REVIEW · DA NANG
Da Nang Street Food Private Tour With Female Tour Guide
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Vietnam Package Tours · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Food, bikes, and bridges in one easy loop. What makes this Da Nang street food private tour stand out is the mix of 6–10 dish tastings and quick hits of city landmarks while you’re still hungry for what comes next. I also like that the whole thing is run by local university students, so the vibe stays relaxed and practical.
I love how the route links food to place—starting in local neighborhoods and markets, then rolling to sights like Dragon Bridge and My Khe Beach. One consideration: this tour is marked not suitable for vegetarians and not a good match if you have food allergies, so if that’s you, be extra cautious before booking.
In This Review
- Key things I’d pay attention to
- Food, Bikes, and Bridges: Getting Oriented in Da Nang
- Your Female Student Guide and the Private-Tour Advantage
- The 3-Hour Street-Food Core and Market Walk
- Taste 6–10 Dishes Without the Guesswork
- Quick Photo Stops: Dragon Bridge, My Khe Beach, Tran Thi Ly Bridge
- What’s Included (and Why It’s Not Just a Cheap Snack Tour)
- A Realistic Packing List for the Motorbike Ride
- Price and Logistics: The Practical Value for a 4-Hour Private Tour
- Who This Tour Fits Best in Da Nang
- Should You Book This Da Nang Street Food Private Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Da Nang street food private tour?
- What can I expect to eat on the tour?
- Does the price include food and drinks?
- Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?
- Is this tour private?
- What attractions are included besides street food?
- Is the tour suitable for vegetarians?
- What about food allergies?
- Are guides English-speaking?
- What are the cancellation and pay-later options?
Key things I’d pay attention to

- Female student guide energy: friendly local university students keep the pace fun and conversation-heavy.
- 6–10 tastings built for comparison: you sample enough variety to learn what you actually like.
- Motorbike-based moving between stops: faster than walking alone, but you’ll want comfy clothes and shoes.
- Food-market time plus landmark photos: the main eating happens in neighborhoods, then you add big Da Nang icons.
- Private-group feel: pickup, transport, and attention are geared to your group.
- Easy customization: you can share interests beforehand and adjust the experience a bit.
Food, Bikes, and Bridges: Getting Oriented in Da Nang

Da Nang is the kind of city where street food is the shortcut to understanding daily life. This tour uses that idea well: you spend the bulk of your time eating and walking through local areas, then you add a few high-recognition photo stops so you leave with both flavor and bearings.
The structure is simple. You start with hotel pickup in Da Nang, then the tour expands from a food-and-market core into short landmark moments. Even if you’re only here for a day or two, it’s a quick way to get a feel for where people actually go, not just what’s on a postcard.
You can also read our reviews of more food & drink experiences in Da Nang
Your Female Student Guide and the Private-Tour Advantage

This is a private group tour led by a female guide, with help from local university students. That matters more than it sounds. In a group, you can end up rushing or missing the story behind what you’re eating. Here, the pace is built around sampling—so you’re not just collecting dishes, you’re getting little explanations along the way.
From the reviews, the guides come across as friendly and informative, and they talk you through the choices. One highlight people call out is the explanations for the food selections and how the tour helps you try things you might not pick on your own. That’s one of the biggest values in any street food tour: local guidance turns guesswork into confidence.
Also, since it’s private, you’re more likely to get flexibility. If you’re curious about certain tastes, you can communicate your preferences beforehand and the experience can be customized based on your interests.
The 3-Hour Street-Food Core and Market Walk

The heart of the tour is the main Da Nang stop, built around about three hours of street food, walking, sightseeing, and a food market visit. This is where you’ll spend most of your appetite time.
Here’s what that typically means in practice:
- You get a mix of savory street snacks and sweet Vietnamese treats.
- You walk through local neighborhoods while moving between food points.
- You see how the market fits into everyday meals, not just as a tourist stop.
That three-hour block is also why the tour works as “value for money.” Many tours advertise street food, but they treat eating as a quick snack break. This one treats it like a small journey—enough time to try multiple items and actually notice differences in flavors, textures, and ingredients.
One more useful detail: tastings are shared, and the exact number depends on group size. The tour is positioned for 6–10 dishes, so for most groups you’ll get a meaningful range without needing to order anything extra.
Taste 6–10 Dishes Without the Guesswork
Street food shopping can be intimidating, especially when everything is on the menu but you don’t read it. This tour removes that stress by bringing you directly to what you should try next, then explaining it as you go.
You can expect a spread that ranges from savory bites to sweet Vietnamese treats. That mix is helpful because Da Nang’s food scene isn’t only one style. You’ll likely sample:
- savory street snacks and everyday-style dishes
- sweet items that balance out the meal
The best part, according to the strongest reviews, is that the food selections come with explanations. That takes you past “I ate something” and into “I know what I liked and why.” It’s a small change, but it makes the entire experience more memorable.
Food allergy and vegetarian note: the tour is explicitly marked not suitable for vegetarians and not suitable for people with food allergies. If either applies to you, I wouldn’t treat “please inform us” as a safety net. Your best move is to skip this specific tour and look for a different one designed for dietary limits.
Quick Photo Stops: Dragon Bridge, My Khe Beach, Tran Thi Ly Bridge

