Da Nang Dolphinarium: The ‘Dance of the Ocean’ Dolphin Show

Da Nang Dolphinarium: The ‘Dance of the Ocean’ Dolphin Show

Da Nang’s first dolphin and sea lion show — what it’s really like, ticket prices, show times, and how to get there from Da Nang or Hoi An.

June 2026
At a glance

What it isDa Nang’s first dolphin & sea lion show, ‘Dance of the Ocean’
WhereCo Co Paradise park, Dien Duong — on the Da Nang–Hoi An coast
Show lengthAbout 40 minutes
Show times10:00 & 15:00 daily; a 20:00 show added in peak summer. Closed Tuesdays
TicketsUS$14 (about 350,000 VND); ~US$12.5 online; under 1 m tall free
Getting there20–30 min by Grab/taxi from central Da Nang; closer from Hoi An
Best forFamilies with kids, a rainy-day plan, a different kind of evening out
Two dolphins leaping together high above a show pool at the Da Nang Dolphinarium
The ‘Dance of the Ocean’ show — Da Nang’s first dolphin and sea lion arena, open since September 2025.

1. The quick answer: Da Nang’s first dolphin show

The Da Nang Dolphinarium is the city’s first-ever dolphin and sea lion show, and its ‘Dance of the Ocean’ production is one of the easiest crowd-pleasers on the whole central coast. It opened in September 2025, so it’s genuinely new — you won’t find it in older guidebooks yet — which is exactly why we put this one together.

Here’s the short version. The show runs about 40 minutes and stars bottlenose dolphins doing big jumps and spins, plus a pair of scene-stealing sea lions, all set to live music and dance. It lives inside the Co Co Paradise themed park near An Bang Beach, on the coastal strip between Da Nang and Hoi An, so it slots neatly into either city’s day.

Who’ll love it? Families with kids, hands down. But couples and groups looking for a different evening, and anyone caught out by a rainy afternoon, will get a kick out of it too. The arena is indoor, modern and air-conditioned, so the weather never cancels your plans.

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2. What the ‘Dance of the Ocean’ show is actually like

This is the part you actually came for, so let’s slow down and walk through it. The whole thing runs around 40 minutes and it’s paced like a proper variety show — there’s barely a dull stretch, and just when the dolphins wind down, the sea lions waddle out to keep the laughs going.

The dolphins — the headline act

The stars are bottlenose dolphins, and they earn top billing. They launch themselves clean out of the water in soaring vertical jumps, twist into mid-air spins, and then there’s the crowd favourite: tail-walking, where a dolphin powers backwards across the surface standing upright on its tail, like it’s moonwalking on water. You’ll hear the gasp ripple through the seats every single time.

From there it gets playful. They nose beach balls and rings high into the air, leap through hoops, and swim in tight synchronized formation — two or three dolphins arcing out of the water in perfect unison, which somehow looks even harder than the solo stunts. There’s usually a clever “painting” bit too, where a dolphin pushes a brush across a canvas, and ball-balancing tricks that show off just how precise these animals are. It’s fast, it’s splashy, and it’s genuinely impressive up close.

The sea lions — the comedy

If the dolphins are the athletes, the sea lions are the comedians, and honestly they sometimes steal the show. Expect clapping on cue, balancing a ball on the tip of the nose, waving a flipper at the crowd, striking dramatic “model” poses, and a bit of cheeky stalling when the trainer asks for a trick — that reluctant, sulky body language gets the biggest laughs in the room. Kids absolutely lose it, and so do most of the adults.

Music, dance and the trainers

What lifts this above a plain animal show is the staging. The tricks are choreographed to live music and cultural dance numbers, so it plays out more like an ocean-themed stage production than a string of stunts. The trainers are part of the performance too — gliding through the water, riding the dolphins, and working hand-to-nose with them in a way that makes the bond between trainer and animal obvious. Lighting and water effects pull the whole thing together.

Audience moments and the bigger message

Keep an eye out, because the show pulls people in. Volunteers — often kids — get called down to high-five a dolphin, hold a hoop, or pose for a photo, and those little moments are the ones families talk about all the way home. Threaded gently through it all is an ocean-conservation message about protecting the sea and the creatures in it, delivered lightly enough that it lands without turning into a lecture.

The 40-minute flow, roughly

  • Opening: music, dancers and an intro that sets the ocean theme.
  • Dolphin showcase: the big jumps, spins, tail-walking and synchronized swims.
  • Sea lion comedy break: the laughs, the clapping, the posing.
  • Audience participation: volunteers down by the pool.
  • Big finish: a final flurry of dolphin jumps with the music swelling, then bows and photo time.

