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Review: Hilton Saigon, an excellent new hotel in Ho Chi Minh City’s District 1

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This is our review of the new Hilton Saigon hotel in Ho Chi Minh City.

Somewhat surprisingly, Hilton Saigon is the only Hilton hotel in Vietnam’s most populous city. I don’t just mean Hilton-branded hotel: I mean any of Hilton’s many brands.

Given the massive amount of development happening in Vietnam, it will undoubtedly be joined by others. For a start, the former Hilton Hanoi Opera hotel is currently undergoing refurbishment into the future Waldorf Astoria Hanoi.

Opened in early 2024, Hilton Saigon is brand new with 228 guest rooms spread across the tower’s 40 floors. (Unlike many recent hotel developments in skyscrapers, rooms are available on high floors too.)

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

Hilton provided my stay for review purposes whilst I paid for all other expenses. The hotel website is here.

Where is Hilton Saigon?

Hilton Saigon is located on the banks of the river Saigon, one of several new buildings to stand around the half-moon shaped Me Linh Square and Tran Hung Dao Statue. It is approximately 30 minutes away from Tan Son Nhat Airport by car and just a few blocks away from the historic French colonial core of the city, with the Opera House, Post Office and other attractions.

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

The Ho Chi Minh City Metro has yet to open, but with taxis and ride hailing apps such as Grab available for just a few pounds and sometimes less, getting around is easy. Whilst the traffic in Ho Chi Minh City can be chaotic, it was never as bad as I expected: I’ve experienced worse gridlock in Bangkok and Los Angeles.

Inside the Hilton Saigon hotel

The lower eight floors of the building are dedicated to meeting and events space, with a big, pillar-free Grand Ballroom and various other spaces. For check-in, head to the ninth floor which is where you’ll find the reception and lobby lounge:

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

An architectural staircase connects the public floors of the hotel, which includes the tenth floor with the main restaurant and the eleventh with the pool, spa and gym.

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

On arriving, I was offered a welcome drink of cold tea during my check-in.

Rooms and suites at Hilton Saigon

Guest rooms are available on floors 12 through 38.

With key card in hand, I made my way up to my suite which I had been upgraded to on check in. I also managed to take a look at a standard guest room, which I’ll start with first.

Even the smallest rooms are generously proportioned and start at a comfortable 39 square metres, with options for a king or twin bed. This includes a spacious bathroom with separate shower and bath tub:

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

The window features a funky electrochemical coating that turns opaque when a switch is flicked. Although this tech has been around for some time, this is one of the first times I’ve seen it in a hotel, and the effect is instant.

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

The toilet is in a separate cubicle with a frosted glass door.

The room itself is equally spacious, in this case with twin beds and a shared bedside table:

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

Opposite is the TV and mini bar (a coffee machine is not provided, except in suites.)

That’s a standard room. Fancy a bit more space? The hotel also offers four categories of suites, of which the King Deluxe Corner Suite River View (mouthful!) is the lowest.

It’s decked out in the same style as the guest rooms but you obviously get far more space – almost double, at 70 square metres. A generous hallway and living room comes with a guest toilet:

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

and

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

In this case, the mini bar features a Nespresso machine, one of the perks of staying in a suite (although, given that many budget hotels have coffee machines these days, every room should really have one):

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

It’s the bedroom which has the real wow factor. I think over half the square footage is occupied by the bedroom and bathroom, with huge sweeping views across the Saigon River and the Tu Thiem 2 bridge:

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

Plenty of sockets and charging ports are on both sides of the bed, as you’d expect for a new build hotel:

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

Here is the full view of the river:

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

On the other corner, you have more floor to ceiling windows as well as an open wardrobe and massive marble bench that doubles up as a luggage rack. As someone who never unpacks, I was a big fan of this feature as there was ample space for multiple suitcases and more.

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

The bathroom is bigger and features the same electrochemical window for privacy. Strangely, for a suite of this size, there is only one wash basin:

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

Toiletries are the standard Crabtree & Evelyn you’ll find in every other Hilton.