After the food-and-market core, the tour shifts into short landmark moments. These aren’t meant to replace full sightseeing days; they’re quick visual anchors so the eating has a bigger city backdrop.
Expect about 15 minutes each at:
- Dragon Bridge (photo stop)
- My Khe Beach (photo stop)
- Tran Thị Lý Bridge (photo stop)
Why do these stops matter? Because Da Nang is spread out, and these bridges and the beach are part of the city’s identity. They help you connect what you tasted with where you are—especially if you’re new to the area.
Practical tip: bring your camera or phone, but also bring your patience. Short photo stops mean you’ll want to be ready to move quickly when the group is moving. The payoff is that you still get out of the tour with clear memories instead of just photos of plates.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Da Nang
What’s Included (and Why It’s Not Just a Cheap Snack Tour)

At $38 per person for about 4 hours, this is positioned as a budget-friendly way to get both food and transport without planning the route yourself.
What’s included:
- street food and drink
- transportation
- pickup and drop-off at your hotel
- English-speaking tour guide
That package matters. If you tried to build the same day on your own, you’d likely spend time figuring out where to go, how to get there efficiently, and what to order. Here, those decisions are already handled, and the time you save is part of the value.
What’s not included:
- tip
One more thing I like about this setup: transportation is included, which fits the pacing. If you’ve been in cities where “street food tour” means lots of slow walking and long detours, this one uses motorbike-friendly movement (you’ll be warned to wear clothes and shoes suited for the ride). That helps keep the tour tight and on schedule.
A Realistic Packing List for the Motorbike Ride

This isn’t a sit-and-eat tour. You’ll ride and walk between stops, so your comfort affects your experience more than you’d think.
Bring:
- comfortable shoes
- hat
- camera
- sunscreen
- comfortable clothes
Also, the tour notes that smoking isn’t allowed. Simple rule, but it keeps the vibe focused on food and movement.
If you tend to get annoyed on rides, dress with that in mind. Light, breathable clothes and shoes with good grip make a bigger difference than you’d expect when you’re bouncing between food stops and jumping off for quick photos.
Price and Logistics: The Practical Value for a 4-Hour Private Tour

You’re paying for convenience plus guided choices. That’s the real story behind the $38 price.
For a private tour, included pickup/drop-off, transport, and the guide’s time can easily add up if you book it separately. Here, your cost mostly covers the day’s planning, movement, and the food-and-drink portion. And because the tour is designed around tasting 6–10 dishes, you’re buying a stack of small experiences rather than one big restaurant meal.
The main “logistics” consideration is dietary fit. Since the tour isn’t suitable for vegetarians and isn’t suitable for people with food allergies, your best decision is to confirm your dietary needs upfront and only book if the guide can realistically accommodate you. Otherwise, you risk spending the tour worrying instead of eating.
Who This Tour Fits Best in Da Nang

This is a strong fit if you:
- want to sample multiple local dishes in a short time
- like learning while you eat (the guides explain choices)
- prefer a private, friendly group vibe over a chaotic crowd
- are okay with motorbike travel and quick landmark photo stops
It might not fit if you:
- follow a vegetarian diet
- have food allergies
- prefer long, slow sightseeing days over a tight food-focused route
If you’re visiting Da Nang and want one “food + orientation” experience to anchor your trip, this tour does that job well.
Should You Book This Da Nang Street Food Private Tour?
If your idea of a good day is eating your way through Da Nang with a student-led guide, this tour is easy to recommend. The standout strengths are clear: you get friendly guide explanations, a real mix of savory and sweet bites, and efficient movement between local food areas and major sights.
I’d only hesitate if you have dietary restrictions like vegetarian needs or food allergies, because the tour is explicitly marked not suitable for those cases. In that situation, pick a different street food experience built for your needs.
If that doesn’t apply to you, book it—this is the kind of tour that helps you learn what you like in one afternoon, without spending hours chasing menus or transport.
FAQ
How long is the Da Nang street food private tour?
It runs for about 4 hours.
What can I expect to eat on the tour?
You’ll taste about 6–10 local dishes, depending on group size, including both savory snacks and sweet Vietnamese treats.
Does the price include food and drinks?
Yes. Street food and drink are included.
Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?
Yes. The tour includes pickup & drop-off at your hotel.
Is this tour private?
Yes. It’s a private group tour.
What attractions are included besides street food?
You’ll make photo stops at Dragon Bridge, My Khe Beach, and Tran Thi Ly Bridge.
Is the tour suitable for vegetarians?
No. The tour is marked not suitable for vegetarians.
What about food allergies?
The tour is marked not suitable for people with food allergies. It’s best to avoid booking if allergies are a concern.
Are guides English-speaking?
Yes. The tour includes an English-speaking guide.
What are the cancellation and pay-later options?
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund. You can also reserve now and pay later.































