Hoi An Beaches 2026: An Bang vs Cua Dai (Beach Clubs, Swimming & How to Visit)

Hoi An Beaches 2026: An Bang vs Cua Dai (Beach Clubs, Swimming & How to Visit)

The honest guide to Hoi An’s beaches — why An Bang is now the one, the beach clubs and sun loungers, the Cua Dai erosion story, the Cham Islands day trip, prices and how to get there.

Last updated & checked: June 2026
Hoi An beaches in 30 seconds

  • The one to go to: An Bang Beach — white sand, beach bars and swimming, ~4 km from the Old Town.
  • The faded original: Cua Dai, badly eroded and now resort-and-breakwater country (and the Cham Islands harbour).
  • Loungers: free at most beach cafés if you order food/drinks, otherwise ≈50,000₫.
  • Best time: the dry season (Feb/Mar–Aug) for calm, clear swimming.
  • Book ahead: the Cham Islands snorkelling day trip — compare on Klook and KKday.

Hoi An isn’t just lanterns and tailors — a proper beach sits a 15-minute ride away. But which one? The short answer in 2026 is An Bang Beach: a relaxed strip of white sand, casuarina trees and brilliant beach bars that has firmly replaced the eroded Cua Dai as the place to swim and sunbathe. This is our honest guide to both: where to lay your towel, the seafood and beach clubs, the Cua Dai erosion story, surfing and water sports, the Cham Islands day trip, prices, safety and exactly how to get there. (Planning the whole trip? Start with our complete Hoi An guide and the Hoi An activities guide.)

The white sand and casuarina trees of An Bang Beach near Hoi An with beach bars
An Bang Beach — Hoi An’s main beach: white sand, beach bars and swimming, 15 minutes from the Old Town. (© dronepicr / CC BY 2.0)
⚡ Quick Facts
⏰ Hours Open beach 24h; beach bars ≈08:00–sunset
💵 Entry / price Beach free; sun lounger free with a food order (else ≈50,000₫); Cham Islands trip ≈$25–45
📍 Location An Bang Beach, ~4 km NE of Hoi An Old Town (Cua Dai ~5 km E)📍 Map →
🚗 Getting there ~15 min by bike from the Old Town; or scooter, taxi/Grab
⏱️ Time needed Half a day (or a sunrise/sunset trip)
📅 Best time Dry season Feb/Mar–Aug for calm swimming; early morning is quietest

1. Hoi An Beaches at a Glance

Here’s the picture in one box before we go deeper:

An Bang Cua Dai
Status 2026 The main, liveliest beach Badly eroded; resort-focused
Distance from Old Town ~4 km (15 min) ~5 km (15 min)
Best for Swimming, beach bars, sunset, seafood Big resorts, Cham Islands harbour
Sand Good, restored each season Much washed away; breakwaters/sandbags
Sun loungers Free with food order, else ≈50,000₫ Mostly resort beach
Vibe Lively, traveller-friendly Quieter, hotel-based
💡 Short on time? Just go to An Bang. It’s the better beach in 2026, has the bars and the swimming, and is an easy bike ride from town — cycle out via the Tra Que herb village for a perfect half-day.

2. An Bang vs Cua Dai: Which Beach?

For years Cua Dai was the Hoi An beach. Then severe erosion — driven by storms, dams upstream and rising seas — swept much of its sand away, and the resorts lined the shore with sandbags and breakwaters. Travellers drifted north to An Bang, which is now firmly the main beach.

  • Go to An Bang for swimming, beach bars, sunset drinks, seafood and a lively-but-laid-back scene.
  • Cua Dai still works if you’re staying at one of its big resorts, or catching the speedboat to the Cham Islands from Cua Dai harbour.
⚠️ Honest note: erosion is an ongoing story on this whole coast. Even An Bang loses sand and beach bars in big storms (especially Oct–Nov) and is rebuilt before each season. The beach you find can vary — it’s at its widest and best in the dry months.

3. An Bang Beach: The Main Event

An Bang is everything most people want from the Hoi An beach:

  • The sand & sea: a long white-sand strip backed by casuarina trees, with generally calm, swimmable water in the dry season.
  • Beach bars & clubs: a famous run of relaxed bar-restaurants right on the sand (see the next section).
  • Sunrise: the beach faces east, so dawn here is glorious — and quiet.
  • Seafood: shacks and bars grilling the day’s catch, just steps from your lounger.
  • Easy from town: a flat 15-minute cycle or a cheap Grab, so it’s a perfect half-day or a sunset trip.
💡 Pair An Bang with a morning at the basket boat or Tra Que village, then back to town for the lanterns — a flawless Hoi An day.

