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.

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. 

Farming with buffalo in Triem Tay village, near Hoi An

Going Green in Hoi An

Triem Tay, on the rural fringes of Hoi An, is home to nearly 150 families whose livelihoods still revolve around traditional activities such as farming and sedge-weaving. 

Spending a day here is a wonderful chance to slow the pace and appreciate the rhythms of rural Vietnam, as you meet the village elders, hear stories about local life, and have a go at some of the local crafts. You’ll also get to see first-hand how an organic farm has been revitalising the local community through sustainable agriculture and ecotourism, and enjoy some of its delicious produce with a home-cooked lunch before you return to town by boat on the Thu Bon River.

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 favourite 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.

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 favourite experiences in Vietnam.

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.

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.