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    Restaurant in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

    Mía Dining

    210Pearl Points

    Michelin-backed European dining at mid-range prices.

    Mía Dining, Restaurant in Ho Chi Minh City

    About Mía Dining

    A two-time Michelin Plate recipient (2024 and 2025) operating European Contemporary cuisine in District 1 at the ₫₫ price point, Mía Dining is one of the stronger value cases in Ho Chi Minh City's mid-tier dining scene. Book three to seven days out for weekdays; weekend tables fill faster now that Michelin recognition has widened its audience. A reliable first visit and a worthwhile return.

    Verdict: Book It, Then Come Back

    If you have already eaten at Mía Dining once, the question is not whether to return — it is how soon you can get back in. For first-timers, the short version: this is one of the more serious European Contemporary kitchens operating in Ho Chi Minh City at the ₫₫ price point, and Michelin has agreed twice, awarding it a Plate recognition in both 2024 and 2025. At that price tier, it is close to a no-brainer for anyone who wants cooking that reaches above its weight class without the bill that usually comes with it.

    The double Michelin Plate is the key trust signal here. Michelin's Plate designation means inspectors found cooking that uses quality ingredients and is prepared with care — it is not a Star, but it is a real credential, and holding it across two consecutive years suggests consistency rather than a one-cycle fluke. For a first-timer calibrating expectations, that matters: you are booking a kitchen that performs reliably, not gambling on a hyped opening.

    The Experience: What to Expect

    Mía Dining operates as a European Contemporary restaurant in District 1, on Nguyễn Thị Minh Khai in the Đa Kao ward. That address puts it in a part of the city that draws both expats and informed local diners looking for something outside the Vietnamese street-food and Chinese dining circuits. The cuisine category , European Contemporary , typically means a kitchen that draws on French and broader European technique while allowing the menu to evolve seasonally or around produce availability. At the ₫₫ price range, the expectation should be a focused menu rather than a sprawling one: a small number of dishes done with precision rather than a wide selection done with varying results.

    The Google rating of 4.9 from 43 reviews is worth noting with appropriate context. A near-perfect score from a still-modest review count means the early audience skews enthusiastic, which is common for tighter, more specialist restaurants that attract diners who specifically seek them out. It is not the same signal as a 4.7 from 2,000 reviews, but it is consistent with a restaurant that has not yet had its quality diluted by scale or inattentive service on a busy night. For a first visit, that track record is encouraging.

    Private Dining and Group Bookings

    The PEA-R-10 angle is worth addressing directly for anyone planning a group visit or private event. European Contemporary restaurants at the ₫₫ tier in Ho Chi Minh City tend to operate in intimate room configurations , smaller seat counts, tighter service ratios, and menus that reward attention rather than the kind of family-style sharing that suits larger Vietnamese or Cantonese formats. If you are booking for a group, contact the venue directly before assuming a private room or a long table is available: the database does not confirm a dedicated private dining space, and at this scale and price point, a semi-private arrangement or full buyout may be the more realistic option. For a business dinner of two to four, the main room at a restaurant like this typically works well. For larger groups (six or more), the main room format of a focused European kitchen can feel tight, and it is worth raising the question of configuration at the time of booking.

    Compared to CieL or Long Trieu, which operate at the ₫₫₫₫ tier, Mía offers a more accessible entry point for a private or celebratory dinner where spend needs to stay controlled without dropping into casual-dining territory. If the group dynamic calls for something more formal and the budget allows, CieL is the step up worth considering.

    Booking: How Far Out?

    At the ₫₫ price point with a Michelin Plate and a near-perfect early rating, Mía Dining is not a walk-in venue for weekend evenings. The booking difficulty is rated Easy on Pearl's scale, which means tables are available, but that assessment can shift quickly as the restaurant's profile grows following two consecutive Michelin recognitions. The practical advice: book three to seven days out for a weekday dinner, and at least one to two weeks ahead for a Friday or Saturday. If you are visiting Ho Chi Minh City on a fixed itinerary and this dinner is a priority, book before you land. The restaurant is not yet operating at the reservation pressure of a Michelin Star venue, but the 2025 Plate reconfirmation means it is on more itineraries than it was a year ago.

    Hours and booking method are not confirmed in the database , check the restaurant's current channels directly for reservation options.

    How Mía Fits the Ho Chi Minh City Dining Picture

    District 1 is home to a dense concentration of quality dining, and Mía sits in a specific niche: European Contemporary at a price point where the competition is thinner than it is at either the street-food end or the top-tier luxury end. Restaurants like Olivia and Okra FoodBar occupy adjacent territory in the city's mid-tier European and fusion space, and are worth considering if Mía is fully booked or if you want a different register. For something more Vietnamese in its DNA at a comparable price, Lửa and Miên Saigon are both credible alternatives. Fashionista Café serves a different purpose , more casual, less destination-oriented , so don't treat it as a like-for-like swap.

