Hanoi hits you fast. Motorbikes. Honking. Food vendors. The Old Quarter never stops.
Hoan Kiem Lake is the center—walk the perimeter at dawn, join tai chi practitioners, watch the city wake up.
Street food defines Hanoi—pho at 6am, bun cha for lunch, egg coffee mid-afternoon. All from plastic stools on sidewalks.
The French Quarter has colonial architecture—Opera House, St Joseph's Cathedral, tree-lined boulevards. Coffee culture strong.
Hanoi is the cultural heart. But Ha Giang calls. Everyone eventually heads north.
The Ha Giang Loop is legendary among travelers. 350km through Vietnam's far northern mountains.
Ma Pi Leng Pass is the highlight—cliff road carved into mountainside, valley views, vertigo-inducing. Clear days essential.
Rice terraces everywhere. Ethnic minorities—Hmong, Tay, Dao. Homestays in villages. ₫150,000-250,000 with dinner.
The riding is challenging—hairpin turns, mountain roads, fog. But the views, the villages, the freedom—this is why motorcycles were invented.
September to November is perfect. Cold in December-February. Rainy June-August. Time it right.
Hoi An is Vietnam's most charming town. Ancient port. Japanese Bridge. Lanterns lighting narrow streets at night.
The lantern festival (14th day of lunar month) is peak romance—all electric lights off, lanterns everywhere, river full of floating candles.
Tailor shops everywhere—custom suits and dresses in 24 hours. $50-150. Quality varies. Read reviews.
An Bang Beach is 4km away. Bicycle there, eat seafood, swim, return to lantern-lit evenings. Perfect combination.
Hoi An deserves 3-4 days. Most people wish they stayed longer.