By the end most people are grinning, the kids are buzzing, and you’ve got a phone full of photos. For 40 minutes, it delivers.

A bottlenose dolphin spinning in mid-air above the water during the show
Bottlenose dolphins do the headline tricks: high jumps, mid-air spins and tail-walking.

3. Is it worth it? An honest take

Short answer: for the right traveller, yes — and it’s one of the better-value family attractions on this stretch of coast.

If you’re travelling with kids, just book it. The combination of dolphins, comedy sea lions and a chance to be picked as a volunteer is close to a guaranteed hit, and the under-1-metre free policy keeps it affordable for young families. It’s also a smart rainy-day plan — the arena is indoors and air-conditioned, so it’s the thing you reach for when the beach is a washout. And if you’ve never seen a live dolphin show before, this is a clean, modern, well-produced introduction.

Because the venue only opened in September 2025, everything still feels fresh: the seating, the lighting, the sound system. That newness is part of the appeal right now.

Who might give it a miss? If your travel style leans entirely toward beaches, food and old-town wandering, a 40-minute show might not be your priority. And a small number of travellers have ethical reservations about marine-animal performances in general — that’s a personal call, and a fair one to think through. But as a fun, easy, weather-proof outing, especially with children, it punches above its ticket price.

4. Tickets and prices

Pricing is refreshingly simple. There’s one ticket type, and your child’s height — not age — decides whether they pay.

TicketPrice (at the gate)Notes
AdultUS$14 (about 350,000 VND)Same price for everyone over 1 m tall
Child taller than 1 mUS$14 (about 350,000 VND)Charged as a full ticket
Child under 1 m tallFreeNo ticket needed
Online / advance~US$12.5 (about 315,000 VND)Cheaper, and locks in a seat in peak season

Booking online tends to be the smart move for two reasons: you usually save a little (around US$12.5 versus US$14), and in busy summer months a popular show can fill up, so an advance ticket guarantees your seat instead of leaving you to gamble at the door.

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. Have it ready on your phone before you arrive.

A sea lion balancing a ball on its nose and clapping its flippers for the crowd
The sea lions are the comedians of the show — clapping, posing and balancing balls on their noses.

5. Show times and which one to pick

The schedule is straightforward, with one catch: the venue is closed on Tuesdays, so don’t build your only free day around a Tuesday visit.

ShowTimeWhen it runs
Morning10:00Daily (except Tuesdays)
Afternoon15:00Daily (except Tuesdays)
Evening20:00Peak summer only (roughly late April to early September)

Which to pick? In summer 2026 the 20:00 evening show is the one to aim for — it tends to have the best lighting and atmosphere, the day’s heat has eased off, and the staging really comes alive after dark. Outside summer you’ll choose between the 10:00 and 15:00 shows; the morning slot is usually quieter and pairs nicely with a beach afternoon afterward.

⚠️ Times are seasonal and can change. Always confirm the day’s schedule (and that you’re not visiting on a Tuesday) before you set off, especially if you’re coming from Hoi An or central Da Nang.

6. Where it is and how to get there

The Dolphinarium sits inside the Co Co Paradise themed park in Dien Duong, right on the coastal corridor between Da Nang and Hoi An, near An Bang Beach. Map

One thing that confuses people: this land used to belong to Dien Ban in Quang Nam province. After the 1 July 2025 merger that folded Quang Nam into an enlarged Da Nang City, it’s officially Da Nang now — but geographically it’s actually a touch closer to Hoi An. So treat it as either a Da Nang day-trip or a quick Hoi An side-trip; both work.

FromDistanceTimeGrab / taxi
Central Da Nang~15–20 km20–30 minUS$6–10 (about 150,000–250,000 VND)
Hoi An Ancient Town~8–10 km10–15 minShorter and cheaper than from Da Nang

The easiest way to get there is a Grab or taxi — door to door, no fuss, and cheap by Western standards. There’s no convenient public bus out here, so don’t count on one. Confident scooter riders can ride out along the coast road, and many tours run their own shuttles. If you’d rather have transport sorted in advance, you can arrange a transfer or driver here:

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Coming from Hoi An, it’s an easy hop near An Bang Beach. Map

💡 If you don’t have local data to call a Grab on the spot, sort a travel eSIM before you arrive — it makes booking rides and checking show times painless. More on that in the practical tips below.
A marine show arena with trainers in the pool and a seated audience watching
A modern indoor arena means the show runs rain or shine.

