InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort: An Honest, Booking-Ready Review

A decision-engine breakdown of Bill Bensley’s cliffside icon on Son Tra Peninsula — real OTA review synthesis, true 2026 prices, the Grab pickup catch, and exactly who should book it (and who should skip it)

2026
InterContinental Danang at a glance

LocationBai Bac Bay, Son Tra Peninsula, Da Nang (inside a nature reserve)
Style5★ ultra-luxury resort, designed by Bill Bensley
Opened2012 (renovated 2022); ~197 rooms, suites & villas
Best forhoneymoon · special occasions · families · luxury seclusion
Skip ifbudget travel · nightlife · no car · accessibility worries
Price bandapprox US$350–790+/night (villas ~US$1,500–5,000+)
Guest rating~9.3/10 across OTAs (as of July 2026)
Beach~700 m private bay, four cliff levels linked by a funicular
Airport~30–40 min by car (~13 km)
Nearest landmarkLady Buddha / Linh Ung Pagoda, ~10–15 min
The basket-boat Nam Tram funicular and InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort stepping down the Son Tra hillside to the sea
The basket-boat Nam Tram funicular and InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort stepping down the Son Tra hillside to the sea · Photo: Wikimedia Commons / Daderot, CC0 1.0

1. InterContinental Danang: the short answer

InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort is for honeymooners, special-occasion couples, and luxury travellers who want the resort itself to be the destination — and it is not for budget trips, nightlife, or anyone who plans to pop into Da Nang or Hoi An every day. It is a Bill Bensley-designed icon set on a private bay inside the Son Tra nature reserve, with an aggregate guest score around 9.3/10 across the major booking sites. The trade-off is real: you are sealed onto a peninsula with no shops, bars or restaurants within walking distance, and you will eat at resort prices. If that sounds like seclusion rather than a problem, few resorts in Vietnam do it better.

Is it right for you?Verdict
Honeymoon, anniversary, “switch off” escapeYes — this is its sweet spot
Family wanting a self-contained luxury bubbleYes — free kids’ club & free dining under 12
You want the resort to be the holiday (3–4 nights)Yes
Budget-conscious, or watching every dollar on foodNo — entry rooms start ~US$350 and meals add up fast
Nightlife, bars, a walkable town nearbyNo — there is nothing within walking distance
No car arranged, expecting easy daily city tripsNo — every outing is a 30–60 min round-trip commitment
Mobility or accessibility concernsCaution — steep four-level cliff terrain

The rest of this review synthesizes verified facility data, real 2026 pricing and aggregated guest reviews so you can decide in minutes. We have not stayed here; we read the data so you don’t have to.

🏨 Hotel prices swing a lot by date & seasonCheck your dates on Trip.com Live lowest prices   Many rooms free to cancelAffiliate link — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

2. Quick facts at a glance

Opened in 2012 and renovated in 2022, InterContinental Danang is a 39-hectare, roughly 197-key resort built down a steep slope of Son Tra Peninsula in four themed levels — Heaven, Sky, Earth and Sea — connected by a private funicular. It holds an aggregate guest score of about 9.3/10 across the major OTAs, anchored by near-perfect marks for service and setting; the one consistently softer number is value for money. Here are the figures that matter before you book.

DetailFact (approx.)
Opened / renovated2012 · renovated 2022
DesignerBill Bensley (Harvard-trained), a signature work, 6+ years to build
Layout4 vertical levels: Heaven → Sky → Earth → Sea, linked by funicular
Rooms~197 rooms, suites & villas (~70 m² entry rooms)
Beach~700 m private white-sand bay
Pools3 (50 m adults-only Long Pool, Garden Pool, Kids Pool) + private villa pools
Dining6 venues incl. Michelin-starred La Maison 1888
Airport~30–40 min by car (~13 km)
Price bandapprox US$350–790+/night; villas ~US$1,500–5,000+
Guest rating (July 2026)TripAdvisor 4.9 · Booking 9.4 · Agoda 9.2 · Trip.com 9.5 → ≈9.3/10
Prestige noteHosted the APEC 2017 summit (heads of state from 24 nations)

That APEC line is not marketing fluff: presidents from two dozen countries were hosted here in 2017, which tells you the security, service and back-of-house operation are at a level very few resorts ever reach.

InterContinental Danang cascading through the Son Tra jungle down to its private bay
InterContinental Danang cascading through the Son Tra jungle down to its private bay · Photo: InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort

3. Who it’s perfect for — and who should skip it

Book it if you want a self-contained luxury cocoon for romance, a celebration or a family escape, and you are happy to stay on-property for most of your trip; skip it if you are travelling on a budget, chasing nightlife, arriving without a car, or hoping to dip into Da Nang and Hoi An every single day. The resort’s isolation is its whole proposition. It works brilliantly for the right traveller and frustrates the wrong one, so match yourself honestly to the table below before you fall for the photos.

