
Ha Giang Loop Price: What You’ll Really Pay in 2026
Facebook X Reddit Table of Contents Learn more: Ha Giang Loop Tours The honest answer to “how much does the Ha Giang

Thúy Kiều (Grace) is a travel blogger and content contributor for Loop Trails Tours Ha Giang. She holds a bachelor’s degree in Sustainable Tourism from Vietnam National University, Hanoi, and has a strong passion for exploring and promoting responsible travel experiences in Vietnam’s northern highlands.
Learn more: Ha Giang Loop Tours
Most travelers who land in Hanoi and start asking around about northern Vietnam end up at the same conclusion within about 24 hours: they need to do the Ha Giang Loop. The follow-up question is always the same. How many days?
3 days is the most booked option, the most realistic for tight schedules, and the one most operators build their entire business around. It’s also the one travelers debate the most, usually because someone in their hostel just got back from a 4 days tour and won’t shut up about it.
Here’s the honest version of the 3 days Ha Giang Loop: what the route looks like, what you’ll see, what to expect on the bike, what it costs in real terms, and how to decide if 3 days is enough or if you should stretch it. No fluff, no overselling, no fake numbers.
Learn more: Ha Giang Loop 2 Days 1 Night
Yes, with one caveat.
3 days hits all the headline sights: Quan Ba Twin Mountains, Tham Ma Pass, the Hmong King’s Palace area, Dong Van Old Town, Lung Cu Flag Tower (optional), Ma Pi Leng Pass, the Nho Que River canyon, and Meo Vac. These are the places that turn up on every photo grid you’ve scrolled through. You’ll see them.
The caveat: 3 days is fast. You’re on the bike for several hours every day, the stops are timed, and you usually skip Du Gia, the off-route village where most 4 days tours sleep on night three. If you’ve come to Vietnam specifically for Ha Giang and you have the days, 4 days is more relaxed. If you’ve got a flight to Da Nang or Hoi An booked tight, 3 days does the job and you won’t feel cheated.
A simple way to think about it: 3 days is the proper Ha Giang Loop done at travel pace. 4 days is the same loop done at “remember it more clearly” pace.
Learn more: Ha Giang Loop 3 Days 2 Nights
Almost every operator runs roughly the same outline because the geography demands it. Small variations exist (extra stops, different lunch spots, alternative scenic detours), but the spine of the route is consistent.
| Day | Route | Approx. riding hours |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ha Giang City → Quan Ba → Yen Minh → Dong Van | 5 to 6 hours |
| 2 | Dong Van → Lung Cu (optional) → Ma Pi Leng → Nho Que River → Meo Vac | 4 to 5 hours plus boat |
| 3 | Meo Vac → Mau Due → Ha Giang City | 5 to 6 hours |
Riding hours include photo stops and lunch, not pure saddle time. Pure saddle time is shorter. The hours feel longer than the numbers suggest because of the road’s curves and the constant urge to pull over for another viewpoint.
Learn more: Ha Giang Loop 4 Days 3 Nights
You’ll start in Ha Giang City somewhere between 8 and 9 in the morning. Most operators do gear-up, helmet sizing, bike check, and a quick safety briefing in their office. If you’re on an easy rider tour you’ll meet your driver here. If you’re self-driving they’ll hand you the keys, the route on a paper map, and the WhatsApp number you call if anything goes wrong.
The first big stop is Quan Ba Pass and the Twin Mountains viewpoint, often called Heaven’s Gate. The view opens up across the Quan Ba valley and you’ll already be reaching for the camera. From there, the road climbs through pine forest toward Yen Minh, where most groups break for lunch.
The afternoon is the famous part. Tham Ma Pass with its tight switchbacks is on this stretch, as is the Hmong King’s Palace at Sa Phin if your operator includes it. By late afternoon you’ll roll into Dong Van Old Town. If it’s a Saturday night, the night market is on. If it’s Sunday morning, the Sunday market across the square is one of the best in northern Vietnam, full of Hmong, Tay, and Dao traders, livestock, woven baskets, and bowls of pho noodle soup at metal tables.
Most operators put you in a homestay or small hotel in or near Dong Van. Dinner is usually included and family-style.
This is the day everyone takes the most photos.
