Street food capital of Southeast Asia, French colonial architecture, lake walks at dawn, and the gateway to Halong Bay.
Hanoi is the most atmospheric capital in Southeast Asia. The Old Quarter is 36 streets named after the trades that once defined them — silver, silk, paper, traditional medicine — and walking it is the trip's defining experience. French colonial buildings sit alongside Buddhist temples and Soviet-era housing. The traffic is a swarm of scooters that flow around you if you walk steadily through it (don't stop). It's chaos that resolves itself.
Food is the obvious headline. Hanoi pho is the original — leaner, simpler, more anise-forward than Saigon's. Bun cha is the city's signature lunch dish (grilled pork in a sweet-savory fish sauce broth with rice noodles). Banh mi is everywhere. Every corner has a coffee shop serving Vietnamese egg coffee or strong drip coffee with condensed milk. Eating in Hanoi for $15-25/day is normal.
Practically, Hanoi is the launchpad for Halong Bay (2-day overnight cruise, 3.5 hours by bus), Ninh Binh ('Halong Bay on land', day trip), and Sapa (overnight train to rice terraces and hill tribes). Most travelers do Hanoi 3-4 days, then a Halong Bay overnight, then south to Hoi An and Ho Chi Minh City.
Beyond the obvious highlights, here are six spots locals actually use and most guidebooks miss:
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Hanoi has a humid subtropical climate. Here's the month-by-month breakdown:
Our pick: October through April. October and November are the absolute sweet spot — warm dry days (22-25°C), low humidity, blue skies, Halong Bay calm enough for cruises. December-February are cool (could need a light jacket evenings). Avoid May-September — hot, humid, monsoon rains, Halong Bay rough.
Noi Bai (HAN) is 45 minutes from the Old Quarter. Take a pre-booked transfer or use Grab ($15-25). Don't take street taxis from the airport — overcharging is common. From Bangkok: 1.5-hour direct, $100-300 RT. From Tokyo/Seoul: 5 hours direct, $400-700 RT. From the US West Coast: 16-20 hours with one stop, $700-1,200 RT. Domestic flights south to Da Nang (Hoi An gateway, 1.5hr) and Ho Chi Minh City (2hr).
Old Quarter for first-trip atmosphere — chaos, food, walkable to everything. Hoan Kiem for slightly quieter stays on the lake. Tay Ho (West Lake) for a calmer, expat-friendly area away from the Old Quarter intensity — better for longer stays. Hotels in the Old Quarter range from $20-30 hostels to $60-150 boutique mid-range to $300+ at the Sofitel Metropole.
Headline acts: an Old Quarter food walk (find a guide for the best version), Train Street, Hoan Kiem Lake at dawn, the Hỏa Lò Prison museum (sobering, important), the Temple of Literature, an evening water puppet show. For day trips: Halong Bay (2-day overnight cruise is non-negotiable for most trips), Ninh Binh + Tam Coc (1-day), Bat Trang ceramic village. Sapa requires an overnight train.
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October through April. October-November is the absolute sweet spot — warm dry days, blue skies, Halong Bay calm. December-February are cool (15-20°C, occasional jacket needed). Avoid May-September: hot, humid, heavy monsoon rains, Halong Bay rough and often cancelled.
Three to four days in the city itself. Add 2 days for a Halong Bay overnight cruise (non-negotiable for most trips). Add a day for Ninh Binh. A perfect Vietnam trip is Hanoi 4 days + Halong 2 + Hoi An 3 + Ho Chi Minh City 3 = 12 days.
Generally yes — violent crime against tourists is rare. Main risks: scooter accidents (crossing the street takes practice — walk steadily, don't stop, let the scooters flow around you), taxi overcharging (use Grab), and street-vendor scams (negotiate prices upfront).
Walk steadily and predictably at a constant pace. Do not stop. Do not run. Scooters will flow around you. Make eye contact with the closest drivers. It feels terrifying for the first day; by day three you'll cross like a local. Cars are the only real concern — they don't have the same flexibility scooters do.
Yes — and the 2-day/1-night overnight cruise format is the right way to see it. Day trips are exhausting (4 hours each way of bus + only 3-4 hours on the water). Avoid the cheapest cruises (safety issues) and the most expensive ($500+ Bhaya Cruises is overkill); $150-250/person for a mid-range cruise hits the sweet spot.
Hanoi is the older, more atmospheric capital — French colonial, narrow Old Quarter streets, lake walks, traditional culture. HCMC is the bigger, faster modern commercial city — better nightlife, more Western expat scene, but less visually distinctive. Many travelers prefer Hanoi as a destination, but most trips do both.