REVIEW · HO CHI MINH CITY
Saigon Ghost beliefs tour, Chinatown sightseeing by scooter
Book on Viator →Operated by CONNECT CULTURE CO.,LTD · Bookable on Viator
Ghost stories and scooters in Saigon. This Saigon Ghost beliefs tour pairs spooky sights with practical city navigation, plus a proper included dinner to keep you fueled during the ride. I like that the route is set up for real atmosphere in the Chinese-Vietnamese parts of town, not just a quick drive-by. I also like the fact that you get helmet and safety gear, so you’re not improvising. One drawback to keep in mind: the tour duration is flexible (about 2 to 4 hours), and at least one stop can vary if a restaurant or attraction is closed for maintenance.
The starting point is memorable too: you begin at the Saigon River Tunnel Dinner and then roll through the city on the back of a motorbike. You’ll learn about the Ghost Building and what people connect it to through Feng Shui beliefs. If you’re sensitive to crowds, loud streets, or being on a scooter for a while, this might feel like a lot. Still, for most people, it’s a fun, fast way to see Ho Chi Minh City like a local.
In This Review
- Key Things to Know Before You Go
- Why This Scooter Ghost Tour Works for First-Time Saigon Sightseeing
- Price and What You’re Really Paying For ($16 Value)
- Pickup, Drop-Off, and How the Meeting Actually Helps
- Safety on a Motorbike: Helmet Use Is Included
- The Start: Saigon River Tunnel Dinner (Your Built-In Fuel Stop)
- Stop 1: Ho Chi Minh City and the Chinese-Vietnamese Belief Lens
- The Ghost Building Lesson and Feng Shui Meaning on the Road
- Seven Spooky Stops: How the Route Feels Without Getting Lost
- Chinatown by Scooter: The Best Part Is Getting There Fast
- Food Included: Coffee or Tea Plus Dinner You Don’t Have to Hunt For
- How Long Should You Block Off?
- Who Should Book This Tour (and Who Might Rethink It)
- Should You Book the Saigon Ghost Beliefs Tour?
- FAQ
- FAQ
- How long is the Saigon Ghost beliefs tour?
- What is the price per person?
- Does the tour include hotel pickup and drop-off?
- Is dinner included?
- What drinks are included?
- Do I need to bring a helmet?
- How many stops are there?
- What if the restaurant is closed or an attraction is under maintenance?
- How many people are in the group?
- What is the cancellation policy?
- Is there a mobile ticket?
Key Things to Know Before You Go

- Seven spooky stops with short street-side moments that keep the story moving
- Saigon River Tunnel Dinner starts the tour, and dinner can be adjusted for dietary needs
- Helmet and safety equipment are provided, so you can focus on the sights
- Ghost Building + Feng Shui explanations give the ghost stories context instead of pure scare tactics
- Pickup and drop-off help you avoid wasting time getting to the first street
- Small-group feel with a maximum of 30 travelers
Why This Scooter Ghost Tour Works for First-Time Saigon Sightseeing

Saigon can be chaotic on foot, especially when you’re trying to cross streets at the wrong time. This tour solves that problem with a simple plan: you sit on the back of a motorbike and let a guide handle the route. You get to see more of the city in less time, and you can actually pay attention to what’s around you instead of fighting traffic math.
What makes it especially interesting is the theme. This isn’t just ghost lore as entertainment. The tour is built around local beliefs tied to the Chinese-Vietnamese community in Saigon, and it explains why people think certain places carry certain energies. That context is what turns the spooky stops from random creepiness into a cultural story you’ll remember.
And yes, you’ll still get the creepy side. One guide named Danny has been praised for mixing cultural and religious traditions with scary, creepy stories from the area. That blend is what you’re paying for: atmosphere plus meaning, delivered on a real street circuit rather than a lecture room.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Ho Chi Minh City
Price and What You’re Really Paying For ($16 Value)

At $16 per person for roughly 2 to 4 hours, the price is hard to beat in Ho Chi Minh City—especially because the tour includes more than just a guide. You get hotel pickup and drop-off, a driver/guide, local guide support, helmet use, coffee or tea, and dinner.
Here’s the value logic for you:
- If you were to arrange scooter time yourself, you’d still need the cost of a driver, plus you’d likely burn time figuring out where to start.
