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    Restaurant in Hanoi, Vietnam

    Bún Chả Đắc Kim (Hang Manh Street)

    210pts

    Hanoi's best-value Michelin-recognised lunch.

    Bún Chả Đắc Kim (Hang Manh Street), Restaurant in Hanoi

    About Bún Chả Đắc Kim (Hang Manh Street)

    A double Michelin Plate winner (2024 and 2025) serving Hanoi's defining bún chả at street-food prices in the Old Quarter. No reservations needed — walk in around 11am to beat the lunch rush. At a single ₫ price tier, this is one of the most accessible Michelin-recognised meals in Southeast Asia and a clear yes for any food-focused visitor to Hanoi.

    Verdict: A Michelin-Recognised Bún Chả Institution Worth the Detour

    Picture a midday lunch crowd spilling onto a narrow Hanoi pavement, plastic stools packed tight, the smoky char of grilled pork drifting through the street. That is the operating mode at Bún Chả Đắc Kim on Hang Manh Street — and it is exactly where a food-focused traveller should want to be eating. This is not ambient dining. It is a deliberate, focused meal at a venue that has held a Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025, making it one of the few Old Quarter street-food addresses to earn repeated international recognition at this price point. If bún chả is on your Hanoi list, Đắc Kim is the place to book.

    What Đắc Kim Delivers

    Bún chả is Hanoi's lunch dish: grilled fatty pork patties and sliced pork belly served alongside a warm, lightly sweet and vinegary dipping broth, a mound of cold rice vermicelli, and a plate of fresh herbs and green papaya. The format has not changed significantly in decades, and Đắc Kim's reputation rests entirely on the quality of execution within that fixed template. The broth balance, the char on the meat, the freshness of the herbs — these are the variables that separate a strong bowl from a forgettable one, and Đắc Kim's back-to-back Michelin Plates signal it is performing those fundamentals at a level the city's leading addresses have to match. For the food explorer who wants to understand why Hanoi's culinary identity anchors so firmly to a single dish, this address gives you the clearest answer.

    The morning and midday window is when Đắc Kim operates at its natural rhythm. Bún chả is a lunch dish by tradition , Hanoians rarely eat it at dinner , so arriving between 11am and 1pm puts you at the heart of the service. The crowd at that hour is a mix of locals and visitors who have done their research, which itself tells you something about the venue's reputation. If you are planning a food-focused morning in the Old Quarter, build your route around an early start at Bánh Cuốn Bà Hoành or Bánh Cuốn Bà Xuân for steamed rice rolls, then arrive at Đắc Kim for the lunch hour. That sequencing gives you two of Hanoi's most important breakfast and lunch formats in a single morning.

    Context and Comparisons

    For the explorer working through Vietnam's regional noodle canon, Đắc Kim sits alongside addresses like Phở Bò Lâm and Phở Bò Ấu Triệu as a Hanoi essential , each covers a different dish, and together they build a coherent picture of the city's food culture. If you want to compare bún chả specifically, Bún Chả Hương Liên on Hai Ba Trung carries its own Michelin recognition and a degree of international fame attached to a 2016 televised dinner. Both are worth trying; Đắc Kim's advantage is its Old Quarter location, which integrates more naturally into a walking day through Hoàn Kiếm. Within Vietnam's broader street-food picture, the discipline of Đắc Kim's execution is comparable to what you see at Michelin-recognised street food addresses in Southeast Asia , Singapore's Hill Street Tai Hwa Pork Noodle and 545 Whampoa Prawn Noodles occupy a similar space: heritage single-dish specialists where the recognition reflects decades of consistency, not innovation.

    Elsewhere in Vietnam, the regional diversity of noodle culture is worth tracing: Bánh Mì Phượng in Hoi An, Rice Bowl in Hue, Mi Quang Ba Vi in Da Nang's Thanh Khe district, and Anan Saigon for a contemporary take in Ho Chi Minh City all represent different nodes in the country's food geography. La Maison 1888 in Da Nang and Duyên Anh Restaurant in Phu Vang cover the fine-dining end for travellers whose itinerary spans multiple formats. Đắc Kim belongs at the other end of that spectrum: low price, high craft, no ceremony.

    Practical Details

    Budget: Single ₫ tier , expect to pay the equivalent of a few dollars per person, which puts this among the most accessible Michelin-recognised meals available anywhere. Reservations: Walk-in only; no booking system required or expected. Timing: Arrive at or just before the midday rush (11am–12:30pm) to avoid the longest queues , the venue fills quickly on weekday lunchtimes. Dress: No dress code; casual street clothes are the standard. Groups: Small groups of two to four are direct; larger parties should expect to be seated across multiple tables depending on availability at the time of arrival. Getting there: The address is 67 Đường Thành in the Hàng Bông area of Hoàn Kiếm , walkable from most Old Quarter accommodation. For a fuller picture of where to eat, sleep, and drink in the city, see our full Hanoi restaurants guide, our Hanoi hotels guide, our Hanoi bars guide, our Hanoi wineries guide, and our Hanoi experiences guide.

    Ratings at a Glance

    • Google Reviews: 4.1 from 661 reviews
    • Awards: Michelin Plate 2024; Michelin Plate 2025
    • Price tier: ₫ (single dong , among the most affordable Michelin-recognised venues in Southeast Asia)

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at Bún Chả Đắc Kim?

