Things to Do in Hoi An (2026): The Best Experiences in Vietnam’s Lantern Town

Things to Do in Hoi An (2026): The Best Experiences in Vietnam’s Lantern Town

Wander the lantern-lit Ancient Town, float a candle on the river, get clothes tailor-made overnight, paddle a basket boat through coconut palms and cook your own Vietnamese feast — here’s every experience worth your time in Hoi An.

Last updated & checked: June 2026
The best things to do in Hoi An in 30 seconds

  • The icon: explore the UNESCO Ancient Town by day, then stay for the lanterns — thousands of silk lanterns glow at dusk and locals float candles on the Thu Bon River.
  • Make & do: have clothes tailor-made (Hoi An is Vietnam’s textile capital), take a cooking class, or craft your own lantern to take home.
  • On the water & in the fields: ride a round basket boat in the Cam Thanh coconut forest and cycle through rice paddies to the herb village of Tra Que.
  • Beach time: cool off at An Bang and Cua Dai beaches, a short ride from the Old Town.
  • Day trips: the My Son Cham ruins, the Cham Islands and the city of Da Nang are all close.

Hoi An is the kind of place people come for two days and stay for a week. The UNESCO-listed Ancient Town — a perfectly preserved old trading port of yellow merchant houses, the Japanese Covered Bridge and thousands of silk lanterns — is the headline, but the real magic is in the doing: floating a candle on the river at dusk, having a suit run up overnight, cooking your own lunch after cycling to a herb garden, or drifting through a coconut forest in a round bamboo boat. This guide rounds up the best things to do in Hoi An — the unmissable icons and the hands-on experiences — and links you to a deep guide for each. (Planning the logistics — getting there, the Ancient Town ticket, where to stay? Our complete Hoi An travel guide has it all, and you can reach Hoi An from Da Nang with our transport guide.)

Lantern-covered boats on the Thu Bon River in Hoi An at night
Lantern boats on the Thu Bon River — the magical heart of a Hoi An night. (© Kuroczynski / CC BY-SA 4.0)

1. The Best Things to Do in Hoi An at a Glance

If you do five things, do these: wander the Ancient Town, see the lanterns and the river at night, take a cooking class, ride a basket boat, and have something tailor-made. Here’s the full menu before the detail:

Experience What it is Best for
The Ancient Town UNESCO old town: yellow houses, Japanese Bridge, assembly halls Everyone — history, photos, strolling
Lanterns & the river at night Silk lanterns, candle boats, the Thu Bon The magic — go after dark
Tailor-made clothes Bespoke suits/dresses, often in 24 hrs A unique souvenir you’ll actually use
Cooking class Market/garden + cook Vietnamese dishes Foodies, couples, a fun half-day
Lantern-making workshop Craft a collapsible silk lantern to take home Families, a hands-on hour
Basket boat (Cam Thanh) Round bamboo boat through coconut palms Fun, families, a different angle
Cycling & Tra Que village Bikes through rice paddies to a herb village Slow travel, mornings
An Bang & Cua Dai beaches Sand and seafood near the Old Town A relaxed afternoon
How to use this guide: base in or near the Old Town, do the icons over a couple of days and slot in the hands-on experiences and a beach afternoon. Each item below links to more detail. For trip logistics, lean on our Hoi An travel guide.

2. Explore the Ancient Town

The Ancient Town is the heart of Hoi An — a tangle of lantern-strung lanes lined with 15th–19th-century merchant houses in faded ochre, best explored slowly and on foot (it’s largely car-free).

  • The Japanese Covered Bridge (Chùa Cầu) — the 400-year-old symbol of the town, freshly restored, spanning a small canal.
  • Old houses & assembly halls — step inside Tan Ky House, the Fujian (Phuc Kien) Assembly Hall and the trade museums to feel the old port’s Chinese-Japanese-Vietnamese mix.
  • The Ancient Town ticket covers entry to a set of these heritage sights — see our Hoi An guide for how the ticket works and which sights to pick.

Go early morning for soft light and few crowds, or late afternoon to roll straight into the lanterns.

3. Lanterns & the Thu Bon River by Night

This is the moment everyone comes for. As dusk falls, the Ancient Town switches on thousands of silk lanterns, the riverfront fills with reflections, and vendors sell little paper lanterns with a candle (around 10,000 VND) to float on the Thu Bon River for good luck.

  • Take a boat: a short ride in a lantern-decked sampan puts you in the middle of the glow — gentle, romantic and great for photos.
  • Time the full moon: on the 14th day of each lunar month, the town turns off its electric lights for the Lantern Festival — pure lantern light, music and floating candles. The standout night of 2026 is the Nguyen Tieu celebration around 3 March (the first full moon after Tet).
  • Even on ordinary nights it’s beautiful — you don’t have to wait for the festival.

4. Make Your Own Lantern

For a hands-on hour, join a lantern-making workshop and build your own silk lantern from the bamboo frame up, guided by a local maker. The best part: the lanterns are collapsible, so they fold flat to fit in your luggage and become the souvenir you’ll actually hang at home.

