Culture still an “add-on” product
Few cities in the region can rival Ho Chi Minh City's cultural–historical panorama. Vestiges of old Saigon endure in iconic French-colonial structures such as the Central Post Office, Independence Palace, and Notre Dame Cathedral; the Cho Lon area with its network of assembly halls, festivals, and signature cuisine of the Chinese-Vietnamese community; an array of museums and revolutionary sites, from the War Remnants Museum, the Ho Chi Minh City History Museum to the Southern Women’s Museum, the Cu Chi Tunnels, and the Rung Sac Military Base.
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Ho Chi Minh City Central Post Office |
Complementing these physical assets are intangible treasures like don ca tai tu (southern amateur music), water puppetry and folk festivals, which are valuable “soft assets” capable of narrating the city's unique urban identity. Yet, these assets largely exist in fragmented form, lacking the structured "packaging" needed to transform them into high-value, economically impactful tourism products.
Industry players confirm that local cultural tourism largely exists as a supplementary component. At Vietravel, for example, museums and historical sites typically serve as add-ons to enhance standard city tours or MICE itineraries.
Pham Anh Vu, Director of the Viet Travel Media JSC, noted that key attractions like the Independence Palace, Cu Chi Tunnels, War Remnants Museum, Notre Dame Cathedral, Nha Rong Wharf and Cho Lon Market are most often bundled with shopping sprees, culinary escapades and urban sightseeing rather than curated into story-rich thematic tours with allocated time and depth.
Travel operators pointed out that many visitors, especially domestic ones, perceive Ho Chi Minh City first and foremost as an economic and entertainment hub, opting for short, flexible itineraries.
This preference deters substantial investment in bespoke cultural tours which demand extended time and genuine curiosity. In an industry where margins are famously slender, operators sensibly gravitate toward versatile, easily marketable bundled tours that promise swift returns and effortless sales.
Policies needed to unleash true potential
As 2026 unfolds, several tour operators are reevaluating the position of cultural tourism within their portfolios. Tran Quang Duy, Director of the Chim Canh Cut Travel Service JSC, treats it as a long-game priority, yet proceeds with measured, selective commitments rather than aggressive scaling.
Meanwhile, the Viet Travel Media JSC is pursuing a phased rollout, focusing on two to three signature creations before venturing further afield. Tours such as “300 Years of Saigon – From formative settlement to modern metropolis,” Cho Lon cultural tours spotlighting the Chinese-origin community, and heritage gastronomy and performance tours are designed along curated routes, marrying expert storytelling with the living canvas of the streets. These products target foreigners seeking in-depth experiences and domestic tourists ready to pay for cultural value.
Cultural tourism holds undeniable potential to rise as one of Ho Chi Minh City’s most coveted signatures. However, systemic bottlenecks remain, particularly fragmented coordination with heritage and museum management units, restrictive opening hours, administrative red tape, intellectual property constraints and limited technology integration.
Against this backdrop, the city was urged to issue a comprehensive and long-term cultural tourism development strategy, in which the municipal administration acts as an orchestrator, clearly identifying key cultural and heritage axes, investing in infrastructure, pedestrian spaces and night tours; and forging substantive public–private partnership mechanisms.
Source: VNA