After breakfast, some itineraries detour north to Lung Cu Flag Tower, the northernmost point of Vietnam. It’s a real flagpole on a hill with steps going up and a panoramic view across the karst mountains into China. Worth it if your group wants to do it; not essential if you don’t.
Then Ma Pi Leng Pass. This is the headline. The road carves along the cliff face above the Tu San Canyon, the deepest canyon in Vietnam, with the Nho Que River winding emerald through the bottom. There’s a famous walkway out from the cliff and a panorama cafe where everyone stops for coffee and the view. You’ll spend longer here than you planned to. Plan for that.
After Ma Pi Leng, you descend to the Nho Que River for an optional boat trip through Tu San Canyon. The boat takes you between sheer limestone walls that dwarf you. It’s quiet, slow, and one of those experiences that doesn’t need a soundtrack. Most 3 days tours include this; check before you book.
By late afternoon you’ll arrive in Meo Vac, a small town in a valley surrounded by rock. Your homestay or hotel for night two is here. Some operators run a cultural evening with local food and rice wine; some leave you to wander the small night market and find a beer.
The closing day. You’ll head back via a different route to avoid retracing day two: usually through Mau Due, sometimes with a brief detour toward Du Gia for a swim spot or a viewpoint, depending on time.
The riding on day three is quieter. The headline scenery is mostly behind you and the road becomes more rolling hills, river valleys, and small village life. This is when riders on the back of bikes finally relax their shoulders and just watch. You’ll stop for lunch at a roadside restaurant your guide knows, probably with grilled meat and rice and morning glory.
You’re back in Ha Giang City by mid to late afternoon. You return the gear, collect your stored luggage, and either crash at a hotel before the night bus to Hanoi or board the bus directly. Some travelers go from Ha Giang east toward Cao Bang or Ba Be Lake from here. Most go back to Hanoi.
Soft CTA: If you’ve already decided 3 days is your window, our [Ha Giang Loop 3 days tour page] lays out current pricing, group sizes, and which days the trip departs. Easy rider is the most popular format. Tell us your dates and we’ll match you to the right one.
Learn more: Ha Giang Motorbike Rental
There are three main ways to do the Ha Giang Loop in 3 days, and the choice affects your experience more than which operator you book with.
You ride on the back of a motorbike and a local guide drives. You bring a daypack. The guide handles the road, the route, the homestay check-ins, the meal stops, the photo opportunities, and the emergency repairs. You sit, watch, and take it in.
Best for: travelers who don’t ride manual, don’t have months of road experience, are nervous about Vietnamese traffic, or simply want to enjoy the scenery without watching every pothole. Most popular option for couples, solo travelers, and first-time Vietnam visitors.
You drive your own motorbike. A guide rides in front of the group on his own bike, and you follow. You’re responsible for your own bike but you’re not navigating alone.
Best for: travelers who already ride, have done at least some manual or semi-automatic motorbike travel, and want the active experience. Vietnam’s licensing requirements have been more strictly enforced in recent years, and not every traveler’s home license is valid here. Rules can change, so check current requirements before you book a self drive tour, and verify your travel insurance covers motorbike accidents under whatever license you hold.
You’re driven in a 4×4 vehicle, usually with another small group. You don’t ride at all. You stop at the same viewpoints as the bike groups and you have a guide and driver.
Best for: travelers who can’t or don’t want to be on a bike for hours each day, those traveling with kids, anyone with a back or knee issue that makes pillion riding uncomfortable, or groups where one person doesn’t want to ride and the rest are flexible. Less photogenic than bikes for social media, but more comfortable and just as scenic.
A simple decision frame:
Learn more: Ha Giang Cao Bang 5 Days 4 Nights
The honest part.
The roads on the Ha Giang Loop are paved on most sections and in generally good condition, but there are stretches that are rough, under repair, or affected by recent rain. Tham Ma Pass, Ma Pi Leng, and the descent to Nho Que River are steep and twisting. None of this is a problem if you’re on the back of a bike with an experienced guide. It can be a problem if you’re driving yourself for the first time and underestimating the gradient.
