Skip to main content

    Bar in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

    7 Bridges Saigon Craft Beer Taproom & Restaurant / Đông Du

    100pts

    District 1 Tap Focus

    7 Bridges Saigon Craft Beer Taproom & Restaurant / Đông Du, Bar in Ho Chi Minh City

    About 7 Bridges Saigon Craft Beer Taproom & Restaurant / Đông Du

    A craft beer taproom on Đông Du Street in District 1, 7 Bridges Saigon operates in the walk-in-friendly, beer-first register that distinguishes taprooms from Ho Chi Minh City's cocktail-led bar tier. The Bến Nghé address places it in the commercial core of the city, where an after-work and visitor crowd converges on a tap list weighted toward Vietnamese craft and regional producers.

    Craft Beer in District 1: Where Đông Du Meets the Tap

    Đông Du Street in Bến Nghé sits in the commercial core of District 1, a short walk from the Saigon River and surrounded by the kind of expat-facing hospitality infrastructure that has defined this pocket of Ho Chi Minh City for decades. The street runs between the older French-colonial grid and the newer glass-tower developments, and its bars and restaurants occupy that in-between register: not tourist-trap rowdy, not rooftop-glamour priced, but consistent enough to draw the same faces back through the week. 7 Bridges Saigon Craft Beer Taproom and Restaurant operates within that neighbourhood logic, which means it draws both the after-work crowd from nearby offices and visitors staying in the surrounding hotels who want something with more depth than a Saigon or Tiger from a convenience store cooler.

    Ho Chi Minh City's craft beer scene expanded significantly through the mid-2010s and continued building even as the pandemic restructured hospitality elsewhere in the region. What emerged is a tiered market: the large international taprooms with multiple venues, the brewpub-style operators who brew on-site, and the multi-tap bars that curate rotating selections from Vietnamese and regional craft producers. 7 Bridges operates as a taproom, which in a city of this density means the offer is built around the tap list and the social experience of working through it, with food serving a supporting role rather than competing for leading billing.

    The Atmosphere: Industrial Warmth in a Dense Urban Block

    Taproom design across Southeast Asia has converged on a recognisable vocabulary: exposed brick or concrete, bar-height seating, open frontages that let the noise out onto the street. The atmospheric logic is deliberate. Craft beer as a category positions itself against the sterile, bright-lit formula of commercial beer venues, and the design communicates that difference before a single glass arrives. A taproom on Đông Du needs to read quickly from the street because foot traffic here moves with purpose; the visual warmth of wood and backlit taps does the work that a sign alone cannot.

    Evening is the right time to be here. Ho Chi Minh City in the afternoon holds the kind of heat that makes cold draught beer a practical consideration rather than a lifestyle choice, and by the time the sun drops below the roofline the street settles into the rhythm that makes District 1 function as a drinking neighbourhood. The ambient sound layers: motorbikes on the street, conversation across the bar, the specific low frequency of a room where the acoustics were never treated but the crowd fills in the gaps. It is a casual register, deliberately so, and the dress code follows accordingly.

    Craft Beer in Vietnam: What the Tap List Represents

    The craft beer category in Vietnam now includes locally-brewed IPAs, witbiers, stouts, and sours alongside imports from regional producers in Thailand, Japan, and further afield. For a city that grew up on Bia Hơi culture, the draught-culture transition has been rapid. Bia Hơi — the ultra-fresh, ultra-cheap draught beer sold from plastic-stool setups across the country — established an expectation that beer should be social, cold, and consumed in volume. Craft beer operations in Ho Chi Minh City have absorbed that cultural grammar while shifting the variables: smaller pours, higher ABV, more hop complexity, higher price points.

    A taproom in this environment makes a specific argument: that the variety and craft of the product justifies the price differential. The conversation between traditional Vietnamese drinking culture and the imported craft model is visible in venues like 7 Bridges, which sits in a neighbourhood where that negotiation plays out nightly across multiple bars competing for the same discretionary spend. For visitors, the tap list offers a more accessible entry point into Vietnamese craft production than a supermarket shelf would, because the staff are proximate to the product and the format encourages questions.

