

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 people finish the Ha Giang Loop, ride back to Ha Giang City, and jump on a night bus to Hanoi. It is a great trip. It is also only half the story.
Push east instead of turning back, and the road drops out of Ha Giang’s jagged stone country into Cao Bang: softer karst towers, jade rivers, a waterfall on the Chinese border, and villages that see a fraction of the traffic. This is the Ha Giang to Cao Bang run, and it is one of the best overland journeys in northern Vietnam that most travelers never hear about until they are already up there.
This guide covers the whole thing end to end: the route, a day by day plan, what you will actually see in Cao Bang, how to travel it, when to go, and the honest logistics that trip people up. If you are weighing whether to extend your Loop, this should make the decision easy.
Learn more: Ha Giang Loop 2 Days 1 Night
The obvious reason is that you do not backtrack. A standard Loop ends where it started, so you ride the same passes twice, then face a long haul back to Hanoi. The combo runs one direction across the top of the country and finishes in Cao Bang City, which has overnight buses straight to Hanoi. Every kilometre is new ground.
The second reason is contrast. Ha Giang is high drama: the Ma Pi Leng, the Nho Que gorge, the Dong Van plateau, sheer walls of grey rock. Cao Bang is a different mood entirely: wider valleys, the Quay Son River running an unreal green through rice fields, a wall of water on the border, and caves you can walk into for an hour. Doing both in one trip means you never feel like you are seeing the same view twice.
Then there is the crowd factor. The Ha Giang Loop has become popular, and the main stops fill up. The stretch from Meo Vac east, and Cao Bang beyond it, still feels quiet. You will share the road with trucks and local motorbikes far more than with other tourists.
One neat bonus for the geology and UNESCO crowd: this single trip links two UNESCO Global Geoparks. The Dong Van Karst Plateau on the Ha Giang side was Vietnam’s first, and Non Nuoc Cao Bang became the country’s second in 2018. You ride from one straight into the other.
Learn more: Ha Giang Cao Bang 5 Days 4 Nights
The classic line is simple to picture:
Ha Giang City to Dong Van to Meo Vac to Bao Lac to Cao Bang City to Ban Gioc.
You ride the normal Ha Giang Loop as far as Meo Vac, then, instead of looping back west toward Ha Giang City, you head southeast. Bao Lac is the hinge of the whole trip: a small town in the Gam River valley where several rivers meet, home to Black Lo Lo communities and a busy morning market. It is the natural overnight between the two regions.
Here is the shape of the connecting section. Treat all distances and times as approximate, because these are mountain roads and conditions change:
| Leg | Rough distance | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Ha Giang Loop (to Meo Vac) | Varies | The standard Loop you already know |
| Meo Vac to Bao Lac | Around 100 to 120 km | The handover point between the two regions |
| Bao Lac to Cao Bang City | Around 130 to 140 km | Mountain riding through Tinh Tuc and Nguyen Binh |
| Cao Bang City to Ban Gioc | Around 80 to 90 km | Out to the border to see the waterfall |
This is the part that turns a Loop into a real journey, and it is where roads matter. There are two broad ways to link Meo Vac and Bao Lac.
The more reliable option runs southeast on QL4C toward the Gam River valley. It is scenic and generally in decent shape. The wilder option cuts through the Khau Vai area (famous for its once a year Love Market) and drops steeply toward the Nho Que River before climbing again. That route is spectacular but rougher, with sections that punish automatic scooters and inexperienced riders.
The takeaway: this leg is more remote and less traveled than the standard Loop roads. Help is further away if something goes wrong. Road surfaces and detours shift season to season, so check the latest updates before you commit to the harder line.
From Bao Lac, most riders follow QL34 southeast, passing through the old tin mining town of Tinh Tuc and the town of Nguyen Binh, gateway to the Phia Oac highlands. This side of the trip serves up some of the most photogenic passes in the northeast, including the switchback climbs the Cao Bang side is quietly famous for. It is long, it is beautiful, and it is a full day of saddle time.
Thinking this sounds like a lot to organise solo? It can be. If you would rather have the route, homestays, and border logistics handled for you, take a look at our Ha Giang to Cao Bang combo tour, or send us a quick message on WhatsApp and we will map it to your dates.
Learn more: Ha Giang Loop 3 Days 2 Nights
This is the itinerary that most riders run, and the one our 5 days 4 nights combo is built around. Exact stops flex with the season, your pace, and road conditions, so read it as a strong template rather than a fixed script.
Day 1: Ha Giang City to Dong Van Climb through Quan Ba and the Heaven’s Gate viewpoint, wind past the Tham Ma pass, and roll into the Sung La valley with its stone walled Hmong villages (this is the area around the famous Pao’s House film location). Finish in Dong Van and wander the old quarter after dark.
Day 2: Dong Van to Ma Pi Leng to Meo Vac The headline day. Ride out to the Lung Cu flag tower near the northernmost point of Vietnam if you want the detour, then take on the Ma Pi Leng Pass, the most dramatic stretch of the whole Loop. Drop down for a boat