Our favourite Vietnam tours and excursions

If destinations and accommodation are the bread and butter of a great vacation, a hands-on cultural experience is the secret sauce that brings it all to life.

Phong Nha caves

Phong Nha caving

Phong Nha-Ke Bang National Park is a Natural World Heritage Site and home to some of the world's most dramatic caverns, including the largest in the world.

Some of these bewitching and cathedralesque caves can be visited via boat or boardwalk without even ducking your head, but the real adventure starts when you head into the mountains on a multi-day trek. Spend your nights in tents or hammocks in the jungle, and don your headtorch to swim in underground lakes, wriggle through tight passageways, and wander vast, dark caverns filled with 360-million-year-old rock formations. Trust us: no matter how you feel about going underground, these are some caves you don’t want to miss.

Limestone karts in Halong Bay Vietnam

Halong Bay/Lan Ha Bay cruising

Every time we do it, cruising on Halong Bay - or quieter Lan Ha Bay - feels almost magical – like we’ve accidentally sailed into a Vietnamese legend. 

Imagine waking up in a wood-panelled cabin to the quiet lapping of water against the hull of your Chinese junk boat. You head out on deck, and there’s a thick sea mist all around you. Sheer green cliffs come into view, looming so high above you that it’s impossible to see where they end. As the sun rises and the mist clears, you can see jagged, limestone pinnacles stretching into the distance as far as the eye can see.  For added romance, treat yourself to your own private vessel – or maybe a luxury cruise with an onboard spa? If there’s ever been a place to travel in style, it’s here. 

Pouring Vietnamese coffee

Saigon's coffee culture

Sipping a sweet iced coffee at a street-side café is an unmissable Vietnamese experience — but there’s more to it than just a few ground beans and some condensed milk: these days, Vietnam is a bona fide, world-class, bean-brewing pro.

On this morning tour, you’ll start where coffee plays its most important role: fuelling the locals as they gear up for the day. After this, it’s time to dive deeper into the local coffee culture with a visit to an 80-year-old coffee warehouse, before concluding at a stylish “Coffee Studio”, where you’ll learn about expert brewing techniques, how to judge the quality of a blend, and maybe even try your hand at latte art.  

Pictures in a Hanoi modern art gallery

Insider Experience: Contemporary art in Hanoi

Get an insider’s look at the capital’s thriving contemporary art scene with curator and artist Nguyen Anh Tuan. 

You'll begin the day with a visit to the private collection of Suzanne Lecht, where you'll see works by some of Vietnam’s most exciting emerging artists. From there, Nguyen will guide you through an exhibition of virtual public art using an augmented reality app – the first of its kind in Vietnam – to see how young Vietnamese artists are pushing the boundaries of technology. Finally, you’ll round off the tour at Manzi Art Space, a chic gallery-cum-café-bar where a cold drink in the courtyard garden makes for a refreshing end to the day. It’s the perfect modern counterbalance to traditional Hanoi.  
 

Back streets of Saigon

Saigon's back alleys

To really understand what makes Saigon tick, you need to go beyond the gleaming skyscrapers and international hotels of District One — and that’s exactly what this tour is all about. 

Learn how the city’s residents live as you rise early and take to the streets, where vendors whip up bun mam fish soup for commuters’ breakfasts. Visit hidden temples to learn about Vietnam’s five “mother goddesses”, and contrast chaotic markets with crumbling, French-era villas. With an expert guide to take you off the beaten track, this is your chance get to know a side of Saigon that outsiders rarely see.

Exterior of Hue's Imperial Tombs

Hue's Imperial Tombs

Hue is best-known for its Citadel, but for us the imperial tombs offer an even more compelling insight into the lives and histories of Vietnam’s royal emperors. 

Scattered in the woods and hills around the city, each tomb reflects not just the architectural style of its time, but the personality of the emperor who built it. Tu Duc’s magnificent mausoleum, for instance, cost so much in taxes that it provoked an attempted coup in 1866, while Khai Dinh’s lavish mix of Eastern and Western architectural styles reflects his admiration for the colonial French. These are the kinds of stories that we think really bring the days of imperial Vietnam to life.