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.

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. 

Man and buffalo in Mekong

Local life in the Mekong Delta

This action-packed day tour is your chance to peep behind the curtain of daily life in the rural Mekong Delta. 

You'll travel from village to village with cycle rides on sun-dappled tracks and sampan cruises through rice paddies and fruit farms, stopping to refuel at the wonderful Mango Riverside Restaurant for lunch. This isn’t your ordinary sightseeing tour, it’s a true insider’s insight into riverside life -- whether it’s visiting the home of a family to learn about the myriad products you can make out of a coconut, or sitting down with the locals to sip honey tea and try tropical fruits from their garden.

Cycling along the banks of the Thu Bon River near Hoi An

Cycling along the Thu Bon River

Usually we don’t like telling people what to do, but we’ll make an exception here: you can’t visit Hoi An without exploring its rural outskirts – and this is one of our absolute favorite ways to do it.

First off, this is not just a bike ride: this is an immersive experience that’ll take you right into the homes, workshops and markets of the Hoi An countryside. You’ll get to try your hand at sedge weaving, see how fish sauce is traditionally made, and sit down for a home-cooked lunch with a local family – and that’s just for starters. This tour is a proper insider’s look at traditional Vietnamese life, and we can’t recommend it enough.

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.

Daily life on the streets of Hanoi

Authentic Life of Hanoi

Hanoi is a maze of streets, a hotch-potch of eras, a tangle of stories. 

Why just admire crumbling colonial townhouses when you can visit a local family who’ve lived in one for four generations? Why watch trains trundling past when you can hop onboard and meet the commuters? Wander the capital on your own and you’ll breeze past countless secrets waiting to be uncovered. On this tour, your guide is your passport to the hidden life of Hanoi -- taking you into the backstreets to seek out the best street food snacks and telling you the stories that will bring the city around you to life. 

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.