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Da Nang, Vietnam

Bún Riêu Cua 39

CuisineNoodles
LocationDa Nang, Vietnam
Michelin

A Michelin Plate-recognised bún riêu cua stall on Lê Hồng Phong, Bún Riêu Cua 39 sits at the sharper end of Da Nang's street-level noodle scene. The format is unapologetically local: crab-enriched broth, a single-dish focus, and prices that reflect the neighbourhood rather than the guidebook. Google reviews stand at 4.1 across 71 ratings, with the 2025 Michelin Plate adding formal weight to what regulars have long known.

Bún Riêu Cua 39 restaurant in Da Nang, Vietnam
About

Da Nang's Noodle Street and Where Bún Riêu Fits

Da Nang's street food identity is built around a handful of noodle formats, and the city's residents treat those formats with the kind of category loyalty that would be recognisable to anyone who has spent time tracking ramen shops in Fukuoka or pho counters in Hanoi. Bún bò, bún chả cá, and bún riêu each occupy distinct corners of the morning-meal circuit, and the best-regarded spots for each tend to cluster on particular streets and draw the same faces daily. Lê Hồng Phong, in the Phước Ninh ward of Hải Châu district, sits inside that circuit — a mixed residential and commercial strip where the eating happens early, the format is fixed, and the turnover is fast. Our full Da Nang restaurants guide maps the wider picture, but for anyone specifically tracing the noodle thread through the city, this street deserves its own walk.

Bún Riêu Cua 39 occupies the bún riêu end of that spectrum. The dish itself — a sour, tomato-tinged broth built on freshwater crab paste, softened with fermented shrimp paste and aromatics, served over thin rice vermicelli , is one of the more technically specific Vietnamese noodle soups. The broth requires a different approach to the spice-forward depth of Bún Bò Huế Bà Thương or the fish-cake richness of Bún Chả Cá 109. The crab element has to deliver enough body to anchor the soup without tipping into muddy heaviness, and the tomato has to provide acidity without crowding out the fermented notes underneath. Getting that calibration right, consistently, at street prices, is what Michelin's 2025 Plate recognition signals. The Plate does not guarantee a full dining experience in the fine-dining sense; what it marks here is execution at a standard the inspectors considered worth publishing.

The Daytime-Only Logic of Bún Riêu

The editorial angle assigned here , the lunch versus dinner divide , is particularly apt for this category of venue, because bún riêu in Vietnam is almost exclusively a morning and midday format. This is not a dinner option. Vietnamese noodle soups of this type are calibrated for the first half of the day: the broth is made before dawn, service begins early, and the kitchen typically shuts when the pot empties rather than at a fixed closing hour. That temporal structure means the experience at Bún Riêu Cua 39 is shaped by when you arrive as much as by what you order.

The daytime rhythm of Vietnamese street noodle spots like this one differs from evening dining in ways that go beyond hours. Mornings tend to be the high-volume period, with the mix of local workers, market traders, and neighbourhood regulars creating a pace that the kitchen has built everything around. The broth is at its freshest, the protein additions are fully stocked, and the condiment table , typically including shrimp paste, lime wedges, chilli, and fresh herbs in this format , is at full capacity. Arriving close to opening is both the most practical and the most rewarding approach. Comparable dynamics appear across Da Nang's single-dish noodle specialists: Bún Bò Bà Rơi (Hai Chau) operates on the same early-morning logic, and the pattern holds at spots like Bà Diệu (Tran Tong Street) and Bà Đông as well.

There is no meaningful evening service to compare against here. The lunch-versus-dinner question at this type of venue resolves firmly in one direction: go in the morning, go early, and treat a mid-morning visit as the fallback rather than the plan.

Price, Peers, and What the Michelin Plate Means in Context

At the ₫ price tier, Bún Riêu Cua 39 sits in the same bracket as the majority of Da Nang's single-dish street specialists. The Michelin Plate awarded in 2025 does not shift the pricing dynamic or signal an upward repositioning; it functions instead as a form of external verification within a category that rarely attracts formal critical attention. For context, Da Nang's only Michelin-starred restaurant, La Maison 1888, operates at the ₫₫₫₫ tier and represents French Contemporary dining at a resort scale. Bún Riêu Cua 39 is not competing in that space, nor adjacent to it , its peer set is the cluster of Michelin Plate and Bib Gourmand-adjacent street spots across the city where the criteria are consistency, technique, and value rather than service architecture or wine depth.

Across Asia's noodle-focused Michelin recognitions, the pattern is consistent: the Plate and Bib Gourmand designations tend to surface places that have earned neighbourhood authority over years of operation and then get pulled into broader visibility by the guide. The same dynamic plays out at A Niang Mian Guan in Shanghai and at single-dish specialists like A Bing Bao Shan Mian in Hangzhou, where local recognition long preceded any guide coverage. The Michelin signal here is worth noting not because it changes the experience, but because it confirms a standard that the 4.1 Google rating across 71 reviews had already started to indicate.

Da Nang's Broader Noodle Scene

Da Nang sits in a particularly interesting position within Vietnam's noodle geography. It is close enough to Hue to absorb Central Vietnamese influences , the spice-forward bún bò Huế tradition is strong here , while also developing its own local specialities, including the fish cake-centred bún chả cá format that is largely specific to the city. Bún riêu, though a dish with origins further north, has found firm footing in the local repertoire, and a spot earning Michelin recognition for it suggests the format has been thoroughly absorbed into Da Nang's culinary identity rather than remaining a northern import.

For visitors building a structured eating itinerary, Da Nang's noodle circuit pairs naturally with the city's other food categories. Akuna in Ho Chi Minh City and Gia in Hanoi represent what the higher end of Vietnamese dining looks like in the country's larger cities, offering a useful counterpoint for understanding where a place like Bún Riêu Cua 39 sits in the national food picture. Regional noodle comparisons across Asia are also worth drawing: A Kun Mian in Taichung, Ajisai in Taichung, A Xin Xian Lao in Fuzhou, and Baan Chik Pork Noodles in Udon Thani all occupy the same category of single-dish noodle specialists with formal recognition, where execution depth rather than concept breadth is the measure.

Planning a Visit

Bún Riêu Cua 39 is located at 39 Lê Hồng Phong, Phước Ninh, Hải Châu, Da Nang. The address places it in a central, walkable part of the city, accessible from most accommodation in Hải Châu district without requiring a taxi. No booking infrastructure exists for a venue of this type , arrival is walk-in, and the queue, if there is one, moves at the pace of a fast counter service. Given the early-finish logic of Vietnamese street noodle kitchens, arriving before 9am on a weekday morning is the most reliable approach. Weekend mornings can run busier. No website or phone contact is listed, so any pre-visit research should come from recent visitor accounts rather than direct outreach. The price remains at street-food level regardless of the Michelin recognition, making it one of the lower-cost Plate venues on the 2025 Vietnam list. For the full picture of what to eat and drink around it, our Da Nang restaurants guide, bars guide, hotels guide, experiences guide, and wineries guide cover the surrounding options in detail.

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