Eat & Drink

6 Cities Where Street Food Vendors Make Vegetarian and Vegan Eating Easy for Every Traveler

A taco of prickly pear or nopal cactus (Opuntia ficus-indica) cooked with cambray onion is served.
These cities are a plant-based foodie’s dream. AFP via Getty Images

Travelers looking to skip meat without skipping the local food scene have more options than ever. These six cities stand out for street food vendors who make vegetarian and vegan eating easy, affordable and genuinely delicious.

Which Street Food City is Best for Vegetarians?

Mumbai is widely considered the top street food destination for vegetarians, because most of the city’s iconic street dishes are meat-free by default. You don’t have to ask for substitutions or hunt down specialty stalls — the default menu works.

According to a National Family Health Survey, approximately 18% of people in Mumbai reported being vegetarian, which has shaped a street food culture built around plants, legumes and dairy. Look for pav bhaji, vada pav, pani puri and bhel puri at stalls across the city.

India as a whole has the highest percentage of vegetarians in the world at 29.5%, according to World Population Review data, which helps explain why vegetarian street food is so deeply embedded in Mumbai’s daily life rather than treated as a niche offering.

How Do You Find Vegan Street Food in Bangkok?

Bangkok makes plant-based eating straightforward: look for stalls marked “jay” (เจ), which means vegan. Vendors typically display a yellow diamond icon with a red border and the symbol written inside.

The jay system is rooted in Buddhist dietary practice and is widely recognized by Thai vendors, so spotting the symbol on a cart or menu is a reliable signal. Pad thai with tofu (ordered without fish sauce, and without egg if you’re vegan), papaya salad without fish sauce, grilled corn brushed with coconut milk and mango sticky rice are all common finds.

For travelers who don’t read Thai, the visual marker is the easiest way to navigate a busy night market without a translation app.

Is Mexico City Good for Vegan Street Food?

Yes — Mexico City has built one of the largest vegan street food and restaurant scenes in Latin America, with over 3,000 establishments offering vegan options.

Mexico has the second-highest percentage of vegetarians in the world at 19%, behind only India, and is tied with India for the highest percentage of vegans at 9%, according to World Population Review. That demand has pushed street vendors well beyond the standard taco.

Look for tlacoyos stuffed with beans and topped with nopales and salsa, plus sopes and huaraches layered with black beans, onion, cilantro and avocado. These dishes are traditionally plant-based, not modern substitutions.

What Vegetarian Street Food Can You Eat in Ho Chi Minh City?

Ho Chi Minh City offers an unusually wide range of vegan street food thanks to the influence of Vietnamese Buddhist cuisine, often called ẩm thực chay or simply chay.

Even Vietnamese diners who don’t follow chay restrictions year-round commonly eat plant-based for religious or health reasons several days each month, which keeps demand for meat-free street food consistent and prices low.

Look for mock-meat dishes built around tofu and seitan — including bánh mì chay made with tofu — along with fresh spring rolls and phở chay, typically made with mushrooms in place of beef or chicken.

What is the Best European City for Vegan Street Food?

London ranked number one out of every city in the world in the 2025 Vegan City Index, published by HappyCow at the beginning of 2026. HappyCow is the world’s leading platform for vegan dining.

London’s strength is range. The city’s popular street food markets — Borough Market, Brick Lane and Maltby Street — are packed with plant-based options drawing from cuisines around the world. Look for stalls selling falafel, dosas, bao and tacos, often side by side.

Berlin came in third in the same 2025 Vegan City Index. The city’s döner culture has well-established meat alternatives, including vegan seitan and falafel, and Markthalle Neun — a historic market hall originally opened in 1891 — offers a rotating mix of global cuisine with strong plant-based representation.

This article was created by content specialists using various tools, including AI

Lauren Schuster
McClatchy DC
Lauren Schuster is a content specialist working with McClatchy Media’s Trend Hunter and national content specialists team. 
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