4. The Beach Clubs & Sun Loungers

An Bang’s beach-bar scene is a big part of the appeal. The deal is simple and traveller-friendly:

  • Loungers are usually “free” — you just order food or a couple of drinks and use the sunbed and umbrella for the day. Otherwise expect to pay around 50,000₫.
  • The names you’ll see: Soul Kitchen, Sound of Silence, La Plage, The Deck House and An Bang Beach Village — each with food, drinks, music and loungers.
  • What to expect: sun beds, showers and toilets, decent Western and Vietnamese food, cocktails and sometimes live music or DJ sunsets.
  • Tip: arrive earlier on busy days to grab a front-row lounger; weekends and holidays fill up.

5. Cua Dai Beach & the Erosion Story

Cua Dai, about 5 km east of the Old Town, is the cautionary tale of the Hoi An coast:

  • What happened: from the 2010s, heavy erosion stripped away much of the beach. The shoreline is now lined with sandbags, breakwaters and sea walls protecting the resorts.
  • What’s there now: large resorts (Palm Garden, Victoria, Vinpearl and others) with their own managed beach sections, plus some restored stretches.
  • Why you’d still go: if you’re staying at a Cua Dai resort, or taking the speedboat to the Cham Islands — they leave from Cua Dai harbour.

For a public, lively swim-and-eat beach, though, An Bang wins easily.

Rows of thatched parasols and sun loungers on a Hoi An beach
Thatched parasols and loungers on the Hoi An beach — usually free for the price of a meal or a couple of drinks. (© Dragfyre / CC BY-SA 3.0)

6. Swimming, Surfing & Water Sports

There’s more to do than sunbathe:

  • Swimming: calm and clear in the dry season; mind the currents and flags in rougher months (see safety below).
  • Surfing: central Vietnam has a real autumn–winter swell, and An Bang gets beginner-friendly waves — lessons and board rental are available.
  • SUP, kayaking, jet-ski & parasailing: seasonal operators set up on the sand, mostly in the calmer dry months.
  • Just lounging: honestly, a lounger, a book and a seafood lunch is the classic An Bang day.
💡 Want the big water adventure? The standout is a snorkelling day trip to the Cham Islands — see the next section.

7. Cham Islands: the Day Trip

The best water excursion from the Hoi An coast is a day trip to the Cham Islands (Cù Lao Chàm), a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve about 15 km offshore:

  • What you do: snorkel (or sea-walk) over coral, swim at quiet island beaches like Bãi Chồng, and eat fresh seafood.
  • How: a speedboat from Cua Dai harbour takes ~15–20 minutes; most tours include hotel pickup, lunch and gear.
  • When: the islands are best in the calm dry season (roughly March–August); rough seas can cancel trips in the wet months.
  • Book ahead: compare the snorkelling day tour on Klook and KKday — it’s the one genuinely bookable highlight of a beach day here.

8. What to Eat at the Beach

The beach food is a highlight, not an afterthought:

  • Grilled seafood: prawns, squid, clams and the catch of the day at the seafood shacks and beach bars.
  • Beach-bar menus: a mix of Vietnamese dishes and Western comfort food, plus cocktails and cold beer.
  • Local specialities: you’re minutes from the Old Town’s cao lầu and white rose if you want the classics too.
💡 Check prices before ordering fresh seafood (often sold by weight) so there are no surprises on the bill.

9. How Much a Beach Day Costs

A day at An Bang is cheap. Rough prices:

Item Typical price
Beach access Free
Sun lounger Free with a food/drink order, else ≈50,000₫
Beach-bar meal + drinks ≈150,000–300,000₫
Surf lesson / board / SUP ≈$15–30
Cham Islands snorkelling day trip ≈$25–45
Grab from the Old Town ≈70,000–100,000₫ each way
💡 Bring small cash for loungers, snacks and parking; carry a little extra for fresh seafood. See our money guide“”.