Things that make the trip safer:
Things that make the trip less safe:
Weather is the biggest variable. Wet season can mean fog on the passes, slick roads, or short closures from landslides. A reputable operator will reroute, wait it out, or shuffle the schedule. Some won’t, especially the cheapest ones. Read recent reviews of the specific operator before booking, not just generic Ha Giang Loop blog posts.
Learn more: Ha Giang Cao Bang Ba Be Lake 6 Days 5 Nights
Northern Vietnam has rough seasons rather than fixed ones, and weather varies year to year. Broad guidance:
Tet (Lunar New Year, usually late January or February) closes a lot of homestays and small businesses. Plan around it.
The buckwheat flower festival in October and November draws extra travelers but the scenery is genuinely beautiful and worth the slight crowd bump.
Learn more: Cao Bang Loop 3 Days best kept secret
A typical 3 days Ha Giang Loop tour package covers:
Usually not included:
Ask specifically about the Nho Que boat. It’s often included but a few operators charge it separately.
Learn more: Loop Trails Tour Ha Giang website
I’m not going to write a price in this article because rates shift through the year and quoting a specific number is the fastest way to mislead someone planning a trip months ahead. What I can give you is a way to read tour quotes properly so you don’t book the wrong one for your situation.
When comparing tour prices, check:
If a tour is dramatically cheaper than three other operators on the same dates, ask why. The answer is usually older bikes, less experienced drivers, no insurance, or a packed group.
Learn more: Ha Giang Packing list
You’re on a bike for three days. Travel light. Operators in Ha Giang City can store your main luggage while you’re on the loop, so only bring what fits in a small backpack.
Bring:
Skip:
Borrow what you don’t have. Most operators have spare jackets, gloves, and rain ponchos to lend. Just ask before day one.
Learn more: Ha Giang Loop Mistake to Avoid
Learn more: Ha Giang Sleeper Bus
The Ha Giang Loop starts in Ha Giang City. There’s no airport. Your options from Hanoi:
Most travelers take the night bus the evening before their tour starts, sleep on the bus, and arrive in Ha Giang City early morning. You have time for breakfast and a coffee before the office briefing. After the loop ends on day three, you can catch an evening bus back to Hanoi the same night, which makes the whole experience door-to-door about four days from Hanoi.
If you book the tour through us, we can help arrange the Hanoi-Ha Giang transfer for you. Booking it yourself is also fine; major travel platforms list the buses with traveler reviews.
Learn more: Ha Giang to Cao Bang
Two upgrade paths if 3 days feels short.
4 days Ha Giang Loop: the same headline sights as the 3 days, but with a night in Du Gia added. Du Gia is a small village off the standard route, with a swim spot, a slower pace, and one of the more memorable homestay experiences in northern Vietnam. The 4th day removes the most rushed parts of the 3 days schedule. If you have the time, it’s the better trip.
Combined Ha Giang and Cao Bang tour: you do the Ha Giang Loop and then continue east through Bao Lac into Cao Bang province, riding all the way to Cao Bang City and ending the trip there. This is six to eight days depending on the operator. You’ll see Ban Gioc Waterfall, Phong Nam Valley, and the Non Nuoc Cao Bang Geopark in addition to the Ha Giang highlights. Best for travelers with a week or more who want one continuous trip rather than two separate loops.
If a 4th day or a combine trip interests you, our [Ha Giang Loop 4 days tour page] and [combined Ha Giang and Cao Bang tour page] cover both. Cao Bang on its own is also worth considering if you’ve already done Ha Giang.
Learn more: Ha Giang Loop Self-Drive
We try to keep this simple. You message us with your dates and group size. We send back two or three suggested itineraries (3 days, 4 days, combined) with current pricing and what each includes. We confirm bike or vehicle preference, dietary needs, and any specific stops you want included or skipped.
Once you decide, a small deposit locks the dates and we assign your guide. Final payment is on arrival, in cash or transfer. We share your guide’s WhatsApp before the trip so you can coordinate directly.
What we won’t do:
We run small groups, current-model bikes, English-speaking local guides, and all-inclusions clearly listed on every tour page. That’s the brand and we keep it boring on purpose.
