REVIEW · HOI AN
Hoi An: Private Evening Food Tour by Bike
Book on GetYourGuide →Operated by Discova Vietnam · Bookable on GetYourGuide
Night rides here feel like a secret. This private Hoi An food tour by bike takes you through quiet lanes and out toward the countryside to eat your way across Vietnam’s best hits. I love how it mixes classic dishes with small surprises on the road, and it includes a stop at a private home in an organic village to pick herbs.
Two things I really like: the first big meal is a hand-made bánh mì made by the Banh Mi Queen, and later you gather herbs yourself for a city-style cao lầu noodle bowl. One possible drawback is that you’re on a bike for about 4 hours and roughly 15 kilometers, so if you have mobility limits or want a very slow pace, tell the operator before you book and wear comfortable shoes.
In This Review
- Key Highlights I’d Plan Around
- Hoi An Night Biking With Food Stops That Actually Make Sense
- Price and What You’re Really Getting for $80
- Meeting at Discova Day Tour Shop and Getting Set Up
- Stop 1: A Short Street-Food Start in Hoi An
- The Herb-Picking Moment: Organic Village to Cao Lầu Noodles
- Bánh Xèo and Local Hospitality at a Family-Welcoming Spot
- Beer, Coffee, and Dinner: The Ride Becomes a Proper Meal Plan
- River BBQ With Views of the Historic Quarter
- End in the Old Quarter With a Sweet Farewell
- Bike Distance, Timing, and How Hard It Feels
- Who This Private Evening Food Tour Fits Best
- Practical Things to Know Before You Book
- Should You Book This Hoi An Bike Food Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the Hoi An private evening food tour by bike?
- How much does the tour cost?
- Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?
- What does the tour include for food and drinks?
- What should I bring and wear?
- Can kids join, and are child seats available?
- What if I have dietary requirements?
Key Highlights I’d Plan Around

- Banh Mi Queen-style bánh mì to start strong, before the ride gets rolling
- Organic village herb picking for the cao lầu you’ll cook your appetite around
- Multiple tastings along the way, not just one sit-down meal
- Bánh xèo served at a local place where you’ll be welcomed like family
- Beer, coffee, and river BBQ with views of the historic quarter
- Old Quarter night ride + sweet finish to end the tour on a high note
Hoi An Night Biking With Food Stops That Actually Make Sense

Hoi An at night has a different rhythm. Streets feel calmer, lanterns soften the light, and the smells of food hang in the air longer than you’d expect. This is exactly why a bike tour works so well here: you cover ground without the rush of sitting in a car, and you get quick hits of food between small stretches of riding.
What makes this tour practical is that it’s built like a sequence of tastes. You don’t just eat once and call it a day. You start with a signature dish, then move into local specialties and shared meals, finishing in the Old Quarter when the vibe is at its best.
You can also read our reviews of more food & drink experiences in Hoi An
Price and What You’re Really Getting for $80

The listed price is $80 per group, with a note of up to 1. That makes this feel like a private, pay-for-convenience kind of experience rather than a big group shuffle. You’re also paying for more than food: you get hotel pick up and drop, an English-speaking guide, a bike, and helmets.
For value, think in terms of “how many meals and tastings are bundled.” You’re not only sampling street bites. The tour includes food, water and beverages, beer and coffee, and it covers a cooked noodle experience (cao lầu) plus a bánh xèo stop and a river barbecue. If you like having someone else handle the route and the ordering, this price starts to look pretty fair.
Where you should be honest with yourself: if you’re the type who snacks lightly and hates eating in multiple small rounds, you might feel the schedule is packed. But if you enjoy variety, this tour is designed for you.
Meeting at Discova Day Tour Shop and Getting Set Up

The tour begins at the Discova Day Tour Shop Hoi An. From there, the plan is straightforward: you’ll ride, snack, learn what you’re eating, and get back to the same meeting point at the end.
Because bikes are included, the key thing you’ll want to get right early is comfort. Wear comfortable shoes. The operator also asks you to mention each person’s height so they can arrange the right-side bike. That’s not busywork. A bike that fits your body keeps you happier during those 4 hours.
Helmets are provided, too. You may not love wearing one, but in a city setting it’s the kind of detail that keeps things stress-free.
Stop 1: A Short Street-Food Start in Hoi An

The tour includes a guided street-food segment of about 30 minutes in Hoi An. This is where your first flavors land, and it’s timed well. Eating early means you’re not hungry when the ride starts to move you through different neighborhoods.
The standout early dish is the bánh mì crafted by the Banh Mi Queen. The tour is built around this for a reason: bánh mì is one of those foods that turns “I’ve tried it before” into “I get it now.” When it’s made well, you taste the balance of crunchy bread, savory fillings, and the little sauces that make everything feel pulled together.
If you tend to like to-go food that you can eat quickly while standing nearby, this first stop fits your style.
The Herb-Picking Moment: Organic Village to Cao Lầu Noodles

This tour’s most memorable learning moment is the terrace visit in a private home in an organic village. You’ll pick herbs for cooking. Not just herbs as a concept. You’ll literally gather them as part of the experience.
Then comes cao lầu, Hoi An’s famous noodle dish, prepared with a savory broth that’s unique to the city. In many places, cao lầu is treated like a menu item. Here, you’re connected to the inputs first, so the bowl feels personal instead of generic.
Two tips if you want this stop to feel smooth:
- Go in hungry, because it’s the kind of dish you’ll want to focus on rather than half-pay attention.
- If you have dietary needs, mention them during booking. The tour states dietary requirements should be advised in advance, and that’s the only responsible way to handle food around herb-based ingredients.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Hoi An
Bánh Xèo and Local Hospitality at a Family-Welcoming Spot