10. How to Get There from Hoi An

An Bang is an easy hop — about 4 km northeast of the Old Town:

  • By bicycle: a flat, scenic 15-minute ride (follow Hai Bà Trưng street); many hotels lend bikes free, and you can detour via Tra Que village.
  • By scooter: 8–10 minutes; see our scooter guide. Guarded parking at the beach is ~5,000–10,000₫.
  • By taxi or Grab: ~10–15 minutes, ≈70,000–100,000₫.
  • Cua Dai is a similar distance due east; the Cham Islands boats leave from Cua Dai harbour.
An Bang Beach at golden hour with a basket boat and the islands on the horizon
An Bang at golden hour — calm water, a lone basket boat and the Cham Islands on the horizon. (© Edgardo W. Olivera / CC BY 2.0)

11. Best Time to Visit & Sea Conditions

The beach changes a lot with the season. Pair this with our Hoi An weather guide and best-time guide:

Season Beach conditions
Feb/Mar–May The sweet spot — warm, calm, clear water; widest sand. Best for swimming.
Jun–Aug Hot and busy; still good for the beach, early or late to beat the heat.
Sep Warm but rain risk rising; sea getting choppier.
Oct–Nov Wet, rough seas, jellyfish and storm erosion; many beach bars close or are damaged.
Dec–Jan Cooler, surf season; good for surfing, less for sunbathing.
⚠️ In the wet season (Oct–Nov) the sea can be dangerous and the beach much reduced by storms. Swim only when it’s calm and a flag/net says it’s safe.

12. Safety: Currents, Flags & Swimming

It’s a real sea, so a few sensible rules:

  • Rip currents can occur, especially in the wet season — swim between flags or where the beach bars net off a safe area.
  • Don’t swim out far or after drinking; the drop-off and currents catch people out.
  • Lifeguards are seasonal and not everywhere — keep a close eye on children.
  • Jellyfish appear in some months; ask locally and watch for warnings.
  • Sun: the central-Vietnam sun is fierce — hat, sunscreen and water (see our essentials for what to carry).

13. With Kids, Families & Sunset

An Bang is great for families and golden-hour lovers alike:

  • Families: the beach bars with loungers, showers, food and (in calm months) gentle water make an easy day with kids — more ideas in our Da Nang with kids guide.
  • Sunrise vs sunset: the beach faces east, so sunrise is the spectacular one; sunset still glows behind you with a drink in hand.
  • Quiet vs lively: walk a few minutes from the main bar cluster for a calmer stretch of sand.

14. Is the Hoi An Beach Worth It? Tips & a Plan

Yes — An Bang is a lovely, easy half-day and the perfect counterpoint to the Old Town. White sand, good swimming in season, brilliant beach bars and seafood, all 15 minutes from the lanterns. Just go in the dry season for the best of it, and treat the Cua Dai/erosion situation with realistic expectations.

Tips: cycle out (via Tra Que); bring sun protection and small cash; pick a beach bar and use its lounger for the price of lunch; swim only when it’s calm; and book the Cham Islands trip ahead if you want the water adventure.

A sample beach day

Time Plan
08:00 Cycle out via Tra Que; sunrise swim while it’s calm and quiet
10:00 Claim a lounger at a beach bar; swim, read, repeat
12:30 Grilled-seafood lunch and a cold drink on the sand
15:00 SUP or a surf lesson, or just doze
17:00 Cycle back; the lantern-lit Old Town in the evening