    For travellers moving through Vietnam, the Michelin-recognised European Contemporary category shows up in other cities too: La Maison 1888 in Da Nang and Hibana by Koki in Hanoi are reference points for the regional tier. For those benchmarking against the European Contemporary category more broadly, Zén in Singapore and Schwarzer Adler in Hall in Tirol represent what the format looks like at its upper ceiling.

    If you are building a broader Ho Chi Minh City trip around food and drink, Pearl's full Ho Chi Minh City restaurants guide covers the full spectrum. For context beyond dining, see also the hotels guide, bars guide, wineries guide, and experiences guide.

    Know Before You Go

    • Cuisine: European Contemporary
    • Location: 12G2 Nguyễn Thị Minh Khai, Đa Kao, District 1, Ho Chi Minh City
    • Price range: ₫₫ (mid-range)
    • Awards: Michelin Plate 2024; Michelin Plate 2025
    • Google rating: 4.9 / 5 (43 reviews)
    • Booking difficulty: Easy , book 3–7 days out for weekdays, 1–2 weeks for weekends
    • Private dining: Not confirmed , contact venue directly for group arrangements
    • Hours: Not confirmed , check current channels before visiting
    • Dress code: Not confirmed , smart casual is a safe default for Michelin-recognised European kitchens at this price point

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What should I order at Mía Dining?

    Pearl does not hold confirmed dish-level data for Mía Dining, so a fixed ordering recommendation risks being outdated. What the Michelin Plate recognition (2024 and 2025) does confirm is that the European Contemporary format is being executed at a consistent standard — ask your server what the kitchen is running that evening and order around that. At ₫₫ pricing, the exposure risk on an off-choice is low.

    How far ahead should I book Mía Dining?

    Three to seven days out is workable for a weekday dinner. For Friday or Saturday, aim for one to two weeks in advance. Two consecutive Michelin Plate awards at a ₫₫ price point in District 1 makes this a target for both locals and visiting diners — weekend tables move faster than the price tier might suggest.

    What should I wear to Mía Dining?

    No confirmed dress code exists in Pearl's data for Mía Dining. A Michelin Plate European Contemporary restaurant at the ₫₫ tier in District 1 typically draws a crowd that leans neat rather than formal — think clean, presentable clothing over shorts and sandals, but a jacket is unlikely to be required. Confirm with the venue if you want certainty.

    Is Mía Dining good for solo dining?

    European Contemporary restaurants at Mía's price point and format tend to suit solo diners reasonably well — the ₫₫ tier keeps the financial exposure manageable and focused menus reward attention rather than group conversation. Mía's Michelin Plate status suggests kitchen consistency that a solo diner, eating without distraction, will actually notice. Contact the venue to confirm whether counter or bar seating is available if that is your preference.

    Can I eat at the bar at Mía Dining?

    Bar or counter seating is not confirmed in Pearl's data for Mía Dining. Contact them directly at 12G2 Nguyễn Thị Minh Khai, Đa Kao, District 1 to ask — smaller European Contemporary venues at this tier sometimes offer a counter option that does not appear on standard booking platforms.

    Location

    12G2 Nguyễn Thị Minh Khai, Đa Kao, Quận 1, Thành phố Hồ Chí Minh 70000, Vietnam

    Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

    Compare Mía Dining

    Mía Dining vs. Similar Venues
    VenueCuisinePriceAwardsBooking Difficulty
    Mía DiningEuropean Contemporary₫₫Michelin Plate (2025); Michelin Plate (2024)Easy
    Anan SaigonVietnamese Street Food₫₫Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    CieLInnovative₫₫₫₫Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    Coco DiningInnovative₫₫₫Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    Long TrieuCantonese₫₫₫₫Michelin 1 StarUnknown
    Little BearVietnamese Contemporary₫₫Unknown

    Comparing your options in Ho Chi Minh City for this tier.

    Also Consider

    At the ₫₫ tier, Mía Dining has no direct like-for-like competitor in Ho Chi Minh City's European Contemporary space, that is part of what makes the double Michelin Plate significant. Anan Saigon and Little Bear match the price point but serve Vietnamese-led menus, making them different choices rather than direct alternatives. If the European Contemporary format is your priority and you want to stay at ₫₫, Mía is the obvious call in District 1.

    For diners willing to spend more, Coco Dining (₫₫₫, Innovative) is the natural next step: more elaborate technique, higher spend, and a stronger case for a special-occasion dinner. CieL and Long Trieu both operate at ₫₫₫₫, CieL for a modern Innovative tasting-menu format and Long Trieu for high-end Cantonese. Neither competes directly with Mía, but both are relevant if the group or occasion calls for a more formal, higher-spend experience. Long Trieu in particular suits larger groups better than a focused European Contemporary room would.

    The decision between Mía and Anan Saigon comes down to what you are optimising for: Anan gives you Vietnamese street food creativity with strong local identity at the same price; Mía gives you European technique and the credibility of two Michelin Plate cycles. For a first-timer to Ho Chi Minh City who wants to eat Vietnamese cooking, Anan is the better use of that meal. For someone who eats Vietnamese regularly or wants a European kitchen at accessible prices, Mía is where to go.

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