Anyone have experience with this hotel?
What was the experience like?
Anyone have experience with this hotel?
What was the experience like?
looks too cheep
iam looking at the moment at hotels too
there are plenty available and very reasonabley priced
but i think if your staying in the city for a few days like i am
a swimming pool is a must
and location is very important too
Stayed there early January. Got a room at the front, with a balcony.
Yeah it was noisy. Seems like a couple of nightclubs have opened up in, or near, that alleyway.
Ah well, I did want to be in Phạm Ngũ Lão, ground zero of Saigon Nightlife. Got what I paid for, didn't I?
(BTW, District 1 is visibly getting bigger, louder, more expensive, and more touristy. Can't hold back progress I suppose. )
The hotel features are a bit worn, but very nice and tasteful.
The staff at the Tulip were excellent. No complaints. Except that the place suffers for lack of a 24 hour front desk. To get back in after 12, I had to wake up the bloke who sleeps in the lobby. The manager swore that was ok, that it wasn't a problem, and I should feel free to stay out and enjoy the Nightlife as much as I want. I still felt sorry for the poor guy though.
Would I stay there again? Definitely, if when I go to Saigon again, I have to pick a hotel room in a hurry. If not, I'd probably do my favourite trick of booking a backpackers for $5, using the locker there to stash my luggage, while for looking for a proper hotel room on foot. Nothing beats seeing the room before you book it.
Jellybean (May 1st, 2018)
a447 yeah. I'm not sure tipping is the done thing in Vietnam, though it certainly is in Cambodia and Thailand.
I've read that if you want to tip somebody, you should present them with a small token gift. I've tried that, once with a tailor, and once with a guitar maker. In both cases they were absolutely delighted, so I think that's probably true.
In retrospect, maybe what I should have done, was give the guy my deodorant and the large bottle of liquid soap I had left over at the end of my trip. I wasn't going to be able to take them on the plane.
searcher (May 3rd, 2018)
In the past I have always found that the boy I just spent my last night of my trip with is only too happy to volunteer to remove the various bottles of aftershave, mouthwash, de-oderants, soaps, razors, unopened socks - and anything else I can't really be bothered packing
I don't know, either. Bob's our resident expert on Vietnam ; I'm sure he'd know.
A Vietnamese girl who I met on a Halong Bay cruise - she was with her English boyfriend - told me it was not customary to tip.
I give tips to hotel staff, regardless. They are underpaid and overworked, imho. And under-appreciated, I think. A tip at the beginning of the stay ensures excellent service, which in turn earns them another tip when I leave.
Winners all around!
In Thailand I tend to stay at the same hotels and kind of know the staff, so I tip them at the end of the trip.