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Hanoi

Hanoi

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Gate8 Global Team

Hanoi deserves 2–3 days at the start of a Vietnam trip. Base yourself in or near the Old Quarter — a tangle of 36 historic streets, each once named for the single trade sold there — for the best food and easiest walking access. Spend one day on foot around the Old Quarter and Hoan Kiem Lake, one on French Quarter architecture, and treat Hanoi as your launch point for Ha Long Bay, Ninh Binh, or Sapa.

Hanoi hits you with all five senses within about ten minutes of leaving the airport: motorbike horns, grilling meat, jasmine tea, egg coffee, and a genuine sense that a thousand years of history is still doing business on the ground floor. It's chaotic in the best way, and most travelers either love it immediately or need a day to adjust — either way, it's worth the adjustment.

How many days do you need in Hanoi?

Two to three days is the sweet spot for the city itself. One day for the Old Quarter on foot (it rewards wandering more than any checklist), one for Hoan Kiem Lake, the French Quarter, and a water puppet show, and a third if you want a half-day Vietnamese cooking class or the Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum complex. Most itineraries then use Hanoi as a base for Ha Long Bay or an overnight train north to Sapa.

Hanoi

Where to stay

AreaBest forVibe
Old QuarterFirst-timers who want to walk everywhereLoud, dense, best street food, can be noisy at night
French QuarterA quieter base with colonial architectureWide boulevards, upscale hotels, still central
West Lake (Tay Ho)Longer stays, expat cafes, a calmer paceLeafy, lakeside, a short taxi from the center
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Cross the street like a local: walk at a slow, steady pace and never stop or dart — the motorbikes flow around you because they can predict your speed. Stopping suddenly is what actually causes accidents. It feels terrifying the first time and becomes routine by day two.

What's actually worth your time

  1. The Old Quarter's 36 streets — each historically named for a single trade (Silk Street, Silver Street, Shoe Street) — best explored on foot with no fixed plan.
  2. Hoan Kiem Lake and the Ngoc Son Temple — Hanoi's calm center, especially lovely at sunrise when locals do tai chi around it.
  3. A water puppet show at the Thang Long Water Puppet Theatre — a genuinely unique Vietnamese art form, performed in a pool of water with a live traditional orchestra.
  4. Egg coffee at a Old Quarter cafe — a Hanoi invention (whipped egg yolk, condensed milk, and coffee) that sounds strange and tastes incredible.
Hanoi Old Quarter street scene
Hanoi's Old Quarter, a tangle of 36 historic trade streets

Day trips from Hanoi

  • Ha Long Bay — the classic overnight cruise, roughly 2.5–3.5 hours each way by road (or a longer scenic option by boat and bus combined).
  • Ninh Binh — limestone karsts and rice paddies you can explore by rowboat, often called "Ha Long Bay on land"; a long day trip or overnight, about 2 hours from Hanoi.
  • Sapa — best reached by an overnight train to Lao Cai followed by a road transfer, or a direct daytime bus; worth 2–3 days if you have them.

Mistakes worth avoiding

  • Trying to drive a motorbike yourself on day one — Hanoi's traffic takes real local experience to read; use Grab (ride-hailing) or a taxi until you've watched how it actually flows.
  • Skipping breakfast street food out of caution — a bowl of pho from a busy, popular stall is one of the safer and best meals of the day, not a risk to avoid.
  • Booking a hotel outside the Old Quarter to "save money" without checking the walk time — a 20-minute walk back at night in unfamiliar traffic isn't worth the savings for most first-timers.

Find a place inside or right next to the Old Quarter

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Where to stay in Hanoi — hotels

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Questions people actually ask

How many days should I spend in Hanoi?
Two to three days covers the city well — one for the Old Quarter, one for the lake and French Quarter, and a spare half-day for a cooking class or the mausoleum complex if history interests you.
What's the best way to get around Hanoi?
Walking covers the Old Quarter itself; for longer hops, use Grab (the local ride-hailing app) for cars or motorbike taxis — it shows the price upfront and avoids any haggling.
Is Hanoi safe for tourists?
Yes, Hanoi is considered very safe for visitors in terms of crime. The real everyday risk is road traffic — take street-crossing seriously and skip renting a motorbike yourself until you've watched how local traffic actually moves.

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