Restaurant in Hanoi, Vietnam
Phở Gà Châm (Yen Ninh Street)
210ptsTwo Michelin Plates. Street prices. Easy yes.

About Phở Gà Châm (Yen Ninh Street)
A Michelin Plate winner for 2024 and 2025, Phở Gà Châm on Yen Ninh Street delivers a specialist chicken pho in the Truc Bach neighbourhood of Ba Dinh for a few dollars a bowl. No booking needed, no frills, and one of the most cost-efficient Michelin-recognised meals in Hanoi. Come early — this is a morning operation.
Verdict: A Michelin-Recognised Chicken Pho at a Price That Makes It an Easy Yes
The most common misconception about Phở Gà Châm on Yen Ninh Street is that Michelin recognition means high prices or a formal dining experience. Neither is true. This is a street-level noodle spot in Ba Dinh district, operating at the ₫ price tier, where a bowl of chicken pho costs a fraction of what you would spend at any sit-down restaurant in the Old Quarter. The Michelin Plate in both 2024 and 2025 signals consistent, well-executed cooking — not white tablecloths. If you are visiting Hanoi and want a credentialed bowl of phở gà without any booking complexity, this is the answer.
The Space: What to Expect When You Arrive
Phở Gà Châm sits at 68 Yen Ninh Street in the Truc Bach neighbourhood of Ba Dinh, a quieter residential pocket of Hanoi that sits away from the concentrated tourist circuit of Hoan Kiem. The spatial experience here is genuinely different from the narrow, stacked shophouses of the Old Quarter. Yen Ninh Street runs along the edge of Truc Bach Lake, and the surrounding streets carry the low-rise, tree-lined character typical of Ba Dinh's older residential blocks. The venue itself is a compact, open-fronted operation built around the format of Hanoi's classic morning noodle spots: small stools and low tables, the kitchen visible and active, a focused menu with almost no variation. There is no ambient music, no designed interior, and no service theatre. What the room offers instead is function: you are seated quickly, the bowl arrives fast, and the space turns over at the pace of a working neighbourhood canteen. For food-focused travellers who find the tourist-heavy pho shops in Hoan Kiem unnecessarily noisy and inflated in price, the spatial register here is a direct argument in favour of the address.
The seating format typical of venues like this in Hanoi means communal or closely packed tables. If you are travelling solo or as a pair, this works entirely in your favour. Groups of four or more should be prepared for a tighter fit or a short wait. Early morning, typically before 9am, is when the room is at its most active and the broth freshest — this is the format that phở gà in Hanoi is built around, a breakfast or early-lunch dish, not an evening meal. Arriving after 11am risks finding the kitchen winding down.
The Drinks Angle: What to Know
There is no cocktail program at Phở Gà Châm, and none should be expected at a venue of this type. The drink that belongs here is trà đá, Hanoi's ubiquitous iced green tea, served free or at negligible cost at almost every street-level eatery in the city. It is the functional counterpart to a bowl of broth: it cuts richness, costs nothing, and is entirely correct for the format. Beer (bia hơi) is occasionally available at venues in this category, though the Michelin Plate designation tends to sit with spots that run lean menus and lean operations. If you are visiting Hanoi with a focus on drinks programming, the Hanoi bars guide is the more relevant resource. For a meal like this, the drink is incidental and the broth is the point.
Awards and Trust Signals
Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) place Phở Gà Châm in a specific and well-defined tier: recognised for quality cooking without the elevation to Michelin Star status. In practical terms, this means the inspectors found the bowl consistently good enough to recommend but not a destination experience in the transformative sense. For a ₫-tier noodle spot, that is the right credential , it tells you the execution clears a meaningful bar without implying the experience is anything other than what it is. The Google rating of 3.3 from 72 reviews is low, and worth flagging: the gap between Michelin Plate status and a modest Google score is not unusual for specialist Hanoi street food spots, where Western reviewer expectations around service speed, English menus, and air-conditioned seating can drag scores down. Weight the Michelin recognition more heavily than the aggregate Google number when making your decision.
Booking and Practical Details
No booking is required and none is likely possible given the format. Walk in, find a seat, order. The ₫ price tier means you are spending the equivalent of a few US dollars on a complete meal. The address , 68 P. Yen Ninh, Truc Bach, Ba Dinh , is walkable from the Truc Bach and West Lake area and reachable by grab in minutes from most central Hanoi hotels. Hours are not confirmed in available data, but the operational pattern for venues in this category in Hanoi is strongly weighted toward morning service, typically from around 6am through to late morning. Come early. If you are already exploring the West Lake or Truc Bach area, this is a logical and low-effort addition to the morning. For more context on eating and moving around the city, the full Hanoi restaurants guide covers the wider picture, and the Hanoi hotels guide can help you position yourself in a neighbourhood where spots like this are within walking distance.
Context: Phở Gà in Hanoi
Chicken pho occupies a distinct place in Hanoi's noodle hierarchy. Phở bò (beef pho) tends to get more international attention, but phở gà has its own devoted following among locals, particularly for morning eating. The broth is typically lighter and faster to make than beef, with the chicken poached directly in the stock. Châm in the name refers to a dipping-style preparation that differentiates this spot from a standard phở gà operation , the noodles and broth are served with elements for dipping rather than fully submerged in the conventional bowl format. That distinction is part of what earns the Michelin attention: a clear point of view on a familiar dish. For comparison across Hanoi's noodle category, Bun Cha Ta on Nguyen Huu Huan Street and Bún Chả Chan cover the bun cha format if you want to eat across multiple noodle styles during your stay. For something different in the noodle space, Miến Lươn Chân Cầm in Hoan Kiem and Miến Lươn Đông Thịnh offer eel vermicelli, another Hanoi specialist format worth knowing. If you are eating across Vietnam beyond Hanoi, Bánh Mì Phượng in Hoi An, Anan Saigon in Ho Chi Minh City, and Rice Bowl in Hue City give you credentialed options at different price points across the country.
Compare Phở Gà Châm (Yen Ninh Street)
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Phở Gà Châm (Yen Ninh Street) | Noodles | ₫ | Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024) | Easy | — |
| Hibana by Koki | Teppanyaki | ₫₫₫₫ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Tầm Vị | Vietnamese | ₫₫ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Gia | Vietnamese Contemporary | ₫₫₫₫ | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| 1946 Cua Bac | Vietnamese | ₫ | Unknown | — | |
| Bun Cha Ta (Nguyen Huu Huan Street) | Noodles | ₫ | Unknown | — |
Key differences to consider before you reserve.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are alternatives to Phở Gà Châm (Yen Ninh Street) in Hanoi?
For a step up in format and price, Gia and Tầm Vị both offer modern Vietnamese cooking with more elaborate menus, though neither delivers Michelin recognition at ₫ pricing. Bun Cha Ta on Nguyen Huu Huan Street is the closest like-for-like in terms of casual format and street-food roots. 1946 Cua Bac suits groups who want a sit-down dining room with broader menu options. Hibana by Koki is a different category entirely — Japanese teppanyaki, not Vietnamese noodles — and only relevant if you are switching cuisine.
Is Phở Gà Châm (Yen Ninh Street) worth the price?
At ₫ pricing, the value case is straightforward: you are paying street-food rates for a bowl that has earned consecutive Michelin Plates in 2024 and 2025. That combination is rare in any city. The only scenario where it is not worth it is if you are not interested in chicken pho specifically — the format is single-focus, so come expecting pho gà, not a broad menu.
Does Phở Gà Châm (Yen Ninh Street) handle dietary restrictions?
The menu is built around chicken pho, which is naturally pork-free, but the kitchen runs a single-dish format with no documented accommodation for allergies or substitutions. Vegetarians and those with gluten restrictions should be cautious: traditional pho broth and noodles may not meet those requirements, and no menu flexibility is on record for this venue.
Can I eat at the bar at Phở Gà Châm (Yen Ninh Street)?
There is no bar at Phở Gà Châm in any conventional sense. The format is a casual walk-in noodle shop — you seat yourself at whatever is available, order at or near the table, and eat. Think plastic stools and shared seating rather than counter dining. Trà đá is the drink that fits this setting.
Is Phở Gà Châm (Yen Ninh Street) good for a special occasion?
Only if your idea of a special occasion is eating genuinely good food in an unpretentious setting — which, in Hanoi, is entirely legitimate. There is no private dining, no dress code, and no ceremony. Two consecutive Michelin Plates (2024 and 2025) make it a strong choice for a food-focused meal, but for a celebratory dinner with atmosphere and service, Gia or Tầm Vị are better fits.
Recognized By
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