Perfect forShould think twice
Honeymooners & couples — seclusion, design, sunset terraces, fine diningBudget travellers — even low-season entry runs ~US$350/night before meals
Families — free dining under 12, free kids’ club, beach activitiesParty / nightlife seekers — nowhere to walk to, it’s a wind-down resort
Luxury travellers who want the resort to be the destination (3–4 nights)Travellers with no car or pre-arranged transfers — every outing is a round-trip
Special occasions — anniversaries, proposals, milestone birthdaysAnyone with mobility / accessibility concerns — steep multi-level cliff
People who genuinely want to switch off and unplugPeople who want to tour Da Nang or Hoi An daily — 30–60 min each way drags

One honest note on families: children under 12 dine free and the kids’ club is complimentary, but under-12s are generally excluded from the premium Club lounge, so factor that in if you are weighing a Club room for a family. And one note on stays: most guests find 3 to 4 nights ideal. Beyond that, even devotees say the captive setting starts to feel limiting unless you deliberately plan day trips out.

4. A resort built for special occasions

If you are planning a honeymoon, a proposal, an anniversary or a wedding, InterContinental Danang is one of the most romantic addresses in Vietnam — a private bay, sunset-facing terraces, a clifftop chapel and pavilions designed for ceremonies, plus the quiet prestige of having hosted the APEC 2017 summit. The seclusion that some travellers find limiting is exactly what makes it sing for couples: you are not sharing the experience with a busy town, only with the jungle, the bay and each other.

The romance levers are stacked here. Bill Bensley’s black-and-white architecture and the four-level descent to the sea give you a constant sense of theatre, while the upper Heaven level — home to The Summit event space — delivers 180-degree views for sunset toasts. For weddings and vows, the resort runs a dedicated chapel, beach ceremonies on the private sand, and The Great Hall, a roughly 270 m² ballroom, plus the panoramic Summit for receptions.

It is not only for couples. The same setting makes a memorable backdrop for a milestone family celebration, with the kids’ club and beach activities keeping younger guests happy while the adults enjoy a fine-dining dinner. If you want to weave a special stay into a wider trip, see our Da Nang honeymoon ideas for pairing the resort with a few nights elsewhere.

💡 For a proposal or anniversary, mention the occasion at booking. Luxury IHG and travel-advisor packages frequently include amenities, dining or spa credits and upgrades — it costs nothing to ask, and the resort’s service reputation means they tend to deliver.
A wedding at InterContinental Danang, overlooking the sea and forested peninsula
A wedding at InterContinental Danang, overlooking the sea and forested peninsula · Photo: InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort

5. Location & how to get there

The resort sits on Bai Bac Bay on the Son Tra Peninsula — known locally as Monkey Mountain — inside a protected nature reserve about 30 to 40 minutes (~13 km) by car from Da Nang airport. It is gloriously isolated: the city beaches are 25 to 35 minutes away, Hoi An is a 45 to 60 minute drive, and the only thing genuinely close is the Lady Buddha statue at Linh Ung Pagoda, about 10 to 15 minutes along the same peninsula. The winding coastal mountain road is scenic but slow, so budget time for every trip off-property.

InterContinental Danang on the map

From the resort to…Drive time (approx.)
Da Nang International Airport airport~30–40 min (~13 km)
Da Nang city / My Khe Beach~25–35 min
Dragon Bridge~30 min
Lady Buddha / Linh Ung Pagoda Lady Buddha~10–15 min (same peninsula)
Marble Mountains Marble Mountains~35–45 min
Hoi An Ancient Town Hoi An~45–60 min
Ba Na Hills Ba Na Hills~75–90 min
⚠️ The single biggest practical catch: Grab pickup is not allowed from the resort. A Grab can drop you off here (the airport ride is cheap, roughly US$12 / 282,000 VND), but it cannot collect you to leave. To get out you must use the resort’s private car (about US$99+ tax each way) or an approved taxi such as Vinasun (about US$15 to the city). Plan your departures and day trips around this, or your “quick trip into town” becomes an expensive surprise.

For airport pickup or a private car-with-driver for day trips, booking ahead is the painless option. You can

📲 See Da Nang car charter on Klook
Affiliate link — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

arrange a Da Nang private car-with-driver, which sidesteps the Grab problem entirely. For getting around the wider region see our Da Nang transport notes, and for combining the two cities our Da Nang and Hoi An planning.

6. The rooms: which one to book

The smart-value pick is the Resort Classic Panoramic Room Oceanview — the same roughly 70 m² as the entry Classic room but with the better view for a modest jump, which is exactly what you came for. From there the ladder climbs through suites to the resort’s signature villas with private pools. Every category faces the ocean; the differences are view, space, level and whether you get a private pool and Club access. Here is the full ladder, lowest to highest.

