Dinnertime comes with a scooter ride. This Hanoi by Night foodie tour pairs you with women drivers and a short, well-paced route through top areas, with multiple food stops built into the journey.
I love the female-led team and the way they’re set up to make you feel comfortable from the first minutes, with a safety briefing right at the start. I also love the menu style: you’re not stuck with one single dish. You get a real spread that includes banh cuon, bun cha, and banh ran ngot, plus a sweet ending.
One consideration: it’s a 4-hour motorbike experience on night streets, so if you get motion-sick or you’re uneasy around fast traffic, think twice before booking.
In This Review
- Key points that make this tour worth your time
- Hanoi by night, from the back of a Honda Lead
- Price and what $69 really buys you
- How pickup works (and why it’s a big deal in Hanoi)
- Stop-by-stop: what you’re really doing during the 4 hours
- Stop 1: Old Quarter meet-up and orientation
- Stop 2: Long Bien Bridge bun cha at a family-run spot
- Stop 3: Past Ho Chi Minh memorial and the nightly guard ceremony area
- Stop 4: Duờng Tau coffee stop, egg coffee, and the secret dessert
- The female-led part: more than a theme
- Food strategy: how the stops reduce your stress
- Is it safe for a first scooter ride?
- Who should book this tour?
- The little extras that make the experience feel personal
- Should you book Hanoi by Night Foodie Motorbike Tours led by women?
- FAQ
- How long is the Hanoi by Night Foodie Motorbike Tour?
- How much does it cost?
- Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?
- Where is the meeting point?
- What food is included during the tour?
- Is this tour led by women?
- What is the maximum group size?
- What happens if the weather is bad?
Key points that make this tour worth your time

- Women drivers and guides handle the riding, with a safety briefing before you go
- Old Quarter hotel pickup and drop-off help you skip taxi wrangling
- Old Quarter as the launchpad: you start oriented, then snack your way outward
- Long Bien Bridge bun cha stop at a family-run restaurant
- Ho Chi Minh memorial at night: you pass the nightly guard ceremony area
- Duờng Tau egg coffee plus a secret dessert for a satisfying finish
Hanoi by night, from the back of a Honda Lead

If you want a fast intro to Hanoi, this kind of night tour has a superpower: it stacks food and sightseeing into the same evening, with minimal downtime. You meet up, get sorted, and then ride through areas you’d never piece together on your own after dark.
The biggest reason I’d steer you here is the setup. This is a female-led motorbike tour, and the company runs mainly female drivers and guides. It starts with a clear meeting routine plus a safety briefing at the first stop, and the bikes are described as brand new Honda Lead scooters. That matters because Hanoi traffic can feel intense the first time you see it.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Hanoi
Price and what $69 really buys you

At $69 per person for about 4 hours, the value comes from three things that usually cost extra when you do them separately: transportation, guided food planning, and entry-level sightseeing flow.
First, you get motorbike touring time without needing to figure out routes or deal with scooter logistics yourself. Second, you’re served multiple dishes across several stops, not just one meal that you could hunt down later. The tour specifically lists complimentary food items such as banh cuon, bun cha, and banh ran ngot, plus an ending stop for Vietnamese egg coffee and a “top secret desert.”
Finally, you’re not guessing about where locals actually eat. The Long Bien Bridge stage includes lunch/dinner-style ordering at a family-run restaurant, which is the kind of place you often miss when you’re working from a phone map and a hungry stomach.
How pickup works (and why it’s a big deal in Hanoi)

This tour offers pickup, and the details point to hotel pickup and drop-off at Old Quarter hotels. That’s a practical win. In Hanoi, dragging yourself across neighborhoods at night can kill your appetite and your energy fast.
If you’re staying outside the Old Quarter, you’ll likely use the main start point: Hanoi Opera House (1 Tràng Tiền, Phan Chu Trinh, Hoàn Kiếm, Hà Nội, Vietnam). The activity also notes that it ends back at the meeting point, while also stating pickup/drop-off for Old Quarter hotels. So, plan on either returning to the meeting area or getting dropped back at your hotel, depending on where you’re staying.
Stop-by-stop: what you’re really doing during the 4 hours

Stop 1: Old Quarter meet-up and orientation
You start in the Old Quarter area, where the mainly female drivers and your tour guide meet you at your hotel lobby for a safety briefing and a clear itinerary rundown. You’ll then hop on a motorbike with a guide.
This first stretch is about more than just getting going. It’s your orientation phase. The tour is designed so the food doesn’t feel random. You build a sense of place as the evening starts, and then the route turns into a snack-and-sight circuit.
What to expect:
- A short but important start-up moment where the guide explains what’s next
- Riding on brand new Honda Lead scooters
- A first photo-and-landmark rhythm as you settle into night Hanoi
You can also read our reviews of more evening experiences in Hanoi
Stop 2: Long Bien Bridge bun cha at a family-run spot
The second stage leads to a prominent family-run restaurant for bun cha. The dish is described as grilled pork with vermicelli noodles, and this stop lasts about 1 hour.
This is the meal anchor of the tour. Bun cha is one of those Hanoi foods that can turn a “quick snack” evening into an actual dinner you’d be happy to repeat. The value here is that you’re going to a specific place for it, not wandering until you find something that looks safe and open.
Practical tip: come hungry. The tour is not positioned as a light sampling only. Between the earlier dish variety and the long bridge-to-restaurant segment, you’ll likely feel like you ate a full evening meal by the end.
Stop 3: Past Ho Chi Minh memorial and the nightly guard ceremony area
The third stage takes you past Ho Chi Minh memorial, with guards performing their nightly ceremonies. This part is described more as a respectful, watch-the-scene moment than a “tour guide lectures at you” moment.
Why this matters for your experience: Hanoi’s night vibe isn’t only street food and scooters. You get a different kind of atmosphere—more formal and ceremonial—simply by riding past an area you’d normally approach with daytime expectations.
Expect it to feel:
- Short and scenic as you move through the area
- Less about a restaurant and more about the city’s nighttime rhythm
Stop 4: Duờng Tau coffee stop, egg coffee, and the secret dessert
The final stage winds down with a cafe stop at Duờng Tau for Vietnamese egg coffee and a top secret desert you only know about once you’re there.
This ending combo is smart. You’ve likely had savory dishes across the route. Finishing with egg coffee gives you caffeine and sweetness in one go, and the secret dessert element keeps the last stop fun instead of predictable.
If you’re a dessert person, this is where you’ll feel the tour did its homework. You’re not just eating because you’re walking by a shop. You’re finishing on purpose.
The female-led part: more than a theme