- You’d probably pay for dinner separately, and here you’re getting a specific meal included: beef noodles soup and coconut.
- You get Feng Shui and Ghost Building context, which is the sort of thing you’d miss if you just wandered Chinatown streets alone.
So the $16 isn’t just for a “theme.” It’s for transportation help, meal value, and storytelling that connects the spooky theme to how local people interpret places.
Pickup, Drop-Off, and How the Meeting Actually Helps
This tour includes hotel pickup and drop-off, which matters a lot in Saigon. The city is big, and “close by” isn’t always close when streets and traffic patterns fight you.
Drop-off is described as convenient and flexible, including places in central areas such as City Hall, Ben Thanh Market, Saigon Square, Pink Church, Opera House, Coffee Apartment, and more. That gives you an easy way to keep your day moving after the tour ends.
Two small practical notes:
- The tour is near public transportation, which can help if you want options beyond hotel pickup.
- You’ll receive a mobile ticket, and confirmation comes at booking time.
Safety on a Motorbike: Helmet Use Is Included
I like when a tour says up front that helmets and other safety equipment are provided. It’s one less stress point.
Your practical takeaway:
- You don’t need to bring a helmet.
- You should still treat this like motorbike travel: wear secure clothing and keep your balance ready while the driver adjusts speed and turns.
- Leave important items at the hotel. This is directly suggested by the tour info, and it makes sense: you’re on the back of a motorbike, and you don’t want to be juggling bags or phones constantly.
The Start: Saigon River Tunnel Dinner (Your Built-In Fuel Stop)
The tour begins with the Saigon River Tunnel Dinner, and dinner is included. If you’ve ever done an evening walking tour, you know how fast hunger can spoil the mood. Here, the schedule takes care of that problem early, before you’re riding around hungry and tired.
Dinner is specified as beef noodles soup and coconut. Also important: dinner can be catered for dietary requirements. If you have allergies or religious or cultural food limits, you’re asked to let the team know so they can make the tour flexible for you.
One more reality check: the tour info says the schedule may vary if the restaurant is closed or an attraction is under maintenance. That doesn’t mean the whole tour disappears—it just means you might see adjustments to protect timing and flow.
Stop 1: Ho Chi Minh City and the Chinese-Vietnamese Belief Lens
Your first stop is described as focusing on Ho Chi Minh City, with particular attention to the Chinese-Vietnamese population in Saigon. That matters because it shapes the entire “ghost beliefs” theme.
Instead of treating spooky stories like random myths, the tour frames them as part of local life and belief systems. You’ll learn about the diverse beliefs tied to the community and how those beliefs affect how people talk about places.
The upside for you: you’ll get better at reading the city. You start connecting architecture, street layout, and cultural clues to the stories people tell about why certain locations feel different.
The possible downside: if you expected pure horror-movie style scares with no cultural explanation, you might wish for more straight-up spooky theater. But the point here is understanding why the stories exist.
The Ghost Building Lesson and Feng Shui Meaning on the Road
One of the tour highlights is learning about the Ghost Building and the implications of Feng Shui beliefs. This is exactly the kind of thing that makes a themed tour worth your time: it turns rumor into a framework you can interpret.
Think about it like this. Feng Shui isn’t just about what looks pretty. For many believers, it’s about how energy flows and how people interpret misfortune, luck, and place. When you learn that logic, you can watch the city differently while you ride.
What you’ll likely experience during this part:
- A guide-led explanation that ties the ghost story to local interpretations
- A slower moment where you can look around instead of rushing onward
- Then you move again, using the story as a thread between stops
If you’re curious about how belief systems show up in everyday spaces, this is the strongest “why this tour” component.
Seven Spooky Stops: How the Route Feels Without Getting Lost
You’re promised seven spooky stops. Since not every stop is named in the provided details, I’d judge the experience by how the tour is designed, not by exact point-to-point landmarks.
Here’s what the structure means in real life:
- Each stop is likely a short, manageable walk or quick roadside pause.
- The guide keeps the theme consistent, so you’re not bouncing between unrelated attractions.
- You see enough variety in the ride that the “Chinatown sightseeing by scooter” isn’t repetitive.
The benefit for you is momentum. You don’t have to decide what to see next or build a self-guided route through streets you might not recognize. The tradeoff is that you’ll experience less slow wandering than a full independent night out.
