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  • What to Expect on a 10-Day Vietnam Tour – Guide for First-timers

What to Expect on a 10-Day Vietnam Tour – Guide for First-timers

May 29, 2026 by Marketing Team Views: 2 Blog

What to Expect on a 10-Day Vietnam Tour – Guide for First-timers

The moment your taxi pulls out of Tan Son Nhat airport, it hits you. The heat. The noise. A wall of motorbikes flowing around your car like water around a stone. You’re either going to love this country immediately, or it’s going to take you a day or two to find your footing.

Either way is completely normal and either way, by day three, most first-timers are already wondering how to come back.

In this article, we will share practical vietnam travel tips for first time travelers to help you navigate your journey smoothly. No fluff, no highlight reel. Just an honest picture of what those 10 days look and feel like.

Just want to see the itinerary? Jump straight to the full day-by-day breakdown: Glimpse of Vietnam — 10-Day ItineraryĀ 
Contents hide
1 Where you’ll go and why this 10 day Vietnam itinerary first timer route makes sense
2 What a typical day actually feels like on a 10 day Vietnam itinerary first timer trip
3 Your guide: what to expect
4 Food: what’s included and what to expect
5 Accommodation: what level to expect
6 What surprises most first-timers
7 Is 10 days enough to explore Vietnam?
8 Ready to see the full itinerary?

Where you’ll go and why this 10 day Vietnam itinerary first timer route makes sense

A 10-day tour covers the same three regions regardless of which direction you travel: Ho Chi Minh City and the Mekong Delta in the south, Hoi An in the centre, and Hanoi with Ninh Binh and Lan Ha Bay in the north. The stops don’t change, only the order does.

Most people fly into whichever city is cheaper or more convenient from home, then travel the length of the country and fly out the other end. Both directions work equally well.

If you start in the south: Ho Chi Minh City hits you first: loud, fast, electric. The Mekong Delta and Cu Chi Tunnels ground you in the history and landscape of the south before you fly up to the quieter pace of Hoi An, then finish in the cooler, more contemplative north with Hanoi, Ninh Binh, and the Lan Ha Bay cruise.

Group of female travelers taking photos beside Notre Dame Cathedral Saigon, side view.
Energetic Ho Chi Minh City
Two travelers taking photos on boat amid nipa palm river scenery.
Peaceful Mekong Delta

If you start in the north: You open with Hanoi’s layered history, spend a night on the water at Lan Ha Bay, experience the dramatic stillness of Ninh Binh, then fly south to Hoi An’s lantern-lit streets, and close the trip in the energy of Saigon. Some people find this a satisfying arc: the journey ends on a high note as the country gets louder and more intense around you.

Kayak in Lan Ha Bay
3 travelers enjoy a cycling experience in Ninh Binh
Cycling in Ninh Binh

Neither direction is better. It comes down to your flights, your travel dates, and personal preference.

Want a deeper breakdown of both options? We cover the tradeoffs in detail here: 10 Days in Vietnam: North or South First?

Ten days won’t take you everywhere. But it’ll take you somewhere real in each region and that’s a better foundation than a rushed loop through 12 cities. This is one of the most vital Vietnam travel tips for first time visitors: slow down to absorb the culture.

Wondering if 10 days is enough, or if you'll feel constantly rushed? We go deeper on that question here: Will I Feel Rushed on a 10-Day Vietnam Tour?

What a typical day actually feels like on a 10 day Vietnam itinerary first timer trip

This is the part most tour websites skip over, so let’s be specific.

Mornings usually start with breakfast at your hotel included every day. Your guide and private driver pick you up from the lobby, typically between 8 and 9am. There’s no meeting point, no waiting for a group, no headcount. They come to you.

The morning usually has one main activity: visiting a historical site, taking a boat ride, cycling through a village. These are genuine experiences, not rushed photo stops. A boat ride through Ninh Binh, for example, takes about an hour each way. You’re on the water, in the silence, watching limestone peaks slide past. There’s nowhere to rush to.

Lunch is usually included on activity days at a local restaurant or, occasionally, with a local family. The food is fresh, regional, and nothing like the ā€œVietnamese foodā€ you’ve had at home. Expect to eat well, and expect to eat a lot.

Afternoons vary. Some days have a second activity: a museum, a pagoda, a village walk. Other days have genuine free time built in, especially in Hoi An. This isn’t filler. It’s intentional. The tour is designed at a leisurely pace because exhausted travelers don’t actually enjoy themselves.

Evenings are yours. Dinner is self-guided on most nights, your guide will point you toward great local spots before dropping you off, and then it’s your evening to do with as you please. Walk around. Find a rooftop bar. Get lost down an alley. The exception is your night on the Lan Ha Bay cruise, where dinner is on board and the whole evening becomes part of the experience.

One honest note: this is a private tour, but it doesn’t mean someone is holding your hand every hour. You’ll have real independence in the evenings, during free time, and on travel days. The support is there when you need it not hovering when you don’t.

Boat ride through trang an ninh binh, one of the signature experience in a Vietnam Travel Iitnerary

Your guide: what to expect

The guide setup on a 10-day tour like this works by region, not by person. You’ll have a local guide in Ho Chi Minh City, a different one in Hoi An, and another in Hanoi. Each guide is deeply familiar with their own city, which is genuinely better than a single guide reading from a script across three regions.