CategoryApprox. sizeHighlightsRate
Resort Classic Room Oceanview (entry)~70 m²Ocean view, the entry pointPhotos & rates
Resort Classic Panoramic Room Oceanview ★~70 m²Same size, upgraded panoramic view — best valuePhotos & rates
Club Panoramic Room Oceanview~70 m²Adds Club InterContinental lounge accessPhotos & rates
Resort Terrace Suite Oceanview~80 m²Bigger, terrace, suite living spacePhotos & rates
Club Terrace Suite Panoramic Oceanview~80 m²Suite + Club loungePhotos & rates
One-Bedroom Seaside Villa by the BeachvillaSea level, private beach steps, private infinity poolPhotos & rates
One-Bedroom Heavenly Penthouse~170 m²Top of Heaven, rooftop infinity pool, 180° views (iconic)Photos & rates
Two-Bedroom Royal Residence by the SeavillaTwo-storey, stilted dining pavilion, 13 m infinity pool (iconic)Photos & rates
Sun Peninsula / Bai Bac Bay Residences~450–1,000 m²The largest multi-bedroom estates, several poolsPhotos & rates

In plain terms: rooms (~70 m²) are spacious and oceanfront, and the Panoramic upgrade is the value sweet spot. Suites (~80 m²) add terrace and living space. The villas are where the resort becomes legendary — every penthouse, villa and residence comes with a private pool, day beds and a 24/7 villa host. The two most iconic are the One-Bedroom Heavenly Penthouse at the very top of the Heaven level (rooftop infinity pool, 180-degree views) and the Two-Bedroom Royal Residence by the Sea (stilted dining pavilion, 13 m infinity pool). The largest estates — the Bai Bac Bay Villa and the three-bedroom Sun Peninsula Residence — run to around 1,000 m².

A suite at InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort
A suite at InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort · Photo: InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort
A private-pool villa at InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort
A private-pool villa at InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort · Photo: InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort
💡 Best room for the money: the Resort Classic Panoramic Room Oceanview. You pay a small premium over the entry room for the same square metres and a noticeably better view. Want a private pool without the villa price? Watch for promotional rates on the Terrace Suite. 📅 Check exact-date prices & photos

Is Club InterContinental worth it?

Club access adds a private lounge with breakfast, evening cocktails and afternoon tea. The ROI is simple: if you would otherwise pay for breakfast (around US$35+ per person) and a couple of evening drinks daily, two adults can roughly break even on the upgrade — and you gain the lounge’s quiet, the views and dedicated service. The catch for families: under-12s are generally excluded, so for a family the maths and the appeal both weaken. Couples are the natural Club buyers here.

7. Inside the resort: facilities in full

This is the resort that justifies staying put: a private funicular down four cliff levels, three pools including a 50 m adults-only infinity edge, a 700 m private beach with free non-motorized water sports, an award-pedigree spa hidden in a jungle lagoon, a 24-hour gym, and a nature-themed kids’ club. It is comprehensive enough that many guests never feel the pull to leave, which is the entire point given the isolation. Here is what’s actually on-site, level by level.

The Nam Tram funicular

The resort’s calling card is a private funicular — reportedly the only one inside a hotel — that carries guests down the steep slope between the four cosmological levels. Bensley designed the cars to echo Vietnamese thúng chai basket boats, with rice-grain-shaped roofs above. It runs reportedly around 130 m, about 90 seconds each way, roughly 18 hours a day with staff aboard. The four levels are Heaven (the summit, The Summit event space, Citron), Sky (Sammy’s boutique and the BENSLEY Outsider Gallery), Earth (dining), and Sea (the pools, Mi Sol Spa, kids’ club, gym, salon and the 700 m beach). Buggies supplement it, including late at night when the funicular pauses.

The pools

There are three. The signature L_O_N_G Pool is a 50 m temperature-controlled infinity pool with a bay panorama and a jacuzzi at one end — it is adults-only (reportedly from age 12, possibly 16) and built for quiet lap swimming above the Long Bar. The Garden Pool is the family pool, framed by greenery and within walking distance of the beach, with the Kids Pool beside it. On top of those, all penthouses, villas and residences come with their own private plunge or infinity pools.

A private infinity pool overlooking the bay at InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort
A private infinity pool overlooking the bay at InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort · Photo: InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort

The 700 m private beach

The sheltered private bay runs about 700 m of white sand at Sea level. Free non-motorized water sports include kayaks, sailboats, SUP and windsurfing with attendant setup (there are no motorized sports). Beach games run from volleyball and football to pétanque, table tennis and badminton, with hammocks, loungers, free cabanas and full beach service.

