Hoi An, Vietnam · Da Nang, Vietnam
old towns, street food, beaches, history
Da Nang
Sadetta
Welcome to central Vietnam! Today is a gentle arrival day — touch down at Da Nang International Airport around midday, settle in, then shake off the travel haze with toes in the sand. By mid-afternoon you'll be at My Khe Beach, one of Vietnam's most famous stretches of soft white sand and warm, swimmable water — an easy place to ease into the rhythm of the trip. As evening falls, you stay right by the shore for a relaxed seafood dinner on the sand, your first taste of the fresh-from-the-boat cooking this coast is known for. Rest up tonight — tomorrow you head into Hoi An's Ancient Town for the Japanese Covered Bridge and a lantern-lit evening.
From the airport, it's a quick 15-minute drive (about 4 miles) to My Khe Beach — grab a metered taxi (Mai Linh or Vinasun) or use the Grab app for transparent pricing. Dinner is just a 3-minute walk along the sand from the beach, so no transport needed in the evening. Keep your hotel's name written in Vietnamese to show drivers.
Enjoy your first evening on the coast — an easy day to recharge before the days ahead.
Da Nang International Airport
My Khe Beach
Seafood on the sand
Hoi An
Tihkusadetta
After yesterday's coastal welcome on My Khe Beach, today trades sand for the lantern-lined lanes of Hoi An's UNESCO-listed Ancient Town — a perfect fit for your love of old towns, street food, and history. You'll start at the iconic 16th-century Japanese Covered Bridge, browse the photogenic streets, then duck into a local tailor for a fitting (Hoi An is famous for fast, custom-made clothing). Lunch is Cao Lau, the pork-and-noodle dish you genuinely can't get authentic anywhere else on earth. The day deliberately leaves a long open afternoon — wander, café-hop, escape the midday heat — before returning for the magic hour: lanterns reflecting on the Thu Bon River and a small boat ride after dark.
Everything today is on foot and tightly clustered. From the Japanese Covered Bridge it's a 5-minute walk to your tailor, then 3 minutes to Cao Lau lunch. The lantern boat launch is a 6-minute riverside stroll from lunch. The Ancient Town core is closed to cars and largely closed to motorbikes during the day, so walking is the only way — no transport needed between stops. If your hotel is outside the center, a short taxi or Grab ride to the edge of the old town is easy.
Enjoy the slow pace today — tomorrow is an early start for the Golden Bridge and Ba Na Hills.
Japanese Covered Bridge
Tailor fitting
Lantern night & boat
Ba Na Hills
Tihkusadetta
Ba Na cable car
French Village lunch
Da Nang
Tihkusadetta
Marble Mountains
Am Phu Cave
Riverside dinner, Da Nang
Hue
Ukkosta
Today is your big history day, and it's worth the early start. You'll leave the coast behind and climb the legendary Hai Van Pass — a switchbacking ridge road with sweeping ocean overlooks that's a highlight in its own right, not just a transfer. From there it's on to Hue, Vietnam's old imperial capital, where the walled Imperial City unfolds in moats, ceremonial gates, and the throne halls of the Nguyen dynasty. After exploring the citadel you'll finish at the riverside Thien Mu Pagoda, the seven-tiered tower above the Perfume River that's one of the country's most photographed monuments. It's a long day on the road, but it bookends your trip with the deeper history behind the beaches and lantern nights.
This is a point-to-point driven day, so a single hired car or small-group tour is by far the easiest way to do it.
Tomorrow is your last morning — relax at An Bang Beach, so consider an early night after today's miles.
Imperial City of Hue
Thien Mu Pagoda
Da Nang
Ukkosta
Morning at An Bang Beach
Da Nang Airport, fly out
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