Cat Ba Town Night Market: What to Eat After a Day on the Water
Cat Ba's waterfront night market is where kayakers, hikers, and day-trippers end up after dark — grilled seafood, piles of snails, cold beer, and no dress code required.
30 guides tagged night-market — sort or switch view to find what fits.
Cat Ba's waterfront night market is where kayakers, hikers, and day-trippers end up after dark — grilled seafood, piles of snails, cold beer, and no dress code required.
From resort beach clubs to downtown cocktail bars and a night market run on draft beer, Phu Quoc has a drinking scene worth planning around.
Vung Tau's real food scene starts after 9pm — grilled seafood alleys, rolling dessert carts, and snail joints packed with locals who didn't come for the beach view.
Phu Quoc's best eating happens after 9pm — if you know where to look past the tourist-facing night market stalls.
Dinh Cau Night Market and Duong Dong Harbor both sell fresh seafood, but the prices, atmosphere, and what to order alongside differ considerably.
Saigon's real food scene kicks into gear after 9pm — grilled meats, snail joints, dessert carts, and noodle stalls that locals actually eat at.
Hue's after-dark food scene runs deeper than the tourist strip on Le Loi. Here's where locals actually eat when the sun goes down.
Three hours, one bridge, and more food than you can reasonably finish — here's how to eat your way through Hoi An's night market without wasting a single stop.
Da Lat's grilled rice paper snack — quail egg, dried shrimp, mayo, charcoal smoke — is everywhere at night. Here's how sidewalk vendors and sit-down shops actually differ.
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