---
title: "How to Travel Vietnam on $25 a Day (2026 Budget Breakdown)"
description: "Daily budget breakdown, accommodation tiers, transport hacks, and money tips for Vietnam on a backpacker budget."
pubDate: 2026-03-15T00:00:00.000Z
category: budget
author: "Traveloonie Team"
readTime: "9 min"
tags: ["vietnam","budget","backpacking","southeast-asia"]
destination: vietnam
canonical: https://traveloonie.com/blog/vietnam-budget-guide
---
import AffiliateCard from '../../components/AffiliateCard.astro';

Vietnam is one of the cheapest countries in the world to travel — and unlike some budget destinations, cheap here doesn't mean compromising. The street food is world-class, the transport is comfortable, and the experiences rival places that cost five times as much. Here's exactly how to do it on $25 a day.

## The Daily Budget Breakdown

### Backpacker ($20-35/day)

| Category | Daily Cost |
|----------|-----------|
| 🛏️ Accommodation | $5-12 |
| 🍜 Food | $5-10 |
| 🚌 Transport | $3-5 |
| 🎭 Activities | $2-5 |
| **Total** | **$15-32** |

### Mid-Range ($50-95/day)

| Category | Daily Cost |
|----------|-----------|
| 🛏️ Accommodation | $25-50 |
| 🍜 Food | $15-25 |
| 🚌 Transport | $5-10 |
| 🎭 Activities | $5-10 |
| **Total** | **$50-95** |

### Comfort ($150-300+/day)

Boutique hotels, private tours, fine dining, and domestic flights. Vietnam's luxury scene is growing fast and still costs a fraction of Thailand or Bali's high end.

## Accommodation

### Hostels ($5-12/night)

Vietnam's hostel scene is solid, especially in Hanoi, HCMC, Da Nang, and Hoi An. Dorm beds average $5-8 in most cities. Many include breakfast, social events, and tour bookings.

<AffiliateCard affiliateKey="hostelworld" />

### Guesthouses & Hotels ($15-40/night)

Private rooms in family-run guesthouses are Vietnam's sweet spot. Clean, air-conditioned rooms with wifi for $15-25/night. In smaller towns, you'll find even better deals.

### Homestays ($8-20/night)

In Sa Pa, Ninh Binh, and the Mekong Delta, homestays let you sleep with local families, eat home-cooked meals, and experience rural Vietnam. Often the most memorable accommodation you'll find.

## Getting Around

### Sleeper Buses ($8-20)

Vietnam's **sleeper buses** are a budget traveler's dream. Full-recline beds (not seats), air conditioning, and overnight routes that save you a night's accommodation. Hanoi to Hue ($15), Hue to Hoi An ($6), HCMC to Dalat ($10). Book through **The Sinh Tourist** or **Futa Bus** for reliable operators.

### Reunification Express Train ($15-45)

The **Reunification Express** runs 2,600km from Hanoi to Ho Chi Minh City with stops in Hue, Da Nang, and Nha Trang. The full journey takes 36 hours, but most travelers do segments. Soft sleeper berths ($25-45) are comfortable and scenic, especially the Hai Van Pass stretch between Hue and Da Nang.

### Domestic Flights ($25-60)

**VietJet Air** and **Bamboo Airways** offer cheap domestic flights if booked in advance. Hanoi to HCMC ($30-50), HCMC to Da Nang ($25-40), HCMC to Phu Quoc ($25-35). Book 2-3 weeks ahead for the best prices.

<AffiliateCard affiliateKey="skyscanner" />

### Grab (Vietnam's Uber)

**Grab** works in all major cities for rides and food delivery. Motorbike Grab is the fastest and cheapest option — a 15-minute ride costs about $1-2. Always use the app (never negotiate with random motorbike taxis).

### Renting a Motorbike ($5-8/day)

The most quintessentially Vietnamese way to travel. Automatic scooters rent for $5-8/day in most cities. For longer routes like the Ha Giang Loop, budget $10-15/day for a semi-automatic. **Important:** Always get travel insurance that covers motorbike riding.

<AffiliateCard affiliateKey="safetywing" />

## Food Budget

Vietnam is where your food budget does the most work:

- **Pho or bun cha** — $1-1.50
- **Banh mi** — $0.50-1.00
- **Com tam (broken rice)** — $1-2
- **Street food snacks** — $0.30-1.00
- **Bia hoi (fresh beer)** — $0.25/glass
- **Vietnamese iced coffee** — $0.50-1.00
- **Restaurant meal** — $3-5
- **Western food** — $5-10 (avoid it, eat local)

**Budget tip:** Eat where locals eat. If the menu is only in Vietnamese and the stools are tiny, you're in the right place.

## Visa Costs

Vietnam's **e-visa** is straightforward:
- **Single entry (90 days):** $25 USD
- **Multiple entry (90 days):** $50 USD
- **Processing:** 3-5 business days online
- **Visa exemption:** 45 days for UK, EU, Japan, South Korea, and others (check the latest list)

Apply at the official [Vietnam e-visa portal](https://evisa.xuatnhapcanh.gov.vn/) — avoid third-party sites that charge extra.

## Money Tips

- **Currency:** Vietnamese Dong (VND). 1 USD ≈ 26,000 VND
- **Exchange at gold shops** — Better rates than airports or banks, no fees
- **ATMs charge fees** — Withdraw larger amounts ($200+) to minimize per-transaction fees. **Agribank** and **BIDV** ATMs have lower fees
- **Carry cash** — Many street vendors, markets, and smaller towns are cash-only
- **Don't pay in USD** — You'll get a worse exchange rate. Always pay in VND
- **Haggle at markets** — Start at 40-50% of the asking price. Don't haggle at restaurants or with street food vendors

<AffiliateCard affiliateKey="xe-currency" />

## Sample 2-Week Budget

| Item | Cost |
|------|------|
| Accommodation (14 nights × $10 avg) | $140 |
| Food (14 days × $8 avg) | $112 |
| Transport (buses, trains, Grab) | $80 |
| Activities & entrance fees | $50 |
| Visa (single entry e-visa) | $25 |
| **Total** | **$407** |

That's 14 days in Vietnam — from Hanoi to Saigon — for about $400. Try doing that in Europe.