
Vietnam is too big and too geographically varied for a short trip. Plan for 14–21 days minimum, with the trip structured as 3 distinct legs across the country rather than a single base. Internal flights cut the travel time significantly; overland buses and trains add the texture. The most reliable months for Vietnam are February–April, October–November — sequence your trip around those weeks for the best version of the food, culture, history side of Vietnam.
The 7-day route: a sample sequence
Day 1: North hub: arrival + orient
Most multi-region trips here start in a major northern city. Spend 2 nights orienting, eating, and recovering from jet lag before moving.
Day 2: Travel day or local route
Use the train/overnight bus/internal flight to your next region. The journey is often part of the experience here — book a window seat.
Day 3: Middle region: heritage + nature
Most of these countries have a ‘middle’ region rich in heritage sites and landscapes — 2–4 nights here, with at least one full day spent moving slowly through old towns or coastline.
Day 4: Travel day to the south
Another long leg — internal flights save serious time on routes over 800 km. Slower buses are cheaper and add atmosphere if you have the days.
Day 5: South / coastal finish
Most multi-region routes finish on the coast or in a contrasting climate to your starting point. Plan 3–4 nights here to actually relax before flying out.
Day 6: Buffer day for the journey home
Don’t fly out the same day you arrive from the south — allow a buffer in case of delayed transport.
Day 7: Buffer day for the journey home
Don’t fly out the same day you arrive from the south — allow a buffer in case of delayed transport.
If you only have 12 days
Don’t try to cover the whole country. Pick one region — typically either the north or the centre — and treat it as a stand-alone trip. You can come back for the rest. Forcing a multi-region trip into 12 days is the most common Vietnam mistake first-time travellers make.
If you have 25+ days
Slow down rather than adding regions. Three nights in a smaller town somewhere on the route is more memorable than another long internal flight.
How to sequence your days
Build the route geographically, not by ‘must-see’ priority. The most exhausting Vietnam trips are the ones that fly from south to north to centre and back. Pick one direction — typically north to south — and travel through. Buses and trains move faster than they used to here; internal flights are reserved for legs over ~800 km.
Trip planning quick facts
- Recommended trip length: 14-21d
- Best months overall: February–April, October–November
- Daily budget tier: Budget-friendly
- Country: Vietnam
- Defined by: food, culture, history, coastal
Keep reading
This itinerary page is a structural companion to the full Vietnam travel guide — first-hand reporting, specific neighbourhood recommendations, and the editorial voice live there. For seasonal timing, see when to visit Vietnam, month by month. If you’re weighing Vietnam against another destination, the interactive comparison tool sets them side by side.