⚠️ Swimming is seasonal and this is an honest caveat. April to August is calm and good for swimming. From October to January the monsoon brings strong surf and rip currents — obey the flag system (green = safe, red = no swimming). Loungers also wrap up around 6 pm, so the beach is a daytime affair.
The private beach and sheltered Bai Bac bay at InterContinental Danang
The private beach and sheltered Bai Bac bay at InterContinental Danang · Photo: InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort

Mi Sol Spa

The spa, recently rebranded from the multi-award-winning HARNN Heritage Spa to Mi Sol Spa (a sound- and vibration-therapy concept named for the musical frequencies Mi/528 Hz and Sol/741 Hz), is tucked into a hidden jungle “Spa Lagoon.” It has eight treatment villas overhanging the lagoon, plus sauna, steam, hammam beds, jacuzzi and marble baths, and runs roughly 10:00 to 22:00. Signature rituals blend tuning-fork frequency work with traditional Asian medicine and Valmont Swiss skincare. Under its former name it was crowned Global Spa of the Year 2017, a pedigree the new identity carries forward.

The lagoon-side Mi Sol Spa at InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort
The lagoon-side Mi Sol Spa at InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort · Photo: InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort

Soar gym & wellness

Soar Gym is air-conditioned, open 24 hours, fitted with Technogym equipment and offers personal training on request, with an outdoor functional-training area too. Complimentary daily wellness includes yoga, tai chi, meditation, aerobics and guided walks. There is also a nail and hair studio and a tennis court.

The fitness centre at InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort
The fitness centre at InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort · Photo: InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort

Planet Trekkers kids’ club

The kids’ club runs daily 09:00 to 18:00 for ages 4 to 12 (under-4s with a guardian), with a nature-and-conservation theme: organic gardening, pollinator and marine-life discovery, safe beach clean-ups and a wildlife workshop. The Family Getaway package bundles a free extra bed, free dining for under-12s, the free kids’ club and a 2 pm late check-out.

Beyond all that, the Son Tra setting adds genuinely rare nature: a free 1 km Ecowalk, a guided half-day Son Tra Wildlife Expedition to spot the endangered red-shanked douc langur, conservation programming and Bensley’s celebrated “monkey bridge.”

A rare red-shanked douc langur of the Son Tra Peninsula near InterContinental Danang
A rare red-shanked douc langur of the Son Tra Peninsula near InterContinental Danang · Photo: InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort

8. The design & the most photogenic spots

The resort is, in effect, a Bill Bensley art installation you can sleep in — a black-and-white palette, a recurring monkey motif, and a vertical “village” cascading down the cliff that guests routinely call a destination in its own right. Bensley spent more than six years building it, and it shows in details from the funicular’s basket-boat cars to the rice-grain roofs and the langur references threaded throughout. If your trip has an Instagram budget, this is where it gets spent.

The single most photographed feature is Citron’s nón lá pods — cantilevered dining capsules shaped like the conical Vietnamese hat, perched over the slope with the bay behind them. The L_O_N_G Bar, one of Vietnam’s longest at around 50 m, adds its “fisherman’s basket” hanging chairs and big day beds. And the sunset terraces on the upper levels deliver the wide, golden-hour bay shots the resort is known for.

Best photo spots:

  • The nón lá pods at Citron, with the bay in frame
  • The Nam Tram funicular cars and rice-grain roofs
  • The 50 m L_O_N_G Pool infinity edge over the bay
  • The L_O_N_G Bar’s basket hanging chairs
  • Sunset from the upper Heaven-level terraces
  • The BENSLEY Outsider Gallery on the Sky level
The 50-metre Long Bar at InterContinental Danang, designed by Bill Bensley
The 50-metre Long Bar at InterContinental Danang, designed by Bill Bensley · Photo: InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort

9. Dining: you’ll eat here, so here’s the rotation

Because there is nothing within walking distance and Grab can’t collect you, you will eat almost every meal on-property — so the right way to think about dining is as a daily rotation across the six venues, not a question of whether to eat in. The line-up is genuinely strong, headlined by a Michelin-starred French flagship, but it is also priced like a captive resort, which is the honest catch and the main reason value-for-money is the resort’s softest review score. Here is how to play it.

La Maison 1888 — the splurge

The flagship is a recreated 19th-century Indochinese mansion serving French fine dining. It won a Michelin star in 2024 and has retained it through 2025 and 2026 — the only Michelin-starred restaurant in Central Vietnam. Its kitchen lineage runs through Michel Roux and Pierre Gagnaire to current culinary direction by Christian Le Squer (from September 2024), with Jean-Louis Angulo as Chef de Cuisine. Set and tasting menus only, from around US$124+ per person.