After the noodle focus, the tour brings you to a local restaurant for bánh xèo, a sizzling rice pancake. This stop matters because it adds texture and flavor variety. Bánh xèo isn’t trying to be the same kind of food as bánh mì or noodles. It’s its own thing: crisp edges, savory filling, and sauces that tie it together.
The tour info also notes that you’ll be welcomed like family. That wording is common in travel marketing, but even when the phrasing is generic, it usually signals something real: a simpler, less formal meal with staff who take a few minutes to help you understand what you’re eating.
If you’re someone who likes to ask questions mid-meal, bring that energy. You’ll get more from the stop when you treat it like a conversation rather than a transaction.
Beer, Coffee, and Dinner: The Ride Becomes a Proper Meal Plan

The main portion of the tour is where the schedule turns into a full evening. One of the listed segments includes beer, coffee, dinner, and food tasting over about 3.5 hours.
That timing matters. It gives you enough time to slow down at each food stop, without feeling like you’re watching the guide rush from one place to the next. It also means you’ll likely taste enough variety that you can compare flavors across the night, instead of just collecting random bites.
One thing I appreciate about tours like this is that they usually keep your energy stable. You’ll have water and beverages, and you’re eating multiple times. That’s a better setup for a bike tour than trying to power through on an empty stomach.
River BBQ With Views of the Historic Quarter

One of the most atmospheric parts of the experience is a barbecue at a small restaurant along the river. You’ll have views of the historic quarter while you eat.
This stop is valuable for two reasons. First, it breaks the pattern of “snack, ride, snack” by giving you a longer sit-down moment. Second, it adds a sense of place. Food tastes better when you can see where you are, especially in a town like Hoi An where the Old Quarter is a big part of the emotional payoff.
If you’re choosing what to prioritize on your Hoi An trip, I’d consider this stop a strong candidate. The combination of food plus river views makes it feel like more than just dinner.
End in the Old Quarter With a Sweet Farewell

The tour finishes by cycling back through the Old Quarter and ending with a sweet treat and a warm farewell.
Finishing like this is smart. It means you’re ending on scenery and atmosphere rather than the last stop being some food you didn’t love. The sweet ending also helps your night feel complete, like you’re closing the loop after all the savory meals.
Also, because this is a bike tour, you arrive through the streets instead of just being dropped off at the edges. That little difference changes how much of the Old Quarter feels part of your evening.
Bike Distance, Timing, and How Hard It Feels
You’ll cycle about 15 kilometers over 4 hours. That’s not a long-distance cycling day, but it’s also not a casual stroll. Expect real riding time between stops.
This tour works best if you’re comfortable with a moderate pace and want a structured eating route. If you want to stop a lot for photos or you’re unused to bikes, you might feel the time more.
The good news: the food stops are frequent enough that the ride doesn’t feel nonstop. It feels like movement with breaks built in.
Who This Private Evening Food Tour Fits Best
This experience fits you if:
- You want authentic Vietnamese flavors in an organized way.
- You enjoy biking and don’t mind riding between meals.
- You like learning about what you’re eating as you go, not just taking photos.
It may not be the best match if:
- You have a hard limit on sitting time on a bike.
- You’re picky about food texture and need a highly customized menu. The tour asks you to share dietary requirements at booking, but the details of specific options aren’t listed here, so you’ll want to confirm what’s possible.
Practical Things to Know Before You Book
Here’s what you should plan around so the experience stays comfortable and smooth.
What to bring: comfortable shoes. That’s the only clothing detail listed, but it’s a big one. You’ll likely do short walks at stops and you don’t want to start the evening with sore feet.
What’s included: bike and helmets, plus food and beverages. The tour also includes hotel pick up and drop, which saves time and hassle.
Kids and bikes: child seats are available on request, with a stated weight capacity of 14 kg. There are also discounts for children age 12 and under with kids bikes.
Heights matter: you’re asked to mention each person’s height so they can arrange the right-side bike. If you book, include that info right away.
Dietary needs: advise dietary requirements at the time of booking. This is the right way to avoid surprises.
Not allowed: pets.
Should You Book This Hoi An Bike Food Tour?
Book it if you want a focused food night in Hoi An that mixes well-known dishes with specific, experience-driven moments like herb picking and a cao lầu meal. The private setup, the included bike gear, and the mix of bánh mì, cao lầu, bánh xèo, river barbecue, and a sweet finish make it feel like a complete evening plan rather than a single meal.
Skip it or think twice if cycling for 4 hours and about 15 kilometers sounds tiring for you, or if you need very strict dietary control and haven’t confirmed what’s available. In that case, message the operator early with your needs.
If you’re in the mood for real flavors, a guided path through the Old Quarter, and a night that feels more like a story than a checklist, this one is a strong choice.
FAQ
How long is the Hoi An private evening food tour by bike?
The tour duration is 4 hours.
How much does the tour cost?
The listed price is $80 per group (up to 1).
Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?
Yes. Hotel pick up and drop is included.
What does the tour include for food and drinks?
Food is included, along with water and beverages. The itinerary also includes beer, coffee, and dinner.
What should I bring and wear?
Wear comfortable shoes.
Can kids join, and are child seats available?
Child seats are available upon request, and they can accommodate a child up to 14 kg. Discounts are available for children age 12 and under with kids bikes.
What if I have dietary requirements?
You should advise any dietary requirements at the time of booking.


