Lots of tours throw in a label like “women-led” as branding. Here, the details tie it to the actual experience. The tour specifically mentions mainly female drivers and a female guide, and the safety briefing is part of how you get comfortable before the ride starts.
In practice, that tends to change the tone of the evening. You’re riding with someone whose job is to guide, not just to drive. That’s why you’ll see people highlight feelings of safety and friendliness again and again, especially from first-time scooter riders.
It’s also tied to a real-world goal stated by the provider: supporting female driver work opportunities in the face of employment barriers. If that social mission matters to you, it’s a strong bonus to a tour that already earns its keep on food and logistics.
Food strategy: how the stops reduce your stress

The best foodie tours do two things. They remove decision fatigue. Then they turn you into someone who orders like a local.
This tour does that by building around a tight set of iconic dishes:
- Banh cuon (steamed roll cake)
- Bun cha (grilled pork with vermicelli noodles)
- Banh ran ngot (salty and sweet donuts)
And then it finishes with:
- Vietnamese egg coffee
- A secret dessert at Duờng Tau
You don’t have to figure out what to try or which places are worth the line. Your guide’s job is to choose and handle timing. Since the ride is about 4 hours, pacing matters. You want stops that are long enough to eat well, but short enough that the evening doesn’t drag.
Is it safe for a first scooter ride?

This is the big question, and the tour is built around addressing it early. You start with a safety briefing before you go, and the tour is operated with a small group size: a maximum of 10 travelers.
Even with that, night riding is still night riding. Hanoi streets are busy. So I’d tell you to be honest with yourself: if you’re anxious about scooters, start by booking with realistic expectations. You’re a passenger most of the time, but you’re still experiencing motion, close spacing, and fast changes in scenery.
A smart move before you go: wear something that won’t snag. Keep your phone secure. Bring a light layer if you’re sensitive to nighttime cool air.
Who should book this tour?

This is a strong fit if:
- You’re in Hanoi for the first time and want your bearings fast
- You want a guided food circuit across multiple areas instead of hunting solo
- You like night scenes and you’re comfortable riding a scooter as a passenger
- You appreciate a company that gives work opportunities to women drivers
It might not be ideal if:
- Night scooter riding sounds like stress rather than fun
- You get motion-sick easily
- You’d rather spend the whole evening on foot with no traffic exposure
Also, if you have dietary needs, you should ask the provider directly. The tour data doesn’t spell out a full vegetarian policy, but feedback you’ll find around this style of tour often highlights customization. If the ability to adjust matters to you, confirm early.
The little extras that make the experience feel personal
Even within a short 4-hour schedule, the tour format leaves room for human touches. People often talk about how guides explain what you’re eating and what you’re seeing, plus the fun of being photographed or captured at stops.
Since the group is capped at 10 travelers, it usually stays organized enough that you’re not shouting over each other. You can still hold a conversation with your guide between bites, ask questions about food, and get practical recommendations for where to go next.
Should you book Hanoi by Night Foodie Motorbike Tours led by women?
Book it if you want one evening in Hanoi that does real work for you: food you’d struggle to assemble yourself, plus quick city sightseeing from a scooter. For $69, the value is strongest when you’re hungry, open to night riding, and excited to eat several Hanoi classics in one go.
Skip or choose a different style of tour if scooters at night make you tense. This isn’t a museum day. It’s a moving food night.
If you’re booking for your first night in Hanoi, I’d put this near the top of your list. It’s structured enough to reduce stress, and it gives you stories you’ll remember long after the last sip of egg coffee.
FAQ
How long is the Hanoi by Night Foodie Motorbike Tour?
The tour runs for about 4 hours.
How much does it cost?
It costs $69.00 per person.
Is hotel pickup and drop-off included?
Pickup is offered, and hotel pickup and drop-off at Old Quarter hotels are included.
Where is the meeting point?
The start point is Hanoi Opera House on 1 Tràng Tiền, Phan Chu Trinh, Hoàn Kiếm, Hà Nội, Vietnam.
What food is included during the tour?
You’ll get complimentary dishes including banh cuon, bun cha, and banh ran ngot, plus Vietnamese egg coffee and a secret dessert at the final cafe stop.
Is this tour led by women?
Yes. The tour is led by women, and the meeting includes mainly female drivers and a female guide.
What is the maximum group size?
The tour has a maximum of 10 travelers.
What happens if the weather is bad?
This experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
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