7. What else is inside the park

Here’s the bit that turns a 40-minute show into a half-day out: the Dolphinarium shares the Co Co Paradise park with a Dinosaur Garden, and a few themed photo areas besides.

The Dinosaur Park is laid out along walking paths lined with life-size dinosaur models — a guaranteed kid magnet, and a fun photo backdrop for everyone else. It’s typically open from around 08:30 to 19:00, so there’s plenty of time to wander it before or after your show. Add the themed corners dotted around the grounds and you’ve got an easy half-day family outing rather than just a quick stop.

The practical upshot: plan to spend a few hours here, not 40 minutes. Build the dinosaurs and a stroll around the park into your timing and you’ll get far more out of the trip and the entry.

8. Best seats and what to expect

Where you sit genuinely changes the experience, so a little planning pays off.

  • Front rows — the splash zone. Sit here and there’s a real chance the dolphins soak you. Kids adore it; just be ready to get wet and keep phones and cameras protected or tucked away.
  • Middle rows — the sweet spot. You get the best overall view of the jumps and the staging, and you stay dry. For most visitors, this is where to aim.
  • Higher up — fine and dry. Still a good view of the whole arena, with no splash risk at all.

A few things worth knowing before you walk in:

  • Arrive 20–30 minutes early to pick decent seats and settle the kids before the lights drop.
  • No flash photography — it can stress the animals. Switch flash off and you’ll still get great shots.
  • The best photos come from the high-jump moments; have your camera ready and your finger on the shutter rather than scrolling through settings mid-show.
⚠️ If you’re sitting near the front with young children, expect to get splashed and pack accordingly. A spare top or a small towel goes a long way.
A dolphin touching its nose to a trainer's outstretched hand in the water
Trainers work close to the animals, with a gentle ocean-conservation message woven through the show.

9. Visiting with kids and families

This is, above all, a family attraction — and a really good one. The mix of dolphins, comedy sea lions and the chance to be called down as a volunteer keeps even short attention spans glued to the action for the full 40 minutes.

The money side is friendly to families too: children under 1 metre tall get in free, and even older kids over that height pay the same flat ticket as adults, so there are no surprises at the gate.

  • Strollers and babies: the indoor arena and flat park paths are easy to navigate with a pushchair, and the air-conditioned hall is a relief for little ones in the summer heat.
  • Toddlers: the show is loud and exciting but not scary; if your toddler startles easily, the middle or upper rows put a comfortable buffer between you and the splashing.
  • Snacks and breaks: with the dinosaur park next door, you can break up the day so nobody melts down.

If you’re building out a wider kid-friendly itinerary, our things to do in Da Nang with kids roundup pairs perfectly with this stop.

10. What to combine it with

Because of where it sits — right on the Da Nang–Hoi An coast — the Dolphinarium slots into a bigger day really easily. A few natural pairings:

  • An Bang Beach: it’s just minutes away, so a relaxed beach morning followed by an afternoon show (or a beach swim after the morning show) is an effortless combo. See our Da Nang and Hoi An beaches rundown for where to settle in.
  • Hoi An Ancient Town: with the lantern-lit old town only 10–15 minutes away, the dolphin show is a brilliant way to entertain kids before an evening in town. Plan it with our Hoi An travel planner.
  • A Da Nang ↔ Hoi An transfer day: if you’re moving between the two, treat the show as a midway stop rather than a separate trip. Our Da Nang to Hoi An transport notes lay out the options.

Stack two or three of these and you’ve got a full, low-stress day on the coast.

Two dolphins leaping in unison beside their trainer during the show
The synchronized leaps are the crowd-pleaser — two dolphins clearing the water together on the trainer’s cue.

11. More Da Nang attractions if you enjoy this

Liked the dolphins? Da Nang has plenty more in the fun-day-out category, and several lean family-friendly:

  • Mikazuki Water Park: a big indoor-outdoor water park with pools, slides and an onsen complex — another excellent rainy-day backup. Details in our Mikazuki water park guide.
  • Asia Park and the Sun Wheel: rides, a giant ferris wheel and great evening views right in the city. See Asia Park and the Sun Wheel.
  • Ba Na Hills: the famous Golden Bridge, French village and cable car up in the mountains — a full day in itself. Plan it with our Ba Na Hills guide.

For a wider sweep of what’s on, browse our Da Nang tours and activities list and pick what fits your dates.

