cheap street food — pho, bánh mì, com tam — but also refined, regional and even fine-dining Vietnamese. For where these sit in the wider city, see our 50 best restaurants in Hong Kong.

Modern sit-down: Ăn Chơi & Chôm Chôm

Sheung Wan's Ăn Chơi is the one that turned casual Vietnamese into a citywide obsession. It picked up a Michelin Bib Gourmand in the 2024 guide and has been packed since; the grilled lime-leaf chicken and prawn-and-pork summer rolls are the orders. Book ahead — it is small.

Style: modern Vietnamese (Michelin Bib Gourmand) · Signature: gà nướng grilled chicken (HK$160); summer rolls (HK$80) · Where: G/F, 15–17 Mercer Street, Sheung Wan · MTR: Sheung Wan, Exit A2

A decade in and still busy, Chôm Chôm takes a modern, charcoal-heavy line on Vietnamese cooking on Peel Street. It is a no-reservations spot, so come early or late; the curry fried chicken and cha ca grouper are worth the wait.

Style: modern Vietnamese (no reservations) · Signature: cà ri fried chicken (HK$138); cha ca grouper (HK$228) · Where: G/F, 58 Peel Street, Central · MTR: Central, Exit D2 (or Sheung Wan)
Hong Kong's Vietnamese food has quietly grown from cheap-and-cheerful lunch into a full spectrum — Bib Gourmand grills, takeaway bánh mì and a proper tasting menu.

Feasting: Cô Thành & BÊP

Tucked inside Pacific Place, Cô Thành bills itself as Hong Kong's largest Vietnamese restaurant, and it is the one for a big group and Saigon specials. The bun bo hue and betel-leaf beef rolls (bo la lot) are the standouts.

Style: Saigon classics · Signature: bun bo hue (HK$138); bo la lot (HK$108) · Where: Shop 123, 1/F, Pacific Place, 88 Queensway, Admiralty · MTR: Admiralty, Exit F

For a reliable, spacious everyday option, BÊP Vietnamese Kitchen runs several branches (Central, Sheung Wan, Tai Kok Tsui) with big tables and dishes from the length of Vietnam. It is walk-in only and gets busy at lunch.

Style: casual Vietnamese (multiple branches) · Signature: bun cha (HK$118); Angus beef pho (HK$118) · Where: multiple locations across Hong Kong · Good to know: walk-in only, quieter at dinner

Where is the best bánh mì in Hong Kong?

For the city's best Vietnamese sandwich, head to Bánh Mì Nếm, a takeaway specialist recognised in the Michelin Guide. The classic bánh mì đặc biệt — pork cold cuts and savoury pâté in a crackly baguette — is as authentic as it gets, and there are branches on both sides of the harbour-facing island.

Style: bánh mì takeaway (Michelin-recognised) · Signature: bánh mì đặc biệt (HK$82) · Where: G/F, 3 Chiu Lung Street, Central; also G/F, 247–249 Queen's Road East, Wan Chai · MTR: Central, Exit D2 / Wan Chai, Exit A3

Regional & refined: An Nam & SEP

An Nam narrows the focus to the herbal, delicate cooking of Hue, Vietnam's old imperial capital, in a room styled after 1920s neoclassical Vietnam. It has locations in Causeway Bay and Kowloon Tong; the steamed rice flan and duck à l'orange are the ones to try.

Style: Hue regional cuisine · Signature: steamed rice flan (HK$108); duck à l'orange (HK$288) · Where: 3/F, Lee Garden Two, 28 Yun Ping Road, Causeway Bay · MTR: Causeway Bay, Exit F

At the top end, SEP takes Vietnamese into fine-dining territory, cooking over a wood fire with an Indochine slant. It is a special-occasion room high up in H Code, built around a dinner tasting menu.

Style: Vietnamese fine dining · Signature: dinner tasting menu (HK$1,680) · Where: 19/F, H Code, 45 Pottinger Street, Central · MTR: Central, Exit D2

A neighbourhood classic: Saigon Etoile

Small, honest and beloved, Tin Hau's Saigon Etoile keeps the menu tight and the pickles and salty-sweet dressings spot on. The bò bún (vermicelli with beef) and the rare bún riêu tomato-and-crab noodle soup are why regulars keep coming back.

Style: streetside Vietnamese classics · Signature: bò bún (HK$78); bún riêu (HK$68) · Where: G/F, 118 Electric Road, Tin Hau · MTR: Tin Hau, Exit A2

Want the newest name in town too? Central's Le Le brings progressive Vietnamese fine dining to Lyndhurst Terrace — worth a look if SEP has you in a splurging mood. For the neighbours, our best Thai restaurants and best Cantonese restaurants guides map out more of the island's dining.

Best Vietnamese restaurants in Hong Kong at a glance

Eight Vietnamese standouts (checked July 2026)

RestaurantStyleAreaPrice (pp)
Ăn ChơiModern (Bib Gourmand)Sheung Wan~HK$200–350
Chôm ChômModern (no bookings)Central~HK$250–400
Cô ThànhSaigon classicsAdmiralty~HK$200–350
BÊP Vietnamese KitchenCasual (multiple)Central / Sheung Wan~HK$120–220
Bánh Mì NếmBánh mì takeawayCentral / Wan Chai~HK$70–100
An NamHue regionalCauseway Bay~HK$250–400
SEPFine diningCentralTasting ~HK$1,680
Saigon EtoileStreetside classicsTin Hau~HK$80–150

Prices and hours change, so confirm before you go. Two useful cross-checks are Foodie's Vietnamese round-up and the Michelin Guide's Hong Kong listings.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best Vietnamese restaurant in Hong Kong?
For a proper sit-down meal, Michelin Bib Gourmand Ăn Chơi in Sheung Wan and Central's long-running Chôm Chôm lead the pack. For fine dining, SEP takes Vietnamese cuisine upmarket, while Cô Thành in Pacific Place is the city's biggest Vietnamese kitchen. For a quick fix, Bánh Mì Nếm makes the best bánh mì in town.
Where can I find the best bánh mì in Hong Kong?
Bánh Mì Nếm, with takeaway shops in Central (3 Chiu Lung Street) and Wan Chai (247–249 Queen's Road East), is the city's go-to, and its bánh mì đặc biệt (HK$82) is recognised in the Michelin Guide. BÊP and Cóm Bánh Mì are strong casual alternatives across the island.
How much does Vietnamese food cost in Hong Kong?
A bánh mì or a bowl of pho runs roughly HK$70 to HK$120. A casual sit-down meal at BÊP, Ăn Chơi or Cô Thành is around HK$150 to HK$300 a head. Fine dining is another level — SEP's dinner tasting is about HK$1,680. Prices change, so confirm before you go.
Which Hong Kong Vietnamese restaurants have Michelin recognition?
Ăn Chơi in Sheung Wan holds a Michelin Bib Gourmand, awarded in the 2024 guide, and bánh mì specialist Bánh Mì Nếm is recognised in the Michelin Guide. No Vietnamese restaurant in Hong Kong currently holds a Michelin star, but the category is well represented in the guide's affordable listings.
Vietnamese Food Pho Bánh Mì Restaurants Sheung Wan Hong Kong 2026