Saigon Ghost beliefs tour, Chinatown sightseeing by scooter

REVIEW · HO CHI MINH CITY

Saigon Ghost beliefs tour, Chinatown sightseeing by scooter

  • 5.04 reviews
  • From $16.00
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Operated by CONNECT CULTURE CO.,LTD · Bookable on Viator

Traveller rating 5.0 (4)Price from$16.00Operated byCONNECT CULTURE CO.,LTDBook viaViator

Ghost stories ride shotgun in Saigon. This Saigon Ghost beliefs scooter tour turns ordinary streets into a living map of Chinese-Vietnamese legends, with seven spooky stops and a night-out feel that’s hard to get on foot. I especially like how the tour pairs scary sights with real explanations about beliefs and local life.

The second thing I like: dinner is built into the ride. You start with Saigon River Tunnel Dinner, then add coffee and/or tea, so you’re not just hopping between photo stops—you’re eating like the city.

One thing to think about: you’re on a motorbike in city traffic, so if you’re uneasy around scooters or you hate sitting still, this won’t be for you. Also, the route can change a bit if the dinner restaurant is closed or if an attraction needs maintenance.

Quick hits you’ll feel in the moment

Saigon Ghost beliefs tour, Chinatown sightseeing by scooter - Quick hits you’ll feel in the moment

  • Seven spooky stops with a clear ghost-and-belief theme, starting at Saigon River Tunnel Dinner
  • Helmet and safety equipment included, plus a guide focused on keeping things manageable
  • Hotel pickup and drop-off and a central drop like City Hall or Ben Thanh Market areas
  • Beef noodles dinner and coconut included, with coffee and/or tea before or after
  • Ghost Building and Feng Shui explanations that connect the stories to everyday beliefs

Price and logistics: is $16 actually good value?

At $16 per person for an experience that runs about 2 to 4 hours, this is priced like a smart “do it once” evening plan—not a big splurge. You’re paying for more than sightseeing: you get a driver/guide, a local guide, hotel pickup and drop-off, and helmet safety equipment. Most importantly, you also get food—beef noodles soup and coconut, plus coffee and/or tea.

If you’ve ever tried to cobble together a night plan in Ho Chi Minh City on your own, you’ll know how quickly costs and hassle add up. A scooter ride plus dinner plus drinks in one ticket is a clean way to save energy and keep the evening moving.

Two practical notes before you book:

  • Keep important items at the hotel. This kind of ride is easier when you travel light.
  • Be aware the tour may vary if the restaurant is closed or if an attraction is under maintenance.

You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Ho Chi Minh City

Scooter tour mindset: faster than walking, but still real city driving

Saigon Ghost beliefs tour, Chinatown sightseeing by scooter - Scooter tour mindset: faster than walking, but still real city driving
This is a scooter-based sightseeing tour. That means you’re not just learning stories—you’re also getting the feel of Saigon’s street energy, especially through Chinatown areas and the neighborhoods tied to the Chinese-Vietnamese community.

The payoff is speed and access. Instead of spending time crossing long distances or waiting for the right moment on foot, you’re guided along winding streets and back lanes. The guide’s job isn’t just storytelling; it’s also making the ride feel doable.

Why that matters for you:

  • You’ll see more than you could on foot in the same time window.
  • You’ll get to the eerie sights while they’re still part of the evening atmosphere—when the streets feel more alive and the mood fits the theme.

Why it might not match your style:

  • If you strongly dislike motorbikes, you may feel tense rather than entertained.
  • If you’re prone to motion sickness, this is something to consider ahead of time.

Pickup, drop-off, and how you’ll start the evening

Saigon Ghost beliefs tour, Chinatown sightseeing by scooter - Pickup, drop-off, and how you’ll start the evening
This tour keeps logistics simple. Hotel pickup is offered, and you can also get drop-off at your hotel or in central spots like City Hall, Ben Thanh Market, Saigon Square, Pink Church, Opera House, Coffee Apartment, and more.

That’s a big deal for an evening tour. You don’t want to spend half your night figuring out transport or paying for it after dinner.

You’ll also have a mobile ticket, and you should receive confirmation at booking time. And the group size is capped at 30 travelers, which tends to help keep the experience from feeling too chaotic.

Stop-by-stop: what the seven ghost-themed stops are likely to feel like

You’ll visit seven spooky stops, and the tour starts with a dinner stop at Saigon River Tunnel Dinner. After that, the itinerary is organized around the beliefs behind the stories—especially where they connect to Chinese-Vietnamese life in Saigon and to the idea of spirits, luck, and place.

Stop 1: Saigon, with Chinese-Vietnamese beliefs as your backdrop

The first stop sets the tone: you’re guided through the logic of local life, with emphasis on the Chinese-Vietnamese population in Saigon and how their beliefs shape what people notice, avoid, or respect.

What you’ll get from this setup:

  • A better sense of why the ghost stories exist beyond just entertainment.
  • Context for later stops, especially when the tour references Feng Shui and the idea of how buildings and street layout affect well-being.

The benefit for you is mental calibration. If you go in expecting only creepy scenes, you’ll miss half the value. This tour tries to give you both: mood and meaning.