    • Order the bún chả , it is the only dish that matters here. The format is set: grilled pork (both patties and sliced belly) served with warm dipping broth, cold vermicelli noodles, and a plate of fresh herbs. Some tables also add nem cuộn (fried spring rolls) as a side. The Michelin Plates for 2024 and 2025 are awarded for the core dish, so focus there rather than on additions.

    Can I eat at the bar at Bún Chả Đắc Kim?

    • Bún Chả Đắc Kim is a street-food venue, not a bar-format restaurant. Seating is at low tables with plastic stools, typical of Hanoi's casual lunch spots. There is no counter or bar seating in the Western sense. If you want a seat with a view of the kitchen, arrive early and ask to be placed near the front of the room.

    Can Bún Chả Đắc Kim accommodate groups?

    • Groups of two to four will seat comfortably without issue. Larger groups (six or more) may be split across tables, which is standard for this type of Old Quarter venue. The single ₫ price tier means the per-head cost for a group is negligible , this is one of the most cost-effective ways to feed a large party well in Hanoi. No advance booking is needed or possible.

    How far ahead should I book Bún Chả Đắc Kim?

    • No booking is required or available. Walk in on the day. The practical reservation strategy is about timing rather than advance planning: arrive just before the midday service (around 11am) to avoid peak queues. The double Michelin Plate recognition has increased foot traffic from international visitors, so a slight buffer before 12pm is worth building in, particularly on weekends.

    What should I wear to Bún Chả Đắc Kim?

    • No dress code. The venue is a casual street-food address in the Old Quarter , shorts, trainers, and a t-shirt are entirely appropriate. Despite the Michelin Plate status, the setting is plastic stools and pavement seating, so dress for the heat and the format, not the award.

    What should a first-timer know about Bún Chả Đắc Kim?

    • Three things: First, come at lunch , bún chả is a midday dish by Hanoi convention, and the kitchen operates in that window. Second, the price is as low as it looks; a full meal for two costs the equivalent of a few dollars. Third, the Michelin Plate (two consecutive years) means you are eating a recognised version of one of Hanoi's defining dishes, not just a convenient tourist stop. Pair this visit with Phở Bò Lâm or Phở Bò Ấu Triệu on the same morning for a focused Old Quarter noodle itinerary.

    Compare Bún Chả Đắc Kim (Hang Manh Street)

    Recognized Venues: Bún Chả Đắc Kim (Hang Manh Street) and Peers
    VenueAwardsPriceValue
    Bún Chả Đắc Kim (Hang Manh Street)Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024)
    Hibana by KokiMichelin 1 Star₫₫₫₫
    Tầm VịMichelin 1 Star₫₫
    GiaMichelin 1 Star₫₫₫₫
    1946 Cua Bac
    Bun Cha Ta (Nguyen Huu Huan Street)

    Comparing your options in Hanoi for this tier.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at Bún Chả Đắc Kim (Hang Manh Street)?

    Order the bún chả — it is the only dish that matters here and the reason Michelin awarded a Plate in both 2024 and 2025. That means grilled pork patties and sliced belly served with a warm dipping broth, rice vermicelli, and a plate of fresh herbs. At the ₫ price tier, adding nem cua bể (fried crab spring rolls) if available is the standard move for a fuller meal.

    Can I eat at the bar at Bún Chả Đắc Kim (Hang Manh Street)?

    Đắc Kim is a street-food format — seating is plastic stools on a narrow pavement and a tight ground-floor room at 67 P. Đường Thành, not a counter bar. You sit wherever space opens up, which at peak lunch hours means acting fast. There is no reservation process, so arriving and claiming a spot is the system.

    Can Bún Chả Đắc Kim (Hang Manh Street) accommodate groups?

    Small groups of two to four travel easiest here. Larger parties should expect to split across tables or stagger arrival — the format is high-turnover street dining, not a private-room operation. For a group that wants a sit-down Hanoi meal with more space, Gia on the same Old Quarter circuit is a structured alternative.

    How far ahead should I book Bún Chả Đắc Kim (Hang Manh Street)?

    No booking is needed or possible — Đắc Kim runs on a walk-in, first-come basis. Arrive before the midday rush (before noon is sensible) to avoid a wait. The queue moves quickly because the format is efficient, but the Michelin recognition has increased tourist footfall, so early arrival is the practical hedge.

    What should I wear to Bún Chả Đắc Kim (Hang Manh Street)?

    Casual clothes only — you are sitting on a plastic stool on a Hanoi pavement. Grilled pork smoke and broth splashes are part of the experience, so avoid anything you would not wear to a street market. There is no dress expectation beyond being dressed for outdoor heat.

    What should a first-timer know about Bún Chả Đắc Kim (Hang Manh Street)?

    This is one of the most accessible Michelin-recognised meals on the planet — a few dollars per person at the ₫ price tier, walk-in only, and focused on a single dish done well. Come at lunch (bún chả is a midday tradition in Hanoi, not a dinner format), eat fast, and do not expect comfort seating or a menu with options. The value case is straightforward: two consecutive Michelin Plates for street food that costs next to nothing.

    Recognized By

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