Restaurant in Hanoi, Vietnam
Phở 10 Lý Quốc Sư (Hoan Kiem)
250Pearl PointsMichelin-recognised phở, no booking needed.

About Phở 10 Lý Quốc Sư (Hoan Kiem)
Phở 10 Lý Quốc Sư holds a 2024 Michelin Bib Gourmand and 4.1 stars across nearly 10,000 Google reviews, making it the most credentialed phở address in Hoan Kiem at a single ₫ price point. The ten-option beef menu and visible kitchen signal a kitchen that takes the format seriously. Walk in early — no booking required.
The Verdict
With nearly 10,000 Google reviews averaging 4.1 and a 2024 Michelin Bib Gourmand to its name, Phở 10 Lý Quốc Sư earns its reputation as one of Hoan Kiem's most consistently rewarding bowls of phở. At a single ₫ price point, this is not a splurge decision — it is a practical one. If you are in Hanoi for even two days and phở is on your list, this address on Lý Quốc Sư deserves a visit over the tourist-facing spots clustered around Hoàn Kiếm Lake. The Bib Gourmand recognition confirms what regulars already knew: the kitchen delivers serious quality at street-food prices.
Why This Address in Hoan Kiem
Lý Quốc Sư sits in the heart of Hoan Kiem district, a short walk from the lake and the Old Quarter, and the street has long served as a corridor between the cathedral quarter and the commercial centre. Phở 10 occupies a compact corner position on that street, which means it functions as a neighbourhood anchor for locals commuting through the district as much as for tourists arriving with guidebooks. The kitchen is visible through a glazed partition — you can watch the team work before you sit down, which is a reasonable signal of a kitchen that has nothing to hide. This transparency is part of what makes the venue feel grounded in its location rather than performing for an outside audience.
The Hoan Kiem branch is one of three in Hanoi, and that matters for planning. The reputation travels across all three, but this address on Lý Quốc Sư is the one most travellers cite when recommending the brand. If you see a nearby spot using a similar name, treat it with caution , imitations of well-regarded phở shops are a documented pattern in the city, and the Michelin credential belongs specifically to this operation. For broader context on where this fits in the city's noodle landscape, see our full Hanoi restaurants guide.
What You Are Eating
The menu runs to ten phở options, which is a wider range than most single-dish specialists in the city. The beef-forward lineup includes tái (rare beef), chín (brisket), nạm (flank), and bắp trần (beef fillet). Each option changes the texture and depth of the bowl, so your choice matters more here than at a one-option shop. The broth is described in available data as hearty and refreshing , a combination that characterises a well-reduced northern-style phở where clarity of flavour comes from hours of bone work rather than from seasoning shortcuts. Tender, slow-cooked beef that pulls apart without resistance is the reported result across the range.
For context, Hanoi-style phở is leaner and more broth-forward than its southern counterpart, with fewer garnishes and a focus on the stock itself. If you have already eaten phở in Ho Chi Minh City , at a place like Anan Saigon , the register here will feel different: quieter, more austere, and more dependent on the broth doing all the work. That is the point. For comparison across Vietnam's noodle spectrum, it is worth noting that Hanoi-style phở sits at a different pole from the noodle traditions you would find at Bánh Mì Phượng in Hoi An or Rice Bowl in Hue City , different formats, different cities, all worth your time but not interchangeable.
If you are interested in other noodle formats in Hanoi itself, Miến Lươn Chân Cầm in the same district handles eel vermicelli, while Miến Lươn Đông Thịnh is another respected address in the same category. Hiệu Lực Canh Cá Rô Hưng Yên in Hai Ba Trung is the address for fish-based preparations if you want to move beyond beef entirely.
When to Go
Phở in Hanoi is a morning and midday dish by convention, and the local rhythm at a shop like this reflects that. Arriving between 7am and 10am puts you in line with how the city actually eats this dish , the broth will have been working since before dawn, and the kitchen will be at its most focused. Midday remains workable, but early morning is the optimal window if you want the full experience and a seat without a queue forming ahead of you. Avoid arriving at peak tourist lunch hours (noon to 1:30pm) if the queue concerns you , this is a compact space and it fills predictably. Weekday mornings are easier than weekends. Hanoi's cooler months, roughly November through February, make a hot bowl of phở more immediately rewarding than the humid summer months, though the kitchen operates year-round.
Getting There and Booking
The address at 10 P. Lý Quốc Sư, Hàng Trống, Hoàn Kiếm puts this in one of Hanoi's most walkable neighbourhoods. Most Old Quarter hotels are within easy walking distance, and the venue is direct to reach by grab bike if you are coming from further afield. No booking is required or expected , this is a walk-in operation, as is standard for Hanoi's phở shops at this price level. Arrive, find a seat, order at the table or counter, and pay when you are done. No website, no reservation system, no dress code. The ₫ price point means you are spending the equivalent of a few dollars for a full bowl. For more on moving around the city and what else to book while you are here, our Hanoi hotels guide, bars guide, and experiences guide cover the wider picture.
For reference, Vietnam's noodle culture extends well beyond Hanoi. If your itinerary takes you south or central, Mi Quang Ba Vi in Thanh Khe and Duyên Anh Restaurant in Phu Vang are worth noting. For international noodle context, A Niang Mian Guan in Shanghai and A Xin Xian Lao in Fuzhou show how the format plays out across the region.