La Maison 1888, the Michelin-starred French restaurant set in a recreated colonial mansion at InterContinental Danang
La Maison 1888, the Michelin-starred French restaurant set in a recreated colonial mansion at InterContinental Danang · Photo: Wikimedia Commons / Daderot, CC0 1.0

Citron — Vietnamese & breakfast

The all-day Vietnamese venue on an upper level, and the same place most guests rate their breakfast highlight. Those nón lá pods are here. Recommended dishes include phở, the Da Nang specialty mì Quảng, Hoi An chicken rice and bánh xèo. Breakfast runs roughly 6:30 to 10:30 with made-to-order egg and phở stations, plus weekend afternoon tea and a Sunday champagne brunch.

Vietnamese cuisine at Citron, the all-day Vietnamese restaurant at InterContinental Danang
Vietnamese cuisine at Citron, the all-day Vietnamese restaurant at InterContinental Danang · Photo: InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort

Tingara — Japanese omakase

A modern Japanese restaurant that opened in December 2024, so older reviews won’t mention it. It serves teppanyaki and sushi with Kuroge wagyu and is associated with Michelin chef Junichi Yoshida.

Terra Mare — beachfront Italian & seafood

A thatched Bensley pavilion on the sand at Sea level, doing Italian and seafood. Highlights include the Plateau Royale (lobster, oysters, king crab) and lobster pappardelle, plus a Saturday beach BBQ buffet (around 18:00 to 21:30).

A beachfront restaurant at InterContinental Danang, lit at night
A beachfront restaurant at InterContinental Danang, lit at night · Photo: InterContinental Danang Sun Peninsula Resort

Long Bar & Buffalo Bar

The L_O_N_G Bar pours cocktails, wine and light bites with a BOGO happy hour around 5 to 7 pm and mains near US$15 (relatively reasonable by resort standards). The Buffalo Bar is the polished champagne-and-aperitif lounge.

⚠️ Captive dining is the real budget watch-out. With breakfast often excluded, expect around US$35+ per person, and La Maison 1888 from ~US$124+ per person. Some guests call it the best food of their trip; others find it expensive and salty. Add a daily meal budget when you compare this resort’s price to a city hotel.

10. What guests really say

Across the major booking sites the resort scores about 9.3/10 — TripAdvisor 4.9/5, Booking.com 9.4/10, Agoda 9.2/10 and Trip.com 9.5/10 as of July 2026 — with service and setting earning near-perfect marks and value for money the one consistently softer number. The praise is remarkably consistent, and so are the complaints, which is exactly why we treat both as trustworthy signals. We don’t quote exact review counts or a Google score because those vary by cache and weren’t reliably verifiable.

✅ What guests praise⚠️ Honest complaints
The Bensley design and Nam Tram funicular — “a destination in itself”Isolation — once you check in, you’re tied to the peninsula; nothing walkable
Service and staff — the most consistent praise (Booking staff score ~9.7)Pricey, near-captive dining — you eat on-site, at resort prices
The setting — private bay, jungle seclusion, rare wildlife, Citron breakfastSteep four-level terrain and jungle reality — and value-for-money the lowest sub-score

On Booking.com the sub-scores tell the story cleanly: staff 9.7, comfort 9.7, facilities 9.6, cleanliness 9.4, location 9.3, WiFi 9.3 — and value 8.6, the lowest. That value number isn’t a knock on quality; it reflects the premium price and the captive food costs. The “jungle reality” is literal, too: because the resort sits in a nature reserve, there are occasional reports of insects or even monkeys getting into rooms, so keeping doors and balconies closed is sensible.

11. Price & is it worth it?

Entry Classic Oceanview rooms run roughly US$350–440 in the low season (October–November is cheapest), US$400–560 in shoulder, and US$560–790+ in peak (December–February, Tết and summer); villas and residences span about US$1,500 to US$5,000+ — and tax and service add about 15% on top. Real booking spreads have been observed from about US$644 to US$1,111 with an annual average near US$790. Whether it’s “worth it” depends entirely on what you’re buying: seclusion, architecture and a private bay, not a convenient city base.

Season (2026 basis)Entry room / night (approx.)
Low (Oct–Nov, cheapest)~US$350–440
Shoulder~US$400–560
Peak (Dec–Feb · Tết · summer)~US$560–790+
Villas & residences~US$1,500–5,000+

For context, Da Nang’s city-beach 5-stars on My Khe — the likes of Pullman, Sheraton Grand, Hyatt Regency and Furama — run roughly US$120–300 a night. InterContinental Danang costs about 2 to 4 times that, and you’re paying for the isolation, the private bay and Bensley’s architecture rather than convenience. The honest verdict from guest consensus: if this is your first Da Nang trip and you want to tour the city, the My Khe resorts are far better value; if you’re here for a honeymoon or a secluded splurge, most guests feel the premium is genuinely earned.