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

The room came with the usual amenities including bath robes, safe and ironing board, although the latter was so well integrated I actually had to call someone up to the room to show me where it was!

One oddity I did experience is that the AC seemed to reset to 23C every time we left. I’m not sure if this was a technical fault or hotel policy to reduce electricity consumption but it meant powering it up to cool it down to 21C or so every time we got back. I did mention this to the hotel on checking out.

Pool and gym at Hilton Saigon

The outdoor pool on the 11th floor provides a welcome refreshment from the heat and humidity of Ho Chi Minh City, especially after a day of exploring. It’s not huge but is surrounded by about six or eight big day beds.

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

The gym is next door with windows overlooking the pool, which is perhaps a bit strange!

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

Breakfast and dining at Hilton Saigon

Hilton Saigon has a number of restaurants, lounges and bars, including two on the top floors.

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

Breakfast is served in the Strand Restaurant on the 10th floor and is buffet style. It is an extensive offering covering all bases, including a large selection of hot Western, Chinese and Vietnamese dishes. A variety of dietary requirements are catered with, for example, both pork and chicken sausages on offer:

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

Or vegetable and meat-based spring rolls, hash browns and even honey-glazed ham:

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

There is, of course, a proper noodle bar serving pho but you can also get slices of banh mi (Vietnamese baguette sandwiches).

A full assortment of fruits, pastries, yoghurts, cold cuts and more are all available. It is an impressive selection overall, and of good quality.

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

Whilst Strand is open for lunch and dinner as well, you can also choose to dine in the flagship Residence Eleven restaurant on the 39th floor specialising in Cantonese cuisine. The designers have done a great job with the interiors:

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

The menu includes classics such as Peking Duck as well as fusion dishes and some Vietnamese dishes, as well.

We had to try the Peking duck, of course:

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

Having opened just over a month ago, the restaurant hasn’t quite made its mark on the city yet. With good food and an excellent location and ambience I’m sure it will establish itself soon.

One floor above Residence Eleven you’ll find Song Bar. Compared to the restaurant downstairs, this is a relatively compact space with just a handful of private seating areas as well as a long bar. A modern, art-deco inspired chandelier hangs between the two floors with a wrap-around staircase:

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

In addition to evening cocktails, Song Bar also offers a popular Afternoon Tea package.

The Executive Lounge at Hilton Saigon

The 34th floor is home to the hotel’s Executive Lounge, with complimentary access for anyone who books an Executive Room or with Hilton Honors Diamond status.

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

and

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

I enjoyed happy hour drinks before dinner both nights here and the food offering is very good. There are a few hot dishes which rotate on a nightly basis, but for me the highlights were the cooked prawns and various other cold little snacks:

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

On one evening slow cooked beef brisket was on offer:

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

There’s even a range of cakes and desserts:

Review the Hilton Saigon hotel

The Executive Lounge was never overcrowded and the staff were friendly so it made a pleasant spot to relax.

Conclusion

My stay at the Hilton Saigon hotel could not be more different from the Park Hyatt Saigon which I reviewed here. Whereas the latter has a very traditional faux French colonial style the brand new Hilton Saigon embraces the ‘now’ with floor-to-ceiling windows and modern decor.

In terms of pricing, whilst the Park Hyatt starts at £200 per night, you’ll find the Hilton available from £140.

Whilst both are in District 1, the centre of Ho Chi Minh City, one is a mid rise surrounded by other colonial buildings whilst the Hilton Saigon has soaring views of the river from its 40-storey tower.

Service at the Hilton was just as good based on my limited interactions with staff and everything went smoothly.

In theory, the Park Hyatt brand is a step above the Hilton. In practice, they were pretty evenly matched and whilst the Hilton Saigon is not as luxurious as the Park Hyatt (nor would I ever expect it to be) I almost preferred it. Do you prefer a traditional luxury hotel or a modern, glass tower hotel? The choice is yours.

Rates at the Hilton Saigon start from £140 or 50,000 Hilton Honors points per night. You can find out more, and book, on the hotel website here.


