Food Guide — Phu Quoc (2026)
Food guide: the night market, seafood from $3, pho from $1.50, tropical fruit, restaurants and cooking at home. Prices for every dish, safety tips and meal budgets.
Phu Quoc is a foodie paradise. The freshest seafood straight off the boat, Vietnamese cuisine for pennies, tropical fruit year-round. And best of all — a kitchen in your apartment lets you mix home cooking with eating out, saving 40-50% on food.
Duong Dong Night Market — a Must Visit
This is Phu Quoc's top dining spot. It runs every evening from 5:00 PM to 10:00 PM. Dozens of stalls offer grilled seafood, tropical fruit and Vietnamese snacks. You pick out the live seafood and the cook prepares it in front of you in 5-10 minutes.
| Dish | Price |
|---|---|
| Grilled prawns (10 pcs) | $3-5 |
| Grilled squid | $3-4 |
| Whole grilled fish | $5-8 |
| Crab | $8-12 |
| Sea urchins (3 pcs) | $2-3 |
| Oysters (6 pcs) | $3-5 |
| Mango/watermelon shake | $1-1.50 |
| Beer | $0.80-1 |
Tip: arrive around 5:30-6:00 PM — the selection is at its best and the queues are shortest. By 8:00 PM the best stalls have sold out.
Street food and local cafes
Vietnamese street food is among the best in the world. On Phu Quoc it's all fresh and cheap:
- Pho ($1.50-2) — the signature Vietnamese soup with rice noodles, beef or chicken and fresh herbs. Eaten for breakfast or lunch. A big, filling portion.
- Banh mi ($1-1.50) — a crispy baguette with meat, pate, vegetables and herbs. Rated the world's best fast food by many food bloggers.
- Rice with meat/chicken ($1.50-2.50) — com tam, the classic lunch dish. Rice, grilled meat, a fried egg and vegetables.
- Fried noodles ($1.50-2) — mi xao, a quick and filling dish.
- Spring rolls ($1-2) — fresh (in rice paper) or fried. A light snack.
- Vietnamese coffee ($0.50-1) — strong, with condensed milk, over ice. Addiction guaranteed.
Restaurants by category
| Category | Price per dish | Where |
|---|---|---|
| Street food | $1-3 | Everywhere, especially Duong Dong |
| Local cafes | $2-5 | Duong Dong, Long Beach |
| Night market | $3-8 | Duong Dong (evening) |
| Mid-range restaurants | $5-12 | Long Beach, Grand World |
| European cuisine | $8-18 | Grand World, Long Beach |
| Fine dining | $20-40 | Hotels, Grand World |
Cooking at home — the key to saving money
A kitchen in your apartment is your main money-saving tool. Buy your groceries at the market and at CoopMart:
- Eggs (10 pcs): $1-1.50
- Rice (1 kg): $0.80-1
- Chicken (1 kg): $3-4
- Seafood from the market: prawns $5-8/kg, fish $3-5/kg
- Vegetables (per kg): $0.50-1.50
- Fruit: mango $1/kg, watermelon $0.50/kg, pineapple $0.50 each
The "50/50" strategy: breakfast and lunch at home ($2-4/day), dinner at a restaurant or the night market ($5-10). That's $7-14/day vs $20-30 eating out only. Savings: $200-400/month per person.
Phu Quoc specialties
- Fish sauce (nuoc mam) — Phu Quoc produces the best fish sauce in Vietnam. Try it in any dish — it's the foundation of Vietnamese cuisine.
- Phu Quoc pepper — black, white and red pepper. Among the best in the world. Buy some as a souvenir ($3-5/kg at the farm).
- Seafood — crab in pepper, prawns grilled with salt and chili, squid, sea urchins. It doesn't get fresher than this.
- Bun quay — local hand-made noodles with seafood. Phu Quoc's signature dish, $2-3.
Meal budgets (1 person/month)
| Style | Per month | Per day |
|---|---|---|
| 80% at home + street food | $100-150 | $3-5 |
| 50% at home + 50% cafes | $200-300 | $7-10 |
| 100% restaurants (budget) | $250-350 | $8-12 |
| 100% restaurants (comfort) | $400-600 | $13-20 |
FAQ
Street food: $1-3 per dish. Night market: seafood $3-8. Restaurant: $5-15. Coffee: $0.50-1. Food budget: $5-7/day (street food + home), $10-15 (mixed), $20-30 (restaurants). An apartment kitchen saves 40-50%. A family of four can eat on $15-25/day by cooking at home plus 2-3 restaurant dinners a week.
Must-eats: grilled seafood at the night market (prawns, squid), pho (soup), banh mi (baguette), bun quay (local noodles), iced Vietnamese coffee, tropical fruit (mango, mangosteen, durian for the brave). Signature items: Phu Quoc pepper and nuoc mam fish sauce. All of it costs $1-5 a portion.
Generally yes — Vietnamese street food is cooked in front of you from fresh ingredients. Safety rules: choose stalls with a queue of locals (a mark of quality), avoid pre-cut fruit, drink only bottled water ($0.30) and check that the food is hot. Your stomach adapts in 2-3 days. Just in case, carry activated charcoal and Imodium.
Bottom line: food on Phu Quoc is delicious and incredibly cheap
$5-10/day is a realistic food budget for one person. The night market is a must-do. An apartment kitchen is the key to saving 40-50%. Book an apartment with a kitchen and enjoy Phu Quoc's food scene.