Google: 4.4 · 158 reviews
Akuna




Akuna occupies the ninth floor of Le Méridien Saigon in District 1, where a Michelin-starred kitchen under Chef Sam Aisbett bridges European technique with Vietnamese produce. Dishes like red-braised goose with Venus clams and smoked Australian pork cheeks sit inside a space defined by 1,200 suspended light rods that replicate the quality of a sunset over moving water. La Liste has scored it 75 points in both 2025 and 2026.
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Where the Room Sets an Argument Before the Menu Does
On the ninth floor of Le Méridien Saigon, 1,200 suspended light rods hang around an open kitchen in a configuration designed to suggest a sunset stream in motion. The effect is less theatrical than architectural: the rods diffuse the ambient light into something slow and amber, and the woodwork and custom furnishings absorb rather than reflect it. The room argues, quietly, that what follows will be considered rather than showy. That argument holds.
Ho Chi Minh City's fine dining tier has expanded sharply over the past decade, and the category of restaurants fusing European technique with Vietnamese ingredients now has genuine depth. CieL and Å by T.U.N.G occupy the same ₫₫₫₫ tier and operate on broadly related premises. What separates Akuna within that peer group is a specific tension: the kitchen draws on Australian-trained instincts and European classical structure, then applies them to Vietnamese seasonal produce in ways that feel interrogative rather than decorative.
The Cultural Work the Menu Is Doing
Vietnamese cuisine carries a set of principles that even the most ambitious fusion formats have to reckon with: freshness as a structural value, contrast as a compositional logic, and balance between fat, acid, and heat as a near-constant baseline. The dishes that land at Akuna do so because they respect those principles without being constrained by their familiar forms.
Red-braised goose with Venus clams is a signal dish in this sense. Red-braising is a Chinese-influenced technique with deep roots in Vietnamese cooking, particularly in the south, where slow cooking in soy, rice wine, and aromatics is common across home and restaurant kitchens. Placing it alongside Venus clams introduces a coastal Vietnamese register while shifting the textural dynamic. The combination reads as a genuine dialogue between two sets of culinary logic rather than a styling exercise.
Smoked Australian pork cheeks introduce a different tension: an imported cut, processed through a technique that carries both European charcuterie associations and Southeast Asian smoking traditions, served in a city where pork is a daily staple across every price point from street stalls to banquet tables. The specificity of the cut and sourcing is a statement about premium positioning, but the cooking approach connects it to something recognisable in local food culture.
This is where Akuna sits most clearly in the broader Asian innovative dining scene. Comparable restaurants across the region, including Thevar and Meta in Singapore, Soigné and alla prima in Seoul, and Vea in Hong Kong, are all working through versions of the same question: how much does a local culinary identity weigh against imported technique, and who gets to decide? Akuna's answer is to treat Vietnamese produce and flavour logic as the fixed point and European method as the variable.
Chef, Credentials, and Competitive Placement
Chef Sam Aisbett brings an Australian background to a city where international chefs have been operating in the fine dining tier since the early 2000s, when French-influenced hotel restaurants first established the ₫₫₫₫ category. His presence at Akuna places it in a lineage of kitchens where the chef's training sits outside Vietnam but the sourcing and flavour references sit firmly inside it. That position is now well-established in Ho Chi Minh City, but the execution determines whether it reads as a genuine contribution or a formula.
The awards record suggests genuine contribution. Akuna has held a Michelin star in both 2024 and 2025, making it part of a small group of Ho Chi Minh City restaurants recognised in the guide's Vietnam editions. La Liste, which aggregates critic scores and review data across a global pool, has rated Akuna at 75 points in consecutive years (2025 and 2026), a level of consistency that positions it alongside the more established innovative restaurants in the city. For context, MAZ in Tokyo and Hibana by Koki in Hanoi operate in the same La Liste scoring range, pointing to Akuna's placement within a recognised regional tier rather than a local niche.
Within Ho Chi Minh City's own innovative category, the comparison set is instructive. Coco Dining operates at ₫₫₫, one price tier below Akuna, and positions itself as innovative without the same awards infrastructure. Nén Light and An's Saigon approach Vietnamese ingredients from different angles. Akuna is currently the restaurant in this city category with the most consistent international recognition, which affects both its booking lead time and its price positioning.
The Hotel Address and What It Implies
Le Méridien Saigon is a full-service international hotel on Tôn Đức Thắng in Bến Nghé, District 1, the central business and luxury district that runs along the Saigon River. Hotel fine dining in Southeast Asia carries a complicated reputation: it can mean reliable luxury with low creative risk, or it can mean a chef with the resource base to execute ambitious food without the survival pressures of a standalone site. Akuna reads as the latter.
The ninth-floor position provides river views and a physical separation from the hotel lobby that helps the restaurant function as a destination rather than an amenity. The decision to build 1,200 light rods around the kitchen rather than use conventional hotel restaurant design suggests a brief that went beyond standard fitout. The Google rating of 4.4 across 121 reviews, while a modest sample, points to a consistent guest experience rather than polarised reactions.
For visitors planning a broader District 1 evening, the address clusters well with the neighbourhood's concentration of premium bars and river-facing venues. EP Club's full Ho Chi Minh City bars guide covers the surrounding options in detail. Those planning a longer trip can cross-reference the Ho Chi Minh City hotels guide for accommodation at comparable service levels, and the full restaurants guide for the broader dining spread across the city, including the experiences guide and wineries guide for further planning depth. For those visiting other Vietnamese cities, La Maison 1888 in Da Nang represents a comparable premium tier in a different setting.
Planning Your Visit
Akuna sits at the ₫₫₫₫ price point, placing it among the higher-expenditure options in Ho Chi Minh City's restaurant tier. At a hotel property with an international awards profile, advance booking is advisable, particularly for weekend evenings. The ninth-floor location at Le Méridien Saigon, 3C Tôn Đức Thắng, Bến Nghé, District 1, is accessible from most District 1 hotels within a short taxi or ride-share ride. Specific hours are not confirmed in our current data, so contacting the hotel directly before visiting is the practical approach.
Cuisine and Credentials
A fast peer set for context, pulled from similar venues in our database.
| Venue | Cuisine | Awards | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Akuna | Innovative | Michelin 1 Star | This venue |
| Anan Saigon | Vietnamese Street Food | Michelin 1 Star | Vietnamese Street Food, ₫₫ |
| CieL | Innovative | Michelin 1 Star | Innovative, ₫₫₫₫ |
| Coco Dining | Innovative | Michelin 1 Star | Innovative, ₫₫₫ |
| Long Trieu | Cantonese | Michelin 1 Star | Cantonese, ₫₫₫₫ |
| Bánh Xèo 46A | Vietnamese | Vietnamese, ₫ |
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Luxurious and cozy contemporary setting with an open kitchen counter, unexpected music selections, and carefully curated lighting that balances sophistication with approachability.