How to earn Hilton Honors points and status from UK credit cards

How to earn Hilton Honors points and status from UK credit cards (April 2025)

There are various ways of earning Hilton Honors points from UK credit and debit cards.  Many cards also have generous sign-up bonuses.

There are two dedicated Hilton Honors debit cards. These are especially attractive when spending abroad due to the 0% or 0.5% FX fee, depending on card.

You also receive FREE Hilton Honors status for as long as you hold the debit cards – Gold status with the Plus card and Silver status with the basic card. This is a great reason to apply even if you rarely use it.

We reviewed the Hilton Honors Plus Debit Card here and the Hilton Honors Debit Card here.

You can apply for either card here.

NEW: Hilton Honors Plus Debit

10,000 bonus points, Hilton Gold status and NO FX fees Read our full review

NEW: Hilton Honors Debit

2,500 bonus points, Hilton Silver status and 0.5% FX fees Read our full review

There is another way of getting Hilton Honors status, and earning Hilton Honors points, from a payment card.

Holders of The Platinum Card from American Express receive FREE Hilton Honors Gold status for as long as they hold the card.  It also comes with Marriott Bonvoy Gold, Radisson Rewards Premium and MeliaRewards Gold status.

We reviewed American Express Platinum in detail here and you can apply here.

The Platinum Card from American Express

80,000 bonus points and great travel benefits – for a large fee Read our full review

You can also earn Hilton Honors points indirectly with:

and for small business owners:

The conversion rate from American Express to Hilton Honors points is 1:2.

Click here to read our detailed summary of all UK credit cards which can be used to earn Hilton Honors points.

Comments (28)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Tariq says:

    The Gantry Curio in Stratford has the same irritating AC behaviour. Switches off and resets to 22deg, even if just one person leaves the room…

    • Michael C says:

      Interesting – I noticed this in 3 Hiltons in 2 different countries in Oct., including, for the first time, the Hilton Kensington, where we’ve been staying for a decade.

  • Michael C says:

    Looks fab, especially the suite, but then…Crabtree & Evelyn? Still?! No gorgeous local brand?

  • Novice says:

    Looks great.

  • Tom says:

    Looks nice. The level to which the mid-range brands vary based on location is always fascinating to me (I’m talking Hilton, Marriott etc.). The whole point of them originally was they represented guaranteed quality to customers but after too much expansion now they’re all over the place.

    In the US, they are often quite basic 3 star hotels, or 4 if you’re lucky. In Europe they are generally 4 star hotels with the odd nicer one and odd worse one. In Asia and the Middle East new Marriott / Hilton properties are typically five star hotels and not really different to the supposed higher end brands owned by the same company like JW Marriott / W / Conrad etc. except for some cheaper toiletries and perhaps a smaller breakfast buffet. In Bangkok, for example, one of the Marriotts is probably nicer than the JW Marriott, Conrad, etc.

    I did a few nights at Park Hyatt Saigon last month and it was good, but indeed doesn’t look that much nicer than this to cost twice the price.

    • JDB says:

      @Tom – if typical Marriott/Hilton properties in ME/Asia are five stars, what are Mandarin/Aman/Peninsula etc. ?

      • Tom says:

        Luxury hotels. Five star does not equal luxury hotel.

        • JDB says:

          Unfortunately words like luxury, deluxe, boutique, premium are much overused and abused! The Michelin very effectively fitted hotels into its five star ratings with nuances such as red/black, the rocking horses etc.

          A 1-5 rating is very commonly used e.g. for staff appraisals and works very well if applied correctly. TripAdvisor uses 1-5 as well but that is hopelessly misused.

          The likes of Hilton/Marriott/IC are intended to be four star hotels. The Premium versions of the first two WA and RC are intended to be in a higher category but don’t really reach the level of the aforementioned Peninsula, Aman, Como, Dorchester, Raffles, Mandarin and many others including independents. Four Seasons presents a dilemma as many properties slide into RC territory.

          There’s no reason why all these places can’t be appropriately categorised within 1-5.