Your guides speak English fluently. Not rehearsed-tour-speech English, but conversational, patient, genuinely curious about you English. They’ll tell you things that aren’t in any guidebook, answer questions you didn’t know you had, and occasionally make you laugh.

You’ll also have a private driver and air-conditioned vehicle for all road transfers. No public buses, no shared vans packed with strangers.

One thing worth knowing: on the return from Lan Ha Bay, the transfer back to Hanoi is by shared shuttle bus, this is standard for all cruises departing from the same port. Your guide won’t be on that bus, but they’ll be in touch and you’ll be met in Hanoi. It’s a two-hour ride and completely straightforward.

Curious how a private tour differs from a group tour in practice? Here's a direct comparison: Group Tour vs Private Tour: What's the Difference?

Food: what’s included and what to expect

Breakfast is included every day. Lunch is included on most activity days. Dinner is nearly always on your own, which is one of the best parts of traveling Vietnam.

Vietnamese food is extraordinarily regional. What you eat in Ho Chi Minh City tastes nothing like what you eat in Hoi An or Hanoi. On a 10-day tour you’ll naturally eat your way through the country: fresh seafood in central Vietnam, pho in Hanoi, banh mi from a street cart at 7am, broken rice with a fried egg, bĆ”nh xĆØo sizzling in a hot pan at a family restaurant.

Your guides will always recommend where to eat in the evenings. Take the recommendations, they’re not sending you to tourist traps.

If you have dietary requirements (vegetarian, gluten-free, allergies,…) flag these before the tour. Vietnam is actually very accommodating once your guide knows, but it’s not a country where you can quietly assume the kitchen will figure it out.

tourists are trying local vietnamese street foods

Accommodation: what level to expect

Hotels are 3 to 4-star standard at each stop, chosen for central location and comfort. The exact properties depend on your chosen budget level when booking, but in general: clean, comfortable, well-located, with a pool in most cases.

Something first-timers often worry about unnecessarily: how many times you’ll need to pack and unpack. The answer is less than you think. Over a standard 10 day Vietnam itinerary first timer loop, you check in and out four times: Saigon, Hoi An, Hanoi, and the cruise. Ninh Binh is a day trip from Hanoi, so you don’t need to move your bags.

The overnight on Lan Ha Bay is a private en-suite cabin on the cruise ship not a hostel dorm, not a shared bunk. It’s one of the highlights of the whole trip for most people.

high view of hotel des art in sai gon, one of the most luxury hotel in southern vietnam
overview of sena cruise, one of the most luxury cruise in ha long bay

What surprises most first-timers

A few things that catch people off guard, good and not-so-good:

The good surprises:
Vietnam is safer than many people expect. Petty theft exists in busy tourist areas (keep your phone in your pocket in the Old Quarter), but violent crime against tourists is extremely rare. Solo travelers, couples, families with children all feel comfortable here.

The landscapes are more dramatic in person than in photos. Ninh Binh especially. Photos don’t capture the scale of the limestone karsts rising out of bright green rice paddies. You’ll take a hundred photos and none of them will do it justice.

The warmth of local people, particularly when you’re with a guide who can bridge the language is genuinely moving. Meals with local families, conversations with village craftspeople, a boat rower in Tam Coc who communicates entirely through smiles and gestures. These moments are what you’ll actually remember.

The things that you need to know before visit Vietnam for the first time:
Ho Chi Minh City traffic is overwhelming on day one. By day two it’s fascinating. By day three you’ll be crossing streets like a local. It really does click.

Weather in Vietnam varies significantly by region and season. The north and south can have opposite weather at the same time of year. It’s worth checking the best travel window for your specific dates, your tour team will advise on this.

A few sites involve stairs, pagodas built into cave systems, temple platforms, city walls. Nothing that requires athletic ability, but worth knowing if you’re traveling with elderly family members or young children who need carrying.

Is 10 days enough to explore Vietnam?

For a first visit to Vietnam: yes. Ten days gives you genuine time in three distinct regions without feeling like you’ve been through a blender. You won’t see everything, no one does, but you’ll see enough to understand why people fall in love with this country, and you’ll have a clear sense of where you want to return.

If you have more time, a 14-day tour adds Hue and Phong Nha to the route, which are extraordinary in their own right. But if 10 days is what you have, the route from Saigon to Hanoi is a complete journey. You won’t leave feeling cheated.

Still weighing up whether the pace works for you? Read this next: Will I Feel Rushed on a 10-Day Vietnam Tour?

Ready to see the full itinerary?

If this gives you a clearer picture of what 10 days in Vietnam actually feels like, the next step is looking at the specific days, activities, and logistics.

Glimpse of Vietnam

10-day journey start from Ho Chi Minh, to the North through the Mekong Delta, Central Heritage towns, and iconic Northern landscapes.

View more
tourists are trying local vietnamese street foods

Have a question before you decide? Our team typically replies within a few hours. Send us a message now.

contact us

Related reading:

  • Will I Feel Rushed on a 10-Day Vietnam Tour?
  • How Much Does a 10-Day Vietnam Tour Cost? (2026 Breakdown)
  • Group Tour vs Private Tour: What’s the Difference?
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