Vegan-friendliness guide
Long-stay viability for a vegan diet. Per-country breakdown by city, local-language ordering tips, supermarket guide, and common pitfalls.
| Country | Score | Tradition | Strongest base | Biggest trap |
|---|
"Tradition" = whether ordering vegan fits an existing local concept (Buddhist jay/chay, Indian pure-veg) vs. needing to be explained from scratch.
Country detail
Festivals & vegetarian days
Phuket Vegetarian Festival
Nine-day Taoist festival in the 9th lunar month, late Sep / early-mid Oct. Roughly half of Phuket goes vegan; thousands of stalls fly the yellow-red เจ flag and the same flag spreads to Bangkok, Hat Yai, Trang and most Thai-Chinese neighbourhoods. Easiest week of the year to eat vegan in Thailand. Dates shift annually, confirm with shrine committees a few weeks ahead.
Ăn chay, 1st & 15th lunar days
Twice a month, many Vietnamese eat fully vegan on the new moon (mùng 1) and full moon (rằm). Chay restaurants are packed; many regular eateries put on a chay menu for the day. Mark these in your calendar, ordering is markedly easier and cheaper, and street stalls that normally drown everything in fish sauce will have a clearly-labelled chay option.
Indian Hindu pure-veg backbone
Banana-leaf restaurants in KL's Brickfields, Penang's Little India and most Tamil neighbourhoods serve pure-veg by default and understand "no ghee, no curd" requests. Thaipusam (late Jan / early Feb) and Deepavali both come with stronger vegan menus.
Bali Hindu & Javanese kejawen
Galungan, Kuningan and Nyepi (silent day, March/April) push warungs toward simpler veg-friendly menus. Day-to-day, Bali's tourist-belt vegan scene runs independent of the religious calendar, Ubud and Canggu are fine year-round.
Finding food on the road
- HappyCow, most complete regional database. App is paid; the website is free and good enough. Filter by "vegan" (not just "vegan-options") for places where you don't need to negotiate.
- Grab Food / Foodpanda / GoFood, all three carry a "Healthy" or "Vegetarian" filter, but it's noisy. More reliable: search the restaurant name from HappyCow, then order. Foodpanda has the better filter in PH/TH/MY; GoFood has the deepest Indonesia coverage.
- Google Maps, searching "vegan" in-language ("เจ", "chay", "veg") often surfaces shrine canteens and small Buddhist eateries that don't appear on HappyCow. Worth a sweep on arrival in any new city.
- Local-Buddhist canteens, temple-run vegetarian canteens (Thai โรงทานเจ, Vietnamese quán cơm chay, Malaysian Buddhist Society canteens) are cheap, abundant outside tourist zones, and almost always egg- and dairy-free.
- Allergy / dietary cards, printable laminated cards in the local script ("contains no meat, fish, fish sauce, shrimp paste, dairy, eggs") are still the most reliable way to communicate in rural areas. Several free templates exist; print before you go.
Methodology
Scores 0-100 based on: density of dedicated vegan/vegetarian listings (HappyCow is the de-facto regional database), local-language tradition for vegan ordering, supermarket availability of vegan products, and how veganisable everyday street and local cuisine is. Numbers and notes refreshed May 2026.