          • Tom says:

            Thank you for the completely unnecessary lecture, but I disagree. 1-5 stars are better applied to facility levels to me (5 star means all facilities such as spa, concierge, hotel car, turndown service, minimum room size above certain level, etc. are provided). This is the basis of the original star rating system and makes more sense than a subjective system based on perceived service levels and being ‘luxury’, hence why Forbes and all the other raters can’t reach agreement on which hotels in any particular city are ‘5 star’. Equally, saying both a dated Hilton and a Waldorf Astoria-level hotel are 4 star so you can protect 5 star rating for proper luxury hotels makes no sense to me, you end up with 50%+ of the hotels in a city like Hong Kong or London being four star hotels or something ridiculous, the ratings then tell you basically nothing.

          • JDB says:

            Thank you for the ‘lecture’ back! All your proposal does is to push what you suggest might be a pile up of four star hotels into a pile up in this huge rather amorphous ‘luxury’ category above five stars when there are very clear differences between hotels. Fortunately some of us can distinguish between Waldorf and Peninsula etc.

          • BBbetter says:

            Reminds me of tripadvisor reviews where they rate the hotel 3 out of 5 because they thought the hotel was 3 star!

          • patrick says:

            I find the tone of JDB`s posts utterly riveting and most entertaining. The dogmatic, bombastic certainty with which he posts on all matters under the sun suggests the sort of character that we probably all encounter at work and that Ricky Gervais portrays so well. I particularly enjoyed a post last week when he claimed that 80% of people did something or other and when he was lambasted with facts to the contrary he attempted to eviscerate his critics with the assertion that statistics were irrelevant. Excellent work, keep it up.

          • TGLoyalty says:

            Have to say Tom is bang on here.

            Stars is about facilities now days look and feel comes into the equation but there is definitely a distinction between 5* hotel and a luxury hotel. I’m not even sure all luxury hotels need to be 5* but they probably fall under the “Boutique” banner.

          • ohanssen says:

            Isn’t the solution what the over-the-top luxury hotels in the Middle East have done, creating 6 and 7 star hotels? While the discussion is an interesting one, on what the criteria for stars should be, you could go with a more general ‘intuitive’ idea that beyond a 5 star hotel category, you would add ‘luxury’ places as a 6th star, and when you get into personal butler territory, you venture into the 7th star world.

          • Occasional Ranter says:

            Re “5 star” =/= “luxury”, by coincidence I just stayed in the Sherwood Residence in Saigon, which was “5 star” in terms of facilities but had all the luxury feel of a faded conference hotel off the Coventry ring road. Lots of choice at breakfast but none of it done with panache, bare walls, harsh lighting, hard mattresses, maids shouting at each other in the hall and using 2 way radios turned up louder than the traffic in the street…

  • JDB says:

    @Rhys – you have been very courteous to your hosts in pitching the two hotels as faux traditional vs ‘now’ but the pictures suggest rather more! The Hilton has done all the things Park Hyatt failed to do in designing the public spaces and rooms, plus you get the river views.

    • Michael C says:

      The wall of glass with river view would definitely make this my choice.

    • Rhys says:

      They’re both just very different. I enjoyed both!

    • Occasional Ranter says:

      “Fortunately some of us can distinguish between Waldorf and Peninsula etc.”

      You’re an enigma. An appalling snob, ridiculously certain of your opinions, but also incredibly helpful.

  • Rob W says:

    Is this The Myst rebranded ? That was excellent and loved the hot tub on the balcony! Pool looks very similar?

  • Gagravarr says:

    A couple of months back, we stayed at the Sheraton Saigon Opera, which is about half way between the Park Hyatt and the Hilton.

    Food in the lounge at the Sheraton was a lot better than the Hilton photos look – Sheraton had loads more food options including a bunch of fresh seafood each night. Rooms a similar size, obviously no river views, and not as modern. Pool was bigger. Staff were super helpful, even sending someone to the airport to get our delayed bag when the airline wouldn’t forward it on!

  • Panda Mick says:

    “The gym is next door with windows overlooking the pool, which is perhaps a bit strange!”

    Why? Conrad Centennial Singapore does the same…

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