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Vietnam's Best Attractions

Vietnam's Best Attractions

Home Vietnam AttractionsVietnam's Best Attractions
Gate8 Global Team

The headline attractions, spread from north to south: Sapa's terraced rice valleys (far north, best April–June or September–October); the Phong Nha-Ke Bang caves (central, some of the largest cave systems on Earth); the Golden Bridge at Ba Na Hills (near Hoi An); and the Cu Chi Tunnels (near Ho Chi Minh City, essential war history). Entry runs $3–30; most need a half or full day, and few sit near each other.

Vietnam's must-sees are spread across a genuinely long country, which is the one thing generic "top 10" lists gloss over — you're not going to see the Cu Chi Tunnels and Sapa on the same day, or even the same week, unless your route is built around it. Here's the honest version of each, including where it sits on the map.

AttractionRegion / nearest baseBest timeApprox. cost
Cu Chi TunnelsNear Ho Chi Minh City (south)Year-round; go early to avoid heat$15–35 (guided tour)
Sapa rice terracesFar north, via HanoiApr–Jun (green) or Sep–Oct (harvest gold)$50–120 (1–2 day trek + homestay)
Golden Bridge, Ba Na HillsNear Da Nang / Hoi An (central)Any clear day; avoid cloud cover$35–45 (cable car + entry)
Phong Nha-Ke Bang cavesCentral VietnamFeb–Aug, drier and safer for boat access$20–40 (half-day cave tour)

Cu Chi Tunnels (near Ho Chi Minh City)

Vietnam's Best Attractions

A network of underground tunnels used by Viet Cong fighters during the Vietnam War (called the American War locally), now partially widened so visitors can crawl through a stretch. It's a sobering, genuinely important half-day, usually booked as a group tour (roughly 1.5 hours each way from Ho Chi Minh City). Entry plus guide typically runs $15–35 as part of a tour. Wear closed shoes and expect heat and tight spaces.

Sapa's rice terraces (far north)

Sapa rice terraces
Terraced rice fields near Sapa, northern Vietnam

Dramatic, hand-carved terraced valleys in the mountains near the Chinese border, best explored on a 1–2 day guided trek with a homestay in a hill-tribe village. Best months are April–June (planting, everything green) and September–October (harvest, golden terraces) — December–February can be cold and misty, which some travelers still love for the atmosphere. Reached from Hanoi by overnight train plus a road transfer, or a direct daytime bus.

The Golden Bridge, Ba Na Hills (near Da Nang / Hoi An)

The Golden Bridge, Ba Na Hills
The Golden Bridge at Ba Na Hills, held up by giant stone hands

A pedestrian bridge held up by two giant stone hands, opened in 2018 and instantly one of Vietnam's most photographed spots. Reached by a long cable car from the base of the mountain (the ride itself is part of the appeal), with a French-village-themed amusement park and gardens at the top. Best on a clear day — cloud cover is common and can hide the view entirely; check the forecast and go on your best-weather day if your schedule allows flexibility.

Phong Nha-Ke Bang caves (central Vietnam)

Phong Nha-Ke Bang caves
Inside one of the Phong Nha-Ke Bang cave systems

Home to Son Doong, one of the largest caves on Earth (permit-only, book a year ahead, and it's a multi-day trek costing thousands of dollars) — but also several far more accessible caves for a normal visitor, like Phong Nha Cave and Paradise Cave, reachable on an easy half-day boat and walking tour. A genuinely underrated stop most first-time itineraries skip entirely, since it sits a bit off the main north-south road route.

What to skip

  • Combined "see everything in one rushed day" tours near Ho Chi Minh City that pair Cu Chi Tunnels with an unrelated stop — both deserve unhurried time, not a bus-window glance.
  • Booking Ba Na Hills' Golden Bridge on a day with a bad weather forecast if you have any flexibility — cloud cover genuinely can obscure the whole view.
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Son Doong Cave (the record-breaking one you may have seen in photos) requires a permitted multi-day expedition booked up to a year in advance and costs several thousand dollars — it is not a casual day-trip stop. The nearby Phong Nha and Paradise caves are the accessible, same-day alternative most visitors actually do.

Questions people actually ask

What are the top attractions in Vietnam?
The Cu Chi Tunnels (near Ho Chi Minh City), Sapa's rice terraces (far north), the Golden Bridge at Ba Na Hills (near Da Nang/Hoi An), and the Phong Nha-Ke Bang caves (central Vietnam) — spread across the country, so plan your route around which ones fit.
Can I visit Son Doong Cave?
Only via a permitted, multi-day guided expedition booked up to a year in advance, costing several thousand dollars — it's not a casual visit. The nearby, far more accessible Phong Nha and Paradise caves make a great same-day alternative.
Is the Golden Bridge at Ba Na Hills worth it?
Yes, if the weather cooperates — it's a genuinely striking structure and the cable car ride up is an experience in itself. Check the forecast and go on a clear day if your schedule allows the flexibility, since cloud cover can hide the view.