Learn more: Ha Giang Loop Easy Rider
A simple decision matrix for the 3 days Ha Giang Loop:
| If you… | Book… |
|---|---|
| Don’t ride or don’t want to drive in Vietnam | Easy rider 3 days |
| Have manual / semi-auto experience and a valid license | Self drive 3 days |
| Don’t want to be on a bike at all | Jeep 3 days |
| Want a more relaxed pace | Easy rider 4 days |
| Want both Ha Giang and Cao Bang in one trip | Combined Ha Giang and Cao Bang |
| Want to drive your own bike on a flexible route | Motorbike rental in Ha Giang |
Easy rider 3 days is the most booked option for a reason. It’s the right pick for the majority of travelers reading this. If you’re at the edges of that majority, one of the other options will fit better.
CTA: Ready to lock in your dates? Message us on [WhatsApp] with how many days you have and how many people are in your group. We’ll send a real itinerary the same day. Or browse the [Ha Giang Loop tour page] for the standard 3 days easy rider package, current pricing, and departure dates.
The 3 days Ha Giang Loop is one of those trips you don’t realize was the highlight of your Vietnam itinerary until you’re back in Hanoi looking at the photos. Go in light, ride safe, and let your guide do the heavy lifting. The mountains take care of the rest.
Learn more: Ha Giang Jeep Tours
Yes. 3 days covers all the headline sights including Ma Pi Leng Pass, Dong Van, Meo Vac, and the Nho Que River. It’s the most booked format. 4 days adds Du Gia and a more relaxed pace if you have the time.
Technically possible, not recommended. You’ll skip too much, spend too long on the bike each day, and miss the slower moments that make the trip memorable. 3 days is the practical minimum.
For easy rider and jeep tours, no. You’re a passenger. For self drive, licensing rules in Vietnam apply and have been more strictly enforced in recent years. Verify current requirements and check that your travel insurance covers motorbike incidents under your specific license.
With a reputable operator, properly maintained bikes, and sensible behavior, it’s no more dangerous than other mountain motorbike trips. Most incidents involve self drive travelers without much experience, alcohol the night before, or operators cutting corners on bike maintenance. Insurance is non-negotiable.
Easy rider means a local guide drives the bike and you ride pillion. Self drive means you drive your own bike with a guide leading the group. Jeep means you ride in a 4×4 with a driver and skip the bike entirely.
Most operators include it on day two. A few charge it separately. Confirm before booking. Skip it only if you’re seriously short on time, because it’s one of the highlights.
It starts and ends in Ha Giang City. You’ll travel from Hanoi to Ha Giang City by night bus, limousine van, or private car the day before your tour begins.
A mix, depending on the operator and itinerary. Most 3 days tours use homestays in Dong Van and Meo Vac, which are clean, basic, and family-run. Private rooms, dorm beds, and small hotels are also options. Confirm the room type with your operator before booking.
September to November for clear skies and golden rice terraces. March to May for flowers and warmer weather. December to February is dry but cold at altitude. June to August is wet but lush. Avoid Tet (Lunar New Year) week, when many homestays close.
Ha Giang for the famous, dramatic version. Cao Bang for the quieter, water-filled, less crowded version. Combined if you have the time. If you only do one, Ha Giang is the icon, but Cao Bang is increasingly popular with travelers looking for something less busy.
Most tour operators in Ha Giang City have luggage storage in their office for free during your tour. You only carry a daypack on the bike. Confirm storage with your operator before arrival.
Light rain doesn’t stop the tour; you’ll wear a poncho and continue. Heavy rain or landslide risk causes a reroute, a schedule shuffle, or in rare cases a rest day. A good operator manages this without drama. Ask about rain policy before you pay.
Contact information for Loop Trails
Website: Loop Trails Official Website
Email: looptrailshostel@gmail.com
Hotline & WhatSapp:
+84862379288
+84938988593
Social Media:
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Office Address: 48 Nguyen Du, Ha Giang 1, Tuyen Quang
Address: 48 Nguyen Du, Ha Giang 1, Tuyen Quang

Facebook X Reddit Table of Contents Learn more: Ha Giang Loop Tours The honest answer to “how much does the Ha Giang

Facebook X Reddit Table of Contents Learn more: Ha Giang Loop Tours There’s a moment, usually somewhere on day two of a

Facebook X Reddit Table of Contents Learn more: Ha Giang Loop Tours If you’ve spent more than a day or two in