Chinatown by Scooter: The Best Part Is Getting There Fast
The tour is explicitly framed as a way to avoid the chaos of navigating Vietnamese motorbikes on your own. That’s a big deal in Ho Chi Minh City. Even if you’re comfortable walking, street crossings and traffic timing can sap your energy.
By riding with a driver/guide, you get:
- Faster movement between neighborhoods and sightlines
- More chances to notice signs, street patterns, and building styles tied to Chinatown life
- A guided narrative so the sights feel connected
And based on the guide feedback shared with the tour info, this can also feel like a “new-to-you” part of the city. One praised experience notes the tour covered areas they hadn’t been to before, which is exactly the kind of value you want from a first pass through Saigon.
Food Included: Coffee or Tea Plus Dinner You Don’t Have to Hunt For
Food is part of the tour design here. You get coffee and/or tea, plus the dinner described above.
Why that matters: when you’re moving around for 2 to 4 hours, you want your energy stable. Instead of finding a place, checking menus, and guessing portion sizes, you start with the dinner stop and then keep going.
Also, the dinner is spelled out as beef noodles soup and coconut. That’s a comfort-food choice for many people, and you’ll know what you’re getting. If you have restrictions, the tour info says they can be flexible—just communicate your needs ahead of time.
How Long Should You Block Off?
Duration is listed as 2 to 4 hours (approx.). In practice, short tours can feel short, but only if the stops are timed well. Since at least one stop could vary if something is closed or under maintenance, you should plan a small buffer.
If you like tight schedules, treat this like an evening anchor. It works well as:
- A first or second evening activity
- A way to get oriented before you do deeper exploring afterward
- A themed activity that doesn’t trap you in a museum or showroom
Who Should Book This Tour (and Who Might Rethink It)
This works best for you if:
- You want a spooky theme with cultural context, especially around Chinese-Vietnamese beliefs
- You like street-level sightseeing and want help navigating traffic
- You’d rather pay for a guided motorbike experience than figure it out yourself
- You want dinner and a drinks included at a low price point
It may be less ideal if:
- You’re strongly uncomfortable being on a motorbike for the duration
- You prefer highly specific, named stops you can research ahead of time (the details provided don’t list every stop name)
- Your schedule can’t handle a possible variation if a restaurant or attraction is closed
Should You Book the Saigon Ghost Beliefs Tour?
I’d book it if your goal is simple: see more of Ho Chi Minh City in a short time, learn the meaning behind ghost stories through the lens of Feng Shui and local belief, and not waste your energy on logistics.
The decision gets even easier when you add the extras: helmet safety equipment, hotel pickup/drop-off, and a dinner start at Saigon River Tunnel. At $16, it’s also one of those “low-risk, high-story” deals. If the guide is someone like Danny, you’re likely to get a mix of cultural context and creepy storytelling that feels like the city speaking back to you.
If you’re on the fence, aim for the version of this tour that fits your comfort level with motorbike travel. If that part sounds fine, this is a smart, practical way to do Chinatown after dark with a lot more meaning than a typical walk-by.
FAQ
FAQ
How long is the Saigon Ghost beliefs tour?
The tour duration is listed as about 2 to 4 hours.
What is the price per person?
The price is $16.00 per person.
Does the tour include hotel pickup and drop-off?
Yes. The package includes hotel pickup and drop-off, with drop-off options that can include central landmarks like City Hall, Ben Thanh Market, and others.
Is dinner included?
Yes. Dinner is included and is listed as beef noodles soup and coconut. Dietary requirements can be catered to if you let the provider know.
What drinks are included?
Coffee and/or tea are included.
Do I need to bring a helmet?
No. Helmet and other safety equipment are provided for use during the tour.
How many stops are there?
The tour is described as having seven spooky stops.
What if the restaurant is closed or an attraction is under maintenance?
The tour may vary in that case, since the restaurant might be closed or an attraction may be undergoing maintenance.
How many people are in the group?
The tour has a maximum of 30 travelers.
What is the cancellation policy?
Free cancellation is offered. You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience start time for a full refund.
Is there a mobile ticket?
Yes. A mobile ticket is provided.



