💡 To shave the rate: target October–November, arrive on a Tuesday, Sunday or Monday (Tuesday is typically lowest), and avoid the December–February, Tết and summer peaks. Remember the ~15% tax and service charge when you compare quotes.
🏨 Hotel prices swing a lot by date & seasonCheck your dates on Trip.com Live lowest prices   Many rooms free to cancelAffiliate link — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

12. InterContinental Danang vs other Da Nang luxury

If you want a walkable city beach with restaurants and bars at the door, a My Khe 5-star like Sheraton Grand, Hyatt Regency, Furama or Pullman is the better, cheaper choice; InterContinental Danang wins only if secluded, design-led luxury on a private bay is the actual goal. They are not really competitors so much as different holidays. The table below lines them up on the things that decide a booking.

ResortVibeBeach / locationPrice bandBest for
InterContinental DanangSecluded, design-led, ultra-luxuryPrivate 700 m bay, isolated Son Tra peninsula$$$$Honeymoon, special occasions, switch-off luxury
Sheraton Grand Da NangBig modern 5-star, livelyMy Khe city beach, walkable area$$–$$$Families, first-timers wanting the city nearby
Hyatt Regency Da NangLarge resort, pools-and-beachNon Nuoc / city-beach belt$$–$$$Families, value 5-star with city access
Furama ResortEstablished, central, classicMy Khe beachfront, very convenient$$–$$$Convenience, repeat visitors
Pullman DanangStylish mid-luxury, socialCity beach, walkable strip$$Couples & families on a city-beach budget
TIA Wellness ResortAll-inclusive spa wellnessCity-beach belt$$$Spa-focused, inclusive-rate travellers
Four Seasons The Nam Hai (near Hoi An)Beach villas, ultra-luxuryBetween Da Nang & Hoi An$$$$Villa luxury closer to Hoi An

Pick one of the My Khe resorts instead if your trip is built around exploring Da Nang and Hoi An, you want to walk to dinner, or you simply want more nights for the money. Pick the Four Seasons The Nam Hai if you want comparable villa luxury positioned closer to Hoi An. Choose InterContinental Danang when the resort itself is the reason for the trip. For the wider picture of where to base yourself, see our Da Nang where-to-stay overview.

13. How many nights & suggested itineraries

Three to four nights is the sweet spot: enough to enjoy the resort fully and still slip out for Hoi An, Ba Na Hills or Lady Buddha, without the isolation starting to feel confining. Two nights works only if you intend to barely leave the property. Below are two clean plans depending on how much exploring you want to fold in.

2 nights — resort-only escape

  • Day 1: Arrive, ride the funicular down to the beach, late lunch at Terra Mare, sunset and cocktails at the L_O_N_G Bar.
  • Day 2: Citron breakfast, the 50 m pool or a spa ritual at Mi Sol, the free Ecowalk or a langur-spotting wildlife walk, dinner at La Maison 1888.
  • Day 3: Final Citron breakfast and a slow check-out (book a late one if you can).

3–4 nights — resort + day trips

  • Add a half-day to Hoi An’s Ancient Town (~45–60 min each way).
  • Add Lady Buddha at Linh Ung Pagoda, just 10–15 min away on the same peninsula.
  • Add a full day at Ba Na Hills and the Golden Bridge if it’s on your list (~75–90 min each way).
💡 Cluster your outings and pre-arrange transport because of the Grab pickup ban — line up the resort car or an approved taxi in advance, and try to combine Lady Buddha with another Son Tra stop in one trip to save on round-trips. For ideas see our Da Nang things to do, Ba Na Hills planning and Hoi An day-trip notes.

14. Booking tips

Book the Resort Classic Panoramic Room Oceanview for the best value, target October–November and a Tuesday arrival for the lowest rates, and compare flexible against non-refundable carefully — the prepaid rate saves roughly 15–20% but loses you the easy cancellation that matters for a trip this expensive. A few specifics worth knowing before you confirm.

  • Best room: Classic Panoramic Oceanview (same ~70 m² as entry, better view). Want a private pool on promotion? Watch the Terrace Suite.
  • Cheapest timing: October–November, arriving Tuesday, Sunday or Monday; avoid December–February, Tết and summer peaks.
  • Cancellation: luxury IHG and OTA flexible rates are usually generous (free cancellation ~3–7 days out, pay on arrival) versus a non-refundable prepay that’s ~15–20% cheaper. Peak and Tết bookings carry stricter terms and deposits.
  • Packages: breakfast, the Club InterContinental tier (lounge breakfast, evening cocktails, afternoon tea), and the Family Getaway bundle (free extra bed, free under-12 dining, free kids’ club, 2 pm check-out).
  • Perks: Virtuoso, Amex Fine Hotels & Resorts and IHG status often add airport pickup, a dining or spa credit (around US$100), upgrades and late check-out — frequently enough to tip the value equation.
💡 Whether you book direct with IHG or through a third party, the rate and the perks both move constantly. Pull up live prices for your exact dates and room, compare what each rate actually includes (breakfast, cancellation, credits), then decide. 📅 Check exact-date prices & photos
🏨 Hotel prices swing a lot by date & seasonCheck your dates on Trip.com Live lowest prices   Many rooms free to cancelAffiliate link — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

15. Common mistakes & things to know

The mistakes that ruin a stay here are all predictable: assuming you can Grab out, expecting to swim year-round, underestimating the steep terrain, and not budgeting for captive dining. None of them are dealbreakers if you plan around them, but each catches first-timers. Read these before you arrive.

