Partnership between New World Hotels & Resorts and Sun Group will unveil all-villa enclave at one of Vietnam’s finest beach destinations
Inspiring natural sights in Vietnam (That aren’t Ha Long Bay)
Hang Sơn Đoòng
Tours into the cave—the world’s biggest, by volume—aren’t cheap. The descent is tricky as well, so only experienced guides are allowed to take tourists inside. You also have to climb over the The Great Wall of Vietnam. This isn’t an excursion for a casual hiker, but it’s an experience to remember.
Côn Đảo
These lesser-known islands lie off the southern coast of Vietnam. In days long gone, political prisoners and other undesirables were sent here to be tortured for information. Nowadays, however, there are prime scuba diving spots and amazing hikes, plus you can check out some local wildlife such as the Crab-Eating Macaque and the Black Giant Squirrel. Sea turtles breed on these islands as well, and you can arrange with local park rangers to watch newly hatched babies as they start their harrowing adventures.
Rice paddies outside Hội An
Hội An itself is a spectacle to behold, but there’s plenty of natural beauty outside the city as well. You can rent bicycles and motorbikes to go for rides in stunning rice paddies, where lumbering water buffaloes roam and old farmers tend the same fields that their ancestors have for generations.
Hai Van Pass
While this is technically man-made, it’s the surrounding jungles and vistas that make this stretch of road so special. It’s a serpentine stretch carved into the side of a mountain just north of Đà Nẵng. It climbs over a chunk of the Annamite Range, which are the mountains bordering Vietnam and Laos.
Fansipan and the Muong Hoa Valley
These two could each have their own spot on this list, but we’ll put them together since they can see each other. Fansipan is the tallest mountain in Indochina, looming over the town of Sapa in the far north. Below Sapa lies the Muong Hoa Valley, an amazing expanse of terraced rice paddies and villages.
Mũi Né Sand Dunes
The sand dunes Mũi Né are strange places. If it weren’t for the deep blue waters and jungle forests surrounding these little quirks, you might think you were in Namibia or Saudi Arabia.
Ban Gioc Waterfall
These waterfalls are the largest in Vietnam—by volume, not height—and they straddle the border with China to the north. Those on the more adventurous side of traveling can rent a motorbike and make the spectacular journey on their own, but there are plenty of tours and shuttles as well.
Sources: theculturetrip