Wine bar$$ba-dinhDaily 09:00-00:00
Why locals love it: An early-20th-century French villa tucked in a Truc Bach side street, half-gallery, half-bar, with rotating contemporary-Vietnamese exhibitions and a small but serious wine list.
Tip: The shaded courtyard fills first in summer; the upstairs gallery is the quietest after 21:00.
Cocktail bar$$$tay-hoTue-Sun 18:00-01:00; closed Mon
Why locals love it: A traditional wooden gate hides a 14-seat minimal cocktail bar on the site of Princess Tu Hoa's 12th-century palace, opened 2025 and now in Asia's 50 Best.
Tip: Bookings recommended; the room only seats 14. Tu Hoa is one of 13 craft villages with roots back to the 12th century.
Café$old-quarterDaily 08:00-22:30
Why locals love it: Enter through a silk shop, walk a long corridor, cross a birdcage courtyard, climb a home staircase, and arrive on a rooftop balcony with the best lake view.
Tip: Look for the red-fronted silk shop on Hang Gai marked 'Silklike'. Egg coffee 50,000 VND.
Café$old-quarterDaily 07:00-22:00
Why locals love it: Up an old staircase above a Hoan Kiem-side travel agency, this 1987 cafe opened by Cafe Giang's daughter Mrs Bich still serves the original 1946 egg coffee.
Tip: Six seats on the narrow balcony overlooking the lake; arrive before 09:00 to claim one.
Vietnamese$old-quarterDaily 06:30-21:00
Why locals love it: A Bib Gourmand eel-noodle counter on a tiny corner of the Old Quarter, with the kitchen set up on the pavement and just six stools inside. Closes when the eel runs out.
Tip: The dry version (mien luon kho) with crispy eel and fried shallots is the dish to order.
Café$$old-quarterDaily 08:30-23:00
Why locals love it: Through an alleyway off Ly Quoc Su, climb to the second floor of an old French house with worn wooden floors. The terrace looks at St Joseph's spires.
Tip: Daytime cafe; cocktails after sunset. The church-bell soundtrack is the reason to sit by the window.