⚠️ The Grab pickup ban. Grab can drop you here but cannot collect you. Departures and day trips must use the resort’s private car (~US$99+ each way) or an approved taxi like Vinasun. Arrange transport in advance.
⚠️ Monsoon swimming. October to January brings strong surf and rip currents in the bay. Obey the flag system (green = safe, red = no swimming). April to August is the calm swimming window.
⚠️ Steep, multi-level terrain. The resort descends a cliff in four levels reliant on the funicular and stairs. If anyone in your party has mobility issues, request assistance and a convenient room location at booking — and note the funicular pauses late at night (buggies cover the gap).
⚠️ Jungle wildlife in rooms. Because this is a nature reserve, there are occasional reports of insects or monkeys entering rooms. Keep doors and balconies closed when you’re out.
⚠️ Captive dining budget. You will eat on-site at resort prices. Add a realistic daily food budget (breakfast often ~US$35+ per person) before you judge the nightly rate as “affordable.”
⚠️ Isolation if you want daily city trips. This is a stay-put resort, not a city base. If your plan is to explore Da Nang and Hoi An every day, a My Khe city resort will serve you far better.

16. The verdict

Book InterContinental Danang if you want a secluded, design-led luxury escape — a honeymoon, an anniversary, a special-occasion family trip, or simply 3–4 nights where the resort itself is the destination — and you’re happy to stay on-property and pay a premium for it. The Bensley architecture, the funicular, the private 700 m bay, the near-perfect service scores and a Michelin-starred restaurant add up to one of the most complete luxury experiences in Vietnam.

Skip it if you’re travelling on a budget, want nightlife or a walkable town, don’t have a car arranged, have mobility concerns, or plan to tour Da Nang and Hoi An daily — in those cases a My Khe city resort gives you more for less, with the action at your door. The resort’s softest review number, value for money, is the honest tell: this is a splurge, and it’s worth it for the right traveller and the wrong fit for everyone else.

If that “right traveller” is you, the only thing left is to check live rates for your exact dates and see what each package actually includes.

🏨 Hotel prices swing a lot by date & seasonCheck your dates on Trip.com Live lowest prices   Many rooms free to cancelAffiliate link — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

InterContinental Danang: frequently asked questions

Q. Is InterContinental Danang worth the price?
For a honeymoon, anniversary or a secluded luxury escape where the resort itself is the destination, most guests feel the premium is earned — you’re paying for a private bay, Bensley’s architecture and near-perfect service. For a first Da Nang trip where you want to explore the city daily, a My Khe city resort at roughly a third to half the price is better value. Compare live rates before deciding. 📅 Check exact-date prices & photos
Q. How much does InterContinental Danang cost per night?
Entry Classic Oceanview rooms run roughly US$350–440 in low season (Oct–Nov is cheapest), about US$400–560 in shoulder, and US$560–790+ in peak (Dec–Feb, Tết, summer). Villas and residences span about US$1,500–5,000+. Add about 15% tax and service. Prices vary by date, so check exact-date rates for the real number.
Q. How do I get from Da Nang airport to the resort?
It’s about a 30–40 minute drive (~13 km). A Grab from the airport is cheap (around US$12 / 282,000 VND) and allowed for drop-off, or you can book the resort’s airport limousine or a private car-with-driver. Booking a transfer ahead is the simplest option given the Grab pickup ban on the way out.

📲 See Da Nang car charter on Klook
Affiliate link — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