It’s a lovely, low-key activity — especially good with kids or on a rainy afternoon — and it makes the evening lanterns mean a lot more once you’ve made one yourself.

5. Get Clothes Tailor-Made

Hoi An is the textile capital of Vietnam, with hundreds of tailor shops that can run up a bespoke suit, dress, coat or shirt — often in as little as 24 hours. Having something made here is one of the town’s signature experiences.

  • Allow time for a fitting or two: order on day one, collect (and tweak) on day two or three. Don’t leave it to your last afternoon.
  • Bring a reference — a photo or a garment you love — and choose your fabric carefully; quality varies a lot between shops.
  • Agree the price, fabric and number of fittings up front, and inspect the finished piece before you pay in full.
Plan it: tailoring needs at least two full days in town. If clothes are a priority, build your stay around the fittings.
A traditional round basket boat in the coconut-palm water forest near Hoi An
A round basket boat in the Cam Thanh coconut forest — one of Hoi An’s most popular hands-on experiences. (© Chester Ho / CC0, Unsplash)

6. Take a Cooking Class

A Hoi An cooking class is one of the most fun half-days in central Vietnam. A typical class (about 4–5 hours, roughly $25–50 / 600,000–1,250,000 VND) starts with a market visit or a cycle to a herb garden to gather ingredients, then you cook regional favourites — fresh spring rolls, bánh xèo (crispy pancakes) and more — and eat the lot.

It’s hands-on, sociable and genuinely useful (you’ll recreate the dishes at home). Want to know the food first? See our guides to bánh xèo and the wider central Vietnam food scene.

7. Ride a Basket Boat in the Coconut Forest

Just outside town in Cam Thanh, the Bay Mau coconut-palm water forest is the setting for Hoi An’s most playful boat trip: a ride in a traditional round bamboo basket boat (thúng chai), paddled by a local boatman through the palms.

  • Expect crab-fishing demos, coconut-leaf weaving and — if you’re up for it — the famous spinning basket-boat show.
  • It’s fun, cheap and family-friendly, and pairs naturally with a cycle out through the rice paddies.
  • It’s also a quick taster of the watery, palm-fringed landscape that surrounds Hoi An.

8. Cycle Through the Rice Paddies & Tra Que Village

Hoi An is flat, green and made for cycling. Many hotels lend bikes free, and within minutes you’re rolling past emerald rice paddies, water buffalo and farming villages.

  • Tra Que Vegetable Village is the classic ride — an organic herb village where you can walk the beds, try your hand at farming with local growers, and eat super-fresh food.
  • Go early to beat the heat; the light over the paddies at sunrise and sunset is magic.
  • Cycling is also the nicest way to reach An Bang Beach.

9. Hoi An’s Beaches: An Bang & Cua Dai

When the Old Town heat builds, the coast is a short ride away:

  • An Bang Beach is the livelier, more popular strip — soft sand, beach bars and seafood shacks, a relaxed crowd, and sunbeds to rent. The easy default for a beach afternoon.
  • Cua Dai Beach, a little further, is quieter (parts have been affected by erosion but it’s still a pleasant, calmer stop).
  • Best swimming is in the dry months (roughly Feb–Aug); in the rains the sea can be rough. Time it with our best time to visit guide and weather guide.
A street in Hoi An Ancient Town with yellow walls and hanging lanterns by day
The Ancient Town by day — yellow walls, silk lanterns and tailor shops along every lane. (© Steffen Schmitz / CC BY-SA 4.0)

10. Day Trips from Hoi An

Hoi An is a brilliant base for central Vietnam’s heavy-hitters:

Day trip What it is How far
My Son Sanctuary Ancient Cham temple ruins in a jungle valley ~1 hr west
Cham Islands (Cu Lao Cham) Snorkelling & clear water, marine park Boat from Cua Dai pier
Da Nang Beaches, Marble Mountains, Dragon Bridge, Ba Na Hills ~45 min north

The My Son ruins are best at sunrise — see our My Son guide. For sea and snorkelling, the Cham Islands leave from nearby Cua Dai. And the city of Da Nang — with the Marble Mountains, the beaches and Ba Na Hills — is just up the coast; see everything to do there in our things to do in Da Nang guide and the Da Nang day trips guide.

11. Hoi An by Traveller Type (and Free Things)

Lots of Hoi An’s best moments are free — wandering the lanes, watching the lanterns, floating a candle, cycling the paddies and lazing on the beach. Pick by who you are:

You are… Don’t miss
First-timer Ancient Town + lanterns at night, a cooking class, tailoring
Family with kids Lantern-making, basket boat, An Bang Beach, bike ride
Couple Lantern boat at night, a tailored outfit, a quiet beach sunset
Foodie Cooking class, a street-food crawl, Tra Que herb village
On a budget Wander the town, float a lantern, cycle, hit the beach
Rainy day Lantern-making, a cooking class, café-hopping, museums
Cheap perfect day: cycle to Tra Que at sunrise → Ancient Town by day → tailor fitting → float a lantern on the river at dusk. Beautiful, and barely costs a thing.