12. Practical tips for your visit

A handful of small things to make the day go smoothly:

  • What to bring: sunscreen and water if you’re wandering the dinosaur park, a small towel or spare top if you’ll sit near the front, and a charged phone for tickets and photos.
  • Beat the heat: central Vietnam gets seriously hot and humid in summer. The arena is air-conditioned, so a midday show doubles as a heat break — and in summer 2026 the 20:00 evening show is the most comfortable and atmospheric of the lot.
  • Rain plan: because the show is indoors, it’s the perfect thing to pivot to when the forecast turns. Keep it in your back pocket.
  • Eat nearby: An Bang Beach has a good cluster of cafés and seafood spots, so build a meal in before or after.
  • Beach combo: with the coast right there, a swim plus the show makes a complete day for very little effort.
💡 Sort a travel eSIM before you land so you can call a Grab, check show times and pull up tickets the moment you arrive — no hunting for Wi-Fi. Grab one here:

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The An Bang and Co Co coastline between Da Nang and Hoi An at golden hour
The venue sits on the Da Nang–Hoi An coast, a short hop from An Bang Beach.

13. Planning the rest of your Da Nang trip

The dolphin show is a great single stop, but it’s even better as one piece of a well-planned coastal trip. To pull the rest together, lean on these:

Get the framework right and stops like the Dolphinarium just slot into place. Map

Frequently asked questions

Q. Is the Da Nang Dolphinarium worth visiting?
For families it’s an easy yes — dolphins, comedy sea lions and audience moments keep kids hooked for 40 minutes. It’s also a great rainy-day plan since the arena is indoors. If you only care about beaches and old towns, it may be lower priority, but it’s strong value for the ticket.
Q. How much are tickets to the dolphin show?
Tickets are US$14 (about 350,000 VND) for adults and for children taller than 1 metre. Children under 1 metre tall get in free. Booking online in advance is a little cheaper, around US$12.5 (about 315,000 VND), and secures your seat in busy season.
Q. What are the show times?
Shows usually run at 10:00 and 15:00 daily, with a 20:00 evening show added during peak summer (roughly late April to early September). The venue is closed on Tuesdays. Times are seasonal, so always confirm the day’s schedule before you head out.
Q. Is the Dolphinarium open on Tuesdays?
No — the Da Nang Dolphinarium is closed on Tuesdays. Plan your visit for any other day of the week, and don’t build your only free afternoon around a Tuesday.
Q. How long is the show?
The ‘Dance of the Ocean’ show runs about 40 minutes from start to finish. With the dinosaur park and themed areas in the same complex, though, you can easily turn the visit into a half-day outing.
Q. How far is it from Da Nang and Hoi An?
From central Da Nang it’s about 15–20 km, or 20–30 minutes by car or Grab. From Hoi An it’s closer — roughly 8–10 km and 10–15 minutes. It sits near An Bang Beach, on the coast between the two cities.
Q. Is it suitable for toddlers and babies?
Yes. The show is exciting but not scary, the arena is air-conditioned, and the flat paths are stroller-friendly. Children under 1 metre tall enter free. If your toddler startles easily, sit in the middle or upper rows away from the splash zone.
Q. Will I get wet during the show?
Only if you choose to. The front rows are a splash zone where dolphins can soak you, which kids love. The middle and upper rows give you a great view and stay dry, so pick your seats based on how wet you want to get.
Q. Is there an evening show?
In peak summer, yes — a 20:00 evening show is added (so summer 2026 has it). It’s often the best one to attend, with the nicest lighting and atmosphere and cooler temperatures. Outside summer there are just the 10:00 and 15:00 shows.
Q. How do I get to the Da Nang Dolphinarium?
The easiest way is a Grab or taxi: about US$6–10 (150,000–250,000 VND) and 20–30 minutes from central Da Nang, and cheaper and shorter from Hoi An. There’s no convenient public bus, but confident riders can take a scooter and many tours offer shuttles.
Q. Can I book tickets online?
Yes, and it’s recommended. Online tickets are a little cheaper (around US$12.5 versus US$14 at the gate) and guarantee your seat during busy summer shows. Have the ticket ready on your phone before you arrive to skip the queue.
Q. Is there more to do than just the show?
Definitely. The same Co Co Paradise park has a Dinosaur Garden with life-size models along walking paths, plus themed photo areas, so you can make it a half-day. An Bang Beach is also right next door for a swim before or after.

Planning the rest of your days on the coast? Start with our complete Da Nang travel planner to tie the whole trip together.

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