    For those mapping the broader craft bar scene across Ho Chi Minh City, [Drinking & Healing](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/bars/drinking-healing-ho-chi-minh-city) and [Stir](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/bars/stir-ho-chi-minh-city) represent different points on the cocktail-to-beer spectrum, while [Alto Saigon](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/bars/alto-saigon-ho-chi-minh-city-bar) and [Another Drink Saigon](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/bars/another-drink-saigon-ho-chi-minh-city-bar) occupy the more polished, cocktail-forward tier. The taproom model that 7 Bridges represents fills a different gap: a beer-first, food-supported format with a walk-in-friendly posture.

    Vietnam's Craft Beer Circuit Beyond Saigon

    The craft beer format has taken root across Vietnam at different intensities. In Hoi An, the [Hoi An Brewing Company Tap Room and Riverside Beer Garden](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/bars/hoi-an-brewing-company-tap-room-riverside-beer-garden-hoi-an-bar) combines the taproom model with an outdoor beer garden format suited to the town's more relaxed tourism pace. In Hanoi, [Workshop14](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/bars/workshop14-hanoi) approaches the drinking venue from a different angle. Further afield, venues like [United Bar in Thanh Khe](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/bars/united-bar-thanh-khe-bar), [Genji Bar in Cam Pha](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/bars/genji-bar-cam-pha-bar), and [Le Pont Club in Hai Phong](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/bars/le-pont-club-hai-phong-bar) reflect how drinking culture in secondary Vietnamese cities is developing its own identity rather than simply mirroring Saigon. The [Le Rendez Vous French Restaurant in Da Nang's Son Tra](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/bars/le-rendez-vous-french-restaurant-da-nang-son-tra-bar) illustrates how the French colonial inheritance shapes food and drink culture in coastal Vietnam differently than it does in the commercial south. Internationally, [Bar Leather Apron in Honolulu](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/bars/bar-leather-apron-honolulu) offers an instructive comparison in how Pacific drinking cultures build serious bar programs in tourist-adjacent markets.

    Planning Your Visit

    7 Bridges Saigon is on Đông Du Street in Bến Nghé, District 1, an area most visitors to central Ho Chi Minh City can reach on foot from major hotels or by a short ride on the Grab network. The taproom format means walk-ins are the norm rather than the exception; reservations are not the expected mode of entry for a venue of this type. Evenings from around 6pm tend to be when the room finds its character, though the format accommodates earlier arrivals from the after-work segment. The food offer supports the beer rather than the other way around, so arriving with beer as the primary objective calibrates expectations correctly. For a broader orientation to where this venue sits within Ho Chi Minh City's drinking and dining offer, see our [full Ho Chi Minh City restaurants guide](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/cities/ho-chi-minh-city).

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is 7 Bridges Saigon Craft Beer Taproom more formal or casual?

    The taproom format is casual by design. District 1 craft beer bars in this price bracket operate without dress codes, and the walk-in culture reinforces that posture. If awards or hotel-group affiliation were part of the offer, formality signals would shift accordingly, but a standalone taproom on Đông Du is built for the kind of visit where you arrive in whatever you wore on the street.

    What's the must-try cocktail at 7 Bridges Saigon?

    7 Bridges is a craft beer taproom, not a cocktail bar, so the tap list is the primary offer. The most useful approach is to ask staff which local Vietnamese craft beers are currently pouring and work from there, particularly for styles that are harder to find at non-specialist bars across the city. Visiting with a cocktail-first objective would be better served by venues in the [Alto Saigon](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/bars/alto-saigon-ho-chi-minh-city-bar) or [Another Drink Saigon](https://www.enprimeurclub.com/bars/another-drink-saigon-ho-chi-minh-city-bar) tier.

    What makes 7 Bridges Saigon a useful stop for visitors exploring Vietnamese craft beer?

    Taprooms in District 1 carry more concentrated tap selections than most hotel bars or general restaurants, making them a practical way to sample Vietnamese craft production across several styles in a single sitting. The Đông Du location places 7 Bridges within walking distance of the central hotel corridor, reducing the logistical friction that would come with a venue further out in Districts 2 or 7 where much of the city's newer hospitality development has concentrated.

    Keep this place

    Save or rate 7 Bridges Saigon Craft Beer Taproom & Restaurant / Đông Du on Pearl

    Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.