Q. Why can’t I take a Grab from the resort?
Grab is allowed to drop guests off but not to collect them from the resort. To leave, you must use the resort’s private car (about US$99+ each way) or an approved taxi such as Vinasun (around US$15 to the city). Plan and pre-arrange all departures and day trips around this.
Q. Is InterContinental Danang good for honeymoons?
Yes — it’s one of its core audiences. The private bay, sunset terraces, fine dining, spa and seclusion make it deeply romantic, and the resort runs dedicated wedding and ceremony venues including a chapel. Mention the occasion at booking, as packages often include extras. See our Da Nang honeymoon ideas.
Q. Is it good for families with kids?
Yes, with caveats. Children under 12 dine free, the Planet Trekkers kids’ club (ages 4–12) is complimentary, and there are beach activities. But the terrain is steep and multi-level, and under-12s are generally excluded from the Club lounge, so a Club room is less suited to families.
Q. Can you swim at the resort?
Yes, but seasonally. April to August is calm and good for swimming in the 700 m private bay. October to January brings monsoon surf and rip currents, so follow the flag system (green = safe, red = no swimming). There are also three pools, including a 50 m adults-only infinity pool and a family Garden Pool.
Q. What is the funicular at InterContinental Danang?
It’s the Nam Tram, a private funicular — reportedly the only one inside a hotel — that carries guests down the steep cliff between the resort’s four levels (Heaven, Sky, Earth, Sea). The cars are designed like Vietnamese basket boats with rice-grain roofs. It runs reportedly around 130 m, about 90 seconds each way, roughly 18 hours a day, with buggies covering late nights.
Q. Is the resort accessible for guests with mobility issues?
It’s challenging. The resort descends a cliff in four levels and relies on the funicular and stairs. Buggies and wheelchair assistance are available, but anyone with significant mobility concerns should request help and a convenient room location at booking and weigh whether a flatter city resort suits better.
Q. Which room should I book?
For value, the Resort Classic Panoramic Room Oceanview — the same roughly 70 m² as the entry room but with a better view for a small premium. Want a private pool? Look for promotional rates on the Terrace Suite, or step up to the iconic Heavenly Penthouse or Royal Residence villas. 📅 Check exact-date prices & photos
Q. Is Club InterContinental worth it?
For couples, often yes: the lounge breakfast, evening cocktails and afternoon tea can roughly offset the upgrade cost if you’d otherwise pay for breakfast and drinks, plus you gain quiet and service. For families it’s weaker value, since under-12s are generally excluded from the lounge.
Q. What restaurants are at InterContinental Danang?
Six venues: La Maison 1888 (Michelin-starred French fine dining), Citron (all-day Vietnamese and the best breakfast, with the nón lá pods), Tingara (Japanese omakase, opened Dec 2024), Terra Mare (beachfront Italian and seafood with a Saturday BBQ), plus the L_O_N_G Bar and Buffalo Bar.
Q. Is La Maison 1888 really Michelin-starred?
Yes. La Maison 1888 won a Michelin star in 2024 and has retained it through 2025 and 2026 — the only Michelin-starred restaurant in Central Vietnam. It serves set and tasting menus from around US$124+ per person, under culinary direction by Christian Le Squer.
Q. How far is the resort from Hoi An?
Hoi An’s Ancient Town is about a 45–60 minute drive from the resort. It makes a good half-day or full-day trip, but remember to pre-arrange transport because of the Grab pickup ban. See our Hoi An day-trip notes.
Q. Do I need a car to stay here?
Effectively yes, or pre-arranged transfers. There’s nothing within walking distance, and the Grab pickup ban means every outing needs the resort’s car or an approved taxi. If you don’t want to leave the property, you can manage without — but plan transport in advance for any trips out.

📲 See Da Nang car charter on Klook
Affiliate link — we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

Q. How many nights should I stay?
Three to four nights is ideal — enough to enjoy the resort fully and take a day trip or two (Hoi An, Ba Na Hills, Lady Buddha) without the isolation feeling confining. Two nights works only if you plan to barely leave the property. Beyond four nights, the captive setting can start to feel limiting.
Q. What is the aggregate guest rating?
About 9.3/10 across the major OTAs as of July 2026: TripAdvisor 4.9/5, Booking.com 9.4/10, Agoda 9.2/10 and Trip.com 9.5/10. Service and setting score near-perfect; the one consistently softer number is value for money (Booking value ~8.6), reflecting the premium price and captive dining.
Q. Is there a spa?
Yes — Mi Sol Spa, recently rebranded from the award-winning HARNN Heritage Spa. It has eight treatment villas overhanging a hidden jungle ‘Spa Lagoon,’ plus sauna, steam, hammam and marble baths, with a sound-and-vibration therapy concept and Valmont skincare. It runs roughly 10:00–22:00. Under its former name it was named Global Spa of the Year 2017.
Q. Should I book direct with IHG or through a third party?
It depends on the rate and the perks on offer, both of which change constantly. Direct IHG booking can earn points and status benefits; third-party and travel-advisor rates (Virtuoso, Amex FHR) sometimes add credits, upgrades and pickups. The honest move is to compare live prices and what each rate actually includes for your dates, then choose. 📅 Check exact-date prices & photos
Q. Where is InterContinental Danang located?
On Bai Bac Bay on the Son Tra Peninsula (Monkey Mountain), inside a protected nature reserve, about 30–40 minutes from Da Nang airport. The nearest landmark is Lady Buddha at Linh Ung Pagoda, 10–15 minutes away on the same peninsula. See it on the map

Compare live prices for your dates

🗺️ Central Vietnam guides →

Browse all our guides →