Our favorite 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.

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: fueling the locals as they gear up for the day. After this, it’s time to dove 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.  

Tour of a Vietnamese market with Chef Ai

Insider Experience: Home cooking with Chef Ai

If you ask us, there’s no better way to kick off your trip to Vietnam than with this cooking class at the home of Vietnamese MasterChef finalist Chef Ai. 

The experience starts with a visit to the local wet market, where Ai will guide you between mountains of fresh herbs and teeming buckets of crabs to pick out ingredients for the lesson. Then, after returning to Ai’s home kitchen, you’ll learn how to make a selection of dishes loaded with aromatic herbs, spices and sauces. This isn’t just an insider’s introduction to the flavors and textures of Hanoian cuisine, it’s a window into Vietnamese daily life – and the things you learn will set you up to make the most of the (many, many) gastronomic opportunities that await you on the rest of your trip.

Eating Vietnamese street food

Insider Experience: Tour Hanoi with a street-food blogger

Whether it’s a steaming bowl of pho or sizzling char siu pork, food is never just food in Vietnam.

As you’ll discover under guidance of expert food bloggers Mark Lowerson and Van Cong Tu, food is one of the best ways to connect with local people, understand regional differences, and immerse yourself in the local culture. That’s exactly what this tour is all about: taking you inside the culinary traditions of the capital via its tastiest street-food treats, and giving you an insight into the real lives of the Vietnamese people. 

Vietnamese cooking class in Hoi An

Organic Farm Cooking Class

We've road tested our fair share of cooking classes in Vietnam, and this is one of our favorites. 

Hosted on an organic farm, this is a hands-on introduction to how green agriculture, ecotourism and traditional practices can be combined to create truly delicious food. Grind your own rice flour using a traditional stone grinder, hand-pick your own fresh ingredients from the garden, and learn some of the secrets of Vietnamese cooking as you whip up five fresh, healthy and traditional dishes. Finally, sit down to enjoy the fruits of your labor in the lush and laid-back surroundings of the Hoi An countryside.

Exploring Ho Chi Minh City on the back of a Vespa

Vespa street-food tour

Vietnam is notorious for its scooter-snarled streets, but we say — if you can’t beat ‘em, join ‘em. 

Hop on the back of a vintage Vespa and be whisked from market to bar to tent stall, sampling the country’s best culinary treats as your guide introduces you to the ins and outs of the local food culture. In Hanoi, that could be steamed rice rolls and smoky bun cha pork; in Saigon it could be mung bean cakes and clams fried in lemongrass. Whichever city you’re in, this tour is all about getting away from the tourist hotspots for a truly immersive (and delicious) taste of local life — and it’s one of our favorite experiences in Vietnam.

Exploring Ninh Binh on a Sampan boat

Ninh Binh Sampan

With its sheer-sided mountains rising dramatically from flat-bottomed valleys, Ninh Binh’s scenery is almost otherworldly. 

It’s the perfect setting for a gentle sampan ride through the flooded fields of rice plants, lotus and waterlily, with opportunities to float through caves by torchlight, spot temples hidden in the forests, and see water buffalo wading on the banks of the rivers. 

Though we love hiking and cycling through the region’s farms and villages, the classic way to appreciate this quintessential Vietnamese scenery is from a sampan boat on one of its slow-moving rivers. These days the main waterways can get quite busy, but there are still plenty of smaller and quieter routes to ply — with opportunities to float through caves by torchlight, spot temples hidden in the forests, and water water buffalo wading on the banks of the rivers.