The middle stops: haunted sights framed by belief systems

After Stop 1, the “spooky stops” concept becomes your moving classroom. You’ll keep stopping for explanations tied to the theme, including local superstitions and what certain places are believed to affect.

The standout topic mentioned in the tour details is the Ghost Building. That’s where you’ll likely hear the strongest mix of story and cultural reasoning—why people interpret certain structures and locations the way they do.

The drawback to watch for: because the tour is designed around specific sites, if any attraction is closed or requires maintenance, the route can adjust. In practice, you’ll still get the main theme, but you might not hit the exact same order every time.

The final stretch: the city feels different after you connect the dots

By the end, you’ll likely see Saigon with a new filter: not just what the buildings look like, but what people believe about what the buildings do—socially, spiritually, and emotionally.

That’s where the scooter experience helps. When you ride between points, the city doesn’t feel like a list of landmarks. It feels like a web of stories tied to real streets you can picture later.

Ghost Building and Feng Shui: how the tour connects fear to everyday choices

The tour explicitly includes time to learn about the Ghost Building and the implications of Feng Shui. Even if you don’t buy into the beliefs, you’ll probably appreciate the human side: people use these ideas to make sense of luck, safety, and responsibility.

Here’s what to pay attention to while you’re being explained:

  • How the guide links a story to a specific location or building trait.
  • How Feng Shui is described as practical thinking, not just magic.
  • How beliefs show up in small choices—what gets attention, what gets avoided, and what’s considered a good or bad sign.

The value for you is context. Instead of hearing random ghost tales, you’ll understand the cultural framework that keeps those tales alive.

Food and drinks: dinner at Saigon River Tunnel Dinner (and it’s part of the plan)

This tour is unusually good about timing, because it doesn’t treat food as an optional add-on.

You get:

  • Dinner: Beef Noodles Soup and Coconut
  • Coffee and/or Tea
  • A chance to keep the tour moving without scrambling for dinner after

If you have dietary requirements, the tour says dinner can be catered. That’s important. Food is not a tiny detail on a 2 to 4 hour tour. It affects your comfort level and your energy for the ride.

One more practical tip: bring loose energy, not heavy expectations. You’re there for local flavor and a convenient meal that fits the theme—not for a fancy fine-dining tasting menu.

Safety and comfort: helmets, and how to prepare yourself

Good news: helmet and other safety equipment is provided.

Still, scooter riding has a feel of its own. To make this smoother:

  • Wear something you can move in and that won’t flap into your face.
  • Keep your hands free if you can (you’ll feel more stable that way).
  • Treat this like a guided ride first, photo walk second.

Also, because the tour advises leaving important items at the hotel, plan to carry only what you need. If you try to bring valuables, you’ll spend mental energy worrying, and that kills the spooky vibe.

Who this tour is perfect for (and who should skip it)

This tour fits best if you want:

  • A short, guided night activity that feels like local culture, not a museum run.
  • A scooter-based way to cover more ground than walking would allow.
  • The combination of ghost stories plus cultural explanations, especially around Feng Shui and the Chinese-Vietnamese community in Saigon.

You might skip it if:

  • You’re uncomfortable on scooters or you’re easily stressed by traffic.
  • You want only quiet, low-motion sightseeing.
  • You prefer purely historical sites with factual timelines and fewer belief-based explanations.

The best way to judge value: what you get for the time

Here’s the tradeoff you’re making, and it’s a fair one. You’re paying for:

  • Transport (pickup and drop-off),
  • A guide and local interpretation,
  • Helmet safety equipment,
  • Food (dinner plus coffee/tea),
  • And a themed route with seven stops.

So even though the price looks small, the inclusion list is the point. This isn’t just an entry ticket. It’s a ready-made plan.

Just remember the tour may adjust if the restaurant or an attraction isn’t available at that moment. That’s not a dealbreaker, but it’s how you protect expectations.

Should you book the Saigon Ghost beliefs scooter tour?

If your idea of fun is: quick ride, creepy stories with explanations, and dinner taken care of, then yes, book it. The tour’s strongest value is the combo of seven spooky stops, helmet safety, and a real meal at the start with beef noodles soup and coconut. That structure makes it easy to enjoy without planning.

If you’re mainly looking for big-name monuments or a calm, low-intensity walk, you might feel like this tour is too themed and too motorbike-centered.

My quick decision rule:

  • If you’ll enjoy local belief stories and you’re okay with scooter riding, this is a solid $16 night plan.
  • If scooters make you tense, skip it and find a walking or tram-style alternative instead.

FAQ

How much does the Saigon Ghost beliefs tour cost?

The price is listed as $16.00 per person.

How long is the tour?

The duration is approximately 2 to 4 hours.

Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?

Yes. The tour includes hotel pickup and drop-off, and it also mentions convenient drop-off in central famous spots such as City Hall, Ben Thanh Market, and others.

What food and drinks are included?

Dinner is included: Beef Noodles Soup and Coconut. The tour also includes coffee and/or tea.

Do I need to bring a helmet?

No. The tour provides a helmet and other safety equipment.

Can the tour accommodate dietary requirements?

Yes. The tour states that dinner can be catered to dietary requirements, and you should let them know ahead of time if you have allergies, religion-based cuisine restrictions, or personal convenience needs.

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