12. How Many Days & a Simple Plan

Three to four days is ideal — enough to explore the town, do a cooking class and a basket-boat trip, get clothes made (with time for fittings), enjoy the beach and take one day trip. A simple frame:

  • Day 1: settle in, wander the Ancient Town, order any tailoring, stay for the lanterns at night.
  • Day 2: morning cooking class or cycle to Tra Que; afternoon basket boat at Cam Thanh; collect tailoring.
  • Day 3: beach morning at An Bang; a day trip to My Son (sunrise) or the Cham Islands.
  • Day 4 (optional): Da Nang for the day, or a slow final lap of the lanes and a lantern-making workshop.

Sort the practicalities — transfers, the Ancient Town ticket and where to stay — with our complete Hoi An travel guide, and tie the wider trip together with our Da Nang & central Vietnam master guide.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Q. What are the best things to do in Hoi An?
The essentials are exploring the UNESCO Ancient Town, seeing the lanterns and the Thu Bon River at night, taking a cooking class, having clothes tailor-made, riding a basket boat in the Cam Thanh coconut forest, and cycling to Tra Que herb village. Add a beach afternoon at An Bang and a day trip to My Son and you have a perfect Hoi An stay.
Q. How many days do you need in Hoi An?
Three to four days is ideal. That gives you time to explore the Ancient Town, do a cooking class and a basket-boat trip, have clothes tailored (with fittings over two or three days), enjoy the beach and take one day trip to My Son or the Cham Islands. With two days, focus on the town, the lanterns and one experience.
Q. Is Hoi An worth visiting?
Absolutely. Hoi An combines a magical lantern-lit UNESCO old town, hands-on experiences (tailoring, cooking classes, lantern-making, basket boats), rice-paddy cycling, nearby beaches and easy day trips to ancient ruins and islands — all in a compact, walkable, car-light town. It’s one of the most charming places in Vietnam.
Q. What is Hoi An famous for?
Hoi An is famous for its silk lanterns and the lantern-lit Ancient Town at night, its tailor shops (it’s called Vietnam’s textile capital), the Japanese Covered Bridge, its food, and the monthly full-moon Lantern Festival when the town switches off its lights and floats candles on the Thu Bon River.
Q. When is the Hoi An lantern festival?
The Lantern Festival happens on the 14th day of every lunar month (the eve of the full moon), when the Ancient Town turns off its electric lights for an evening of pure lantern light, music and floating candles. The most spectacular night of 2026 is the Nguyen Tieu celebration around 3 March, the first full moon after Tet. On any evening, though, the lanterns are lit and beautiful.
Q. Should I get clothes tailored in Hoi An?
Yes — it’s one of Hoi An’s signature experiences. The town has hundreds of tailors who can make a bespoke suit, dress or coat, often within 24 hours. Order early in your stay so there’s time for a fitting or two, bring a reference photo, choose good fabric, and agree the price and details up front. Don’t leave it to your last afternoon.
Q. How much is a cooking class in Hoi An?
A typical Hoi An cooking class runs about $25–50 (≈ 600,000–1,250,000 VND) per person for a 4–5 hour experience that usually includes a market visit or a cycle to a herb garden, hands-on cooking of regional dishes like fresh spring rolls and bánh xèo, and eating what you make. Prices vary by provider and group size.
Q. What is the basket boat ride in Hoi An?
It’s a ride in a traditional round bamboo basket boat (thúng chai) through the Bay Mau coconut-palm water forest at Cam Thanh, just outside town. A local boatman paddles you among the palms, often with crab-fishing demos, coconut-leaf weaving and a spinning basket-boat show. It’s cheap, fun and very family-friendly.
Q. What are the best things to do in Hoi An with kids?
Lantern-making workshops, the basket boat at Cam Thanh, An Bang Beach, a gentle bike ride through the rice paddies, and floating a paper lantern on the river at night. The Ancient Town is largely car-free, which makes it relaxed for families.
Q. Does Hoi An have a beach?
Yes — An Bang Beach is the popular, lively one (soft sand, beach bars and seafood, a short ride from the Old Town), and Cua Dai Beach is quieter nearby. Swimming is best in the dry months (roughly February–August); in the rainy season the sea can be rough, so check conditions.
Q. What are the best day trips from Hoi An?
The top day trips are the My Son Sanctuary (ancient Cham ruins, ~1 hour, best at sunrise), the Cham Islands (Cu Lao Cham) for snorkelling (boat from Cua Dai pier), and the city of Da Nang (~45 minutes) for the Marble Mountains, beaches and Ba Na Hills.
Q. How do you get to Hoi An, and how do you get around?
Most visitors come from Da Nang (~45 minutes / ~30 km) by Grab, private car, shuttle or bus — see our Da Nang–Hoi An transport guide. In Hoi An itself the Ancient Town is walkable and largely car-free, and the surrounding countryside and beaches are best reached by bicycle (often free at hotels) or a short Grab ride.

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