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Hoi An Beaches — FAQ

Q. Which is the best beach in Hoi An?
An Bang Beach is the best beach in Hoi An in 2026. It has white sand, calm swimmable water in the dry season, a famous run of beach bars and great seafood, all about 4 km (15 minutes) from the Old Town. Cua Dai, the original main beach, has been badly eroded and is now mostly resort beach, so most travellers head to An Bang.
Q. What happened to Cua Dai Beach?
Cua Dai suffered severe erosion from the 2010s — driven by storms, upstream dams and rising seas — which washed away much of the sand. The shoreline is now lined with sandbags, breakwaters and sea walls protecting the resorts. It’s still used by its big hotels and is the harbour for Cham Islands boats, but for a public swim-and-eat beach, An Bang is far better.
Q. How do I get to An Bang Beach from Hoi An?
An Bang is about 4 km northeast of the Old Town. The nicest way is to cycle — a flat, scenic 15-minute ride along Hai Bà Trưng street, and you can detour via Tra Que herb village. You can also take a scooter (8–10 min), or a taxi/Grab (~10–15 min, about 70,000–100,000₫). Guarded bike/scooter parking at the beach is around 5,000–10,000₫.
Q. Do I have to pay for sun loungers at An Bang?
Usually not directly — most beach cafés and bars let you use a sun lounger and umbrella for the day if you order food or a couple of drinks. If you don’t order, expect to pay around 50,000₫ for a lounger. Beach access itself is free.
Q. What are the best beach bars at An Bang?
The well-known beach clubs include Soul Kitchen, Sound of Silence, La Plage, The Deck House and An Bang Beach Village. Each has loungers, showers, a mix of Vietnamese and Western food, drinks and sometimes live music or DJ sunsets. Arrive earlier on weekends and holidays to grab a front-row lounger.
Q. When is the best time to visit Hoi An’s beaches?
The dry season, roughly February/March to August, is best — warm, with calm, clear water ideal for swimming, and the widest sand. June to August is hottest and busiest. October to November is the wet season, with rough seas, jellyfish and storm erosion that can close beach bars. December to January is cooler and better for surfing than sunbathing.
Q. Is it safe to swim at An Bang Beach?
It’s generally safe in calm, dry-season weather, but it’s a real sea with rip currents, especially in the wet season. Swim between flags or in the netted areas the beach bars set up, don’t go out far or swim after drinking, and watch children closely as lifeguards are seasonal. Avoid swimming when the sea is rough or warning flags are up.
Q. Can you surf at An Bang Beach?
Yes — central Vietnam has a genuine autumn–winter swell (roughly September to December/January) and An Bang gets beginner-friendly waves, with surf lessons and board rental available. Outside that window the sea is usually flatter and better for swimming, SUP and kayaking. It’s a fun, low-key surf spot rather than a world-class one.
Q. What is the Cham Islands day trip?
The Cham Islands (Cù Lao Chàm) are a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve about 15 km off the Hoi An coast. A day trip — by speedboat from Cua Dai harbour, ~15–20 minutes — typically includes snorkelling or sea-walking over coral, swimming at island beaches and a seafood lunch. It’s the standout bookable water adventure from the beach; compare tours on Klook and KKday and book ahead.
Q. How much does a day at the beach in Hoi An cost?
Very little. Beach access is free, a sun lounger is free with a food or drink order (else ≈50,000₫), and a beach-bar meal with drinks runs about 150,000–300,000₫. A surf lesson or SUP is around $15–30, and a Cham Islands snorkelling day trip about $25–45. A Grab from the Old Town is roughly 70,000–100,000₫ each way.
Q. What should I bring to the beach?
Sun protection above all — hat, sunscreen and sunglasses, as the central-Vietnam sun is fierce. Bring small cash for loungers, food, parking and seafood, plus water, a towel and a dry bag for your phone. If you plan to surf or do water sports, swimwear and a change of clothes; the beach bars have showers and toilets.
Q. Is An Bang Beach good for families and kids?
Yes — the beach bars with loungers, showers, food and (in the calm dry months) gentle water make it an easy, fun day with children. Keep a close eye on kids in the water, as currents can be strong and lifeguards are seasonal. It’s a relaxed, traveller-friendly beach rather than a built-up resort strip.
Q. Can I combine the beach with other Hoi An activities?
Easily — An Bang is a short ride from Tra Que herb village and the Cam Thanh basket boat, so many people loop the countryside and the beach in one day, then return for the lantern-lit Old Town in the evening. Cua Dai harbour is also the departure point for the Cham Islands day trip.
Q. Is sunrise or sunset better at An Bang?
Sunrise is the spectacular one, because the beach faces east — dawn over the sea is glorious and the beach is at its quietest. Sunset still glows beautifully behind you, and it’s prime time for a drink and DJ set at the beach bars. For photos and a peaceful swim, come at first light.
Q. Will the beach be eroded or have no sand when I visit?
It varies. Erosion is an ongoing issue on this coast, and An Bang loses sand and beach bars in big storms (especially October–November), then is rebuilt before each main season. In the dry months (Feb/Mar–Aug) the beach is at its widest and best. If you visit in the wet season, expect a narrower beach and rougher sea.

🏮 Complete Hoi An Travel Guide 2026 →