Ratings and Trust Signals
- Michelin Bib Gourmand , 2024 (confirmed in venue data)
- Google rating , 4.1 from 9,752 reviews
- Price , ₫ (single tier, one of the lowest price points available in the city)
- Booking difficulty , Easy (walk-in only, no reservation required)
Frequently Asked Questions
How far ahead should I book Phở 10 Lý Quốc Sư (Hoan Kiem)?
No advance booking is required — this is a walk-in street-food-style operation. Arrive early (7–10am) to beat the queue and catch the freshest broth of the day. The Michelin Bib Gourmand recognition means tourist traffic has increased, so mid-morning waits are common. If you show up after noon, expect the shop to be winding down or already closed.
Does Phở 10 Lý Quốc Sư (Hoan Kiem) handle dietary restrictions?
The menu is built entirely around beef-based phở, so options for vegetarians or those avoiding beef are extremely limited. All ten listed variants involve beef cuts — tái, chín, nạm, bắp trần, and others. There is no documented vegetarian or chicken phở option in the venue record. Guests with beef restrictions should look elsewhere in Hoan Kiem.
What should I order at Phở 10 Lý Quốc Sư (Hoan Kiem)?
The menu offers ten phở variants, which gives you more choice than most single-dish specialists in Hanoi. Tái (rare beef) and chín (brisket) are the benchmark options at any Hanoi phở shop, and nạm (flank) and bắp trần (beef fillet) are worth considering if you want more texture. The broth is the point here, so do not skip it for a dry noodle alternative.
Can Phở 10 Lý Quốc Sư (Hoan Kiem) accommodate groups?
The venue operates a compact corner kitchen and is described as small, so large groups will likely need to split across tables or wait for turnover. For groups of four or more, arriving at opening time is the practical move. This is not a venue for a private booking or a celebratory dinner — it is a high-turnover phở counter, and groups should plan accordingly.
Is Phở 10 Lý Quốc Sư (Hoan Kiem) good for solo dining?
Yes — solo dining is the natural format here. Counter seating and communal tables are standard at Hanoi phở shops, and a single bowl at ₫ pricing makes this one of the most practical solo meals in Hoan Kiem. The Michelin Bib Gourmand credential gives solo travellers confidence the quality justifies a stop, without the cost or commitment of a full sit-down restaurant.
What should I wear to Phở 10 Lý Quốc Sư (Hoan Kiem)?
Dress casually — this is a street-level phở shop, not a formal dining room. Comfortable clothes appropriate for Hanoi's heat and humidity are the right call. There is no dress code, and showing up in anything more than clean casual would be out of place.
Location
10 P. Lý Quốc Sư, Hàng Trống, Hoàn Kiếm, Hà Nội, Vietnam
Hanoi, Vietnam
Compare Phở 10 Lý Quốc Sư (Hoan Kiem)
| Venue | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|
| Phở 10 Lý Quốc Sư (Hoan Kiem) | ₫ | Easy |
| Hibana by Koki | ₫₫₫₫ | Unknown |
| Tầm Vị | ₫₫ | Unknown |
| Gia | ₫₫₫₫ | Unknown |
| 1946 Cua Bac | ₫ | Unknown |
| Bun Cha Ta (Nguyen Huu Huan Street) | ₫ | Unknown |
Side-by-side comparison to help you decide where to book.
Also Consider
- Hibana by Koki, Teppanyaki, ₫₫₫₫
- Tầm Vị, Vietnamese, ₫₫
- Gia, Vietnamese Contemporary, ₫₫₫₫
- 1946 Cua Bac, Vietnamese, ₫
- Bun Cha Ta (Nguyen Huu Huan Street), Noodles, ₫
At a single ₫ price point with a Michelin Bib Gourmand, Phở 10 Lý Quốc Sư sits in a different category from Hanoi's upmarket Vietnamese dining options. If you are comparing it to Gia or Hibana by Koki, both at ₫₫₫₫, you are not comparing like for like. Those venues are for longer, occasion-driven meals. Phở 10 is a morning ritual, a fast and focused bowl that costs a fraction of either, and the Michelin recognition means you are not sacrificing quality to save money. Book Gia or Hibana for a dinner that calls for a formal setting; come here for the kind of meal that is actually harder to find: a specialist doing one thing at the highest level for almost nothing.
Within the ₫ and ₫₫ tier, the closer comparisons are Bun Cha Ta on Nguyen Huu Huan Street and 1946 Cua Bac. Bun Cha Ta is the address for bún chả, grilled pork with vermicelli, and is the right call if you want to cover a different Hanoi classic in the same outing. 1946 Cua Bac sits in a different district and offers a broader Vietnamese menu at the same low price tier. Phở 10 beats both on the narrowness of its focus: if phở specifically is what you want, this is the most credentialed option in the immediate Hoan Kiem area. Tầm Vị at ₫₫ is worth considering if you want a more varied Vietnamese meal in a sit-down environment, but it is not a phở specialist.
For first-time visitors to Hanoi trying to map out a noodle itinerary, the practical recommendation is this: start mornings at Phở 10 Lý Quốc Sư for phở, add Bun Cha Ta for a midday bún chả, and save a budget for one dinner at Gia or a comparable ₫₫₫₫ venue to see the contemporary Vietnamese side of the city. The three together give you a complete picture of Hanoi's eating range without overlap.
Recognized By
Explore Hanoi
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