Restaurant in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
Diaspora-Anchored Indian Kitchen

Dahi Handi Indian Restaurant on Đông Du offers one of the few Indian dining options in District 1, making it a practical choice for travellers wanting a change from Vietnamese food without crossing town. Limited public data on pricing and awards means it's hard to recommend as a destination, but for a walk-in dinner in a convenient central location, it covers the need. Easy to book, no advance planning required.
Dahi Handi Indian Restaurant sits on Đông Du, one of District 1's better-connected streets for evening dining, and it earns a look from anyone in Ho Chi Minh City who wants Indian food without a long detour. With limited public data on pricing, chef credentials, or awards, this is not a venue where we can tell you to splurge on a specific dish or expect white-tablecloth service. What we can say: Indian restaurants in Ho Chi Minh City occupy a small niche, and if you're returning to Đông Du after a previous visit, the question is whether anything has changed enough to warrant another booking. On current evidence, this is a practical neighbourhood option rather than a destination dining choice.
Đông Du runs through Bến Nghé, the riverside core of District 1, within walking distance of the main hotel cluster along Nguyễn Huệ and Đồng Khởi. That location makes Dahi Handi accessible for guests staying in the centre, and the address puts it closer to the tourist corridor than most Indian options in the city. Indian cuisine in Ho Chi Minh City has historically been thin on the ground compared to Bangkok or Singapore, so the category itself carries some draw for travellers who have been eating Vietnamese food for several days and want a change of register.
Without confirmed data on the drinks program, we can't assess whether the bar side of the operation is worth your attention on its own terms. Indian restaurants in this price tier across Southeast Asia typically run short lists of Indian beers, lassi-style drinks, and limited spirits. If a strong cocktail program matters to you for this visit, Ho Chi Minh City's standalone bar scene on nearby Bùi Viện or the rooftop options along Nguyễn Huệ will serve you better. For the purposes of a food-focused dinner, the drinks question is secondary.
For a return visitor, the honest framing is this: unless you had a specific dish that worked well last time, or you've heard of a recent change in kitchen direction, there's no documented reason to prioritise Dahi Handi over trying somewhere new in the city's expanding restaurant scene. That's not a knock — it's a fair read of the available evidence. If Indian food is what you want and you're already in District 1, the location alone makes this the path of least resistance.
Booking difficulty here is rated Easy. No reservations platform data is confirmed, so walk-in appears to be a viable approach, particularly for small groups. District 1 restaurants at this level rarely require advance planning outside of holiday weekends. If you're travelling during Tết or a Vietnamese public holiday, call ahead where possible. The address at 23 Đông Du is direct to reach by grab car from anywhere in the city centre. For a broader read on what's worth your time in Ho Chi Minh City right now, see our full Ho Chi Minh City restaurants guide, our full Ho Chi Minh City bars guide, and our full Ho Chi Minh City hotels guide.
Quick reference: 23 Đông Du, District 1 — easy walk-in , no confirmed booking platform.
Against the wider District 1 dining field, Dahi Handi sits in a different category from most of its geographic neighbours. Anan Saigon at ₫₫ is the sharper choice if you want creative Vietnamese cooking at an accessible price, and it has a cocktail program that actually merits attention on its own. Coco Dining at ₫₫₫ and Akuna at ₫₫₫₫ both offer more documented track records in the innovative category if you're planning a special dinner. Long Trieu at ₫₫₫₫ covers the Cantonese end if Chinese cooking is what you're after.
For travellers exploring beyond Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam's dining scene has strong regional options worth planning around: La Maison 1888 in Da Nang, Gia in Hanoi, and Saffron in Hue City all have more documented credentials. Closer to home, CieL in Ho Chi Minh City rounds out the city's more serious dining options.
If you're building a night around this part of District 1, pair dinner with a stop at one of Ho Chi Minh City's better-documented venues. Anan Saigon and CieL cover the Vietnamese and innovative ends of the spectrum. For travellers passing through Vietnam more broadly, Cargo Club Cafe & Restaurant in Hoi An, Mi Quang Ba Vi in Thanh Khe, and Bau Troi Do in Son Tra are worth adding to the itinerary. See our full Ho Chi Minh City restaurants guide for the complete picture.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Booking Difficulty | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dahi Handi Indian Restaurant | Easy | — | ||
| Anan Saigon | Vietnamese Street Food | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Akuna | Innovative | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Coco Dining | Innovative | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Long Trieu | Cantonese | Michelin 1 Star | Unknown | — |
| Bánh Xèo 46A | Vietnamese | Unknown | — |
A quick look at how Dahi Handi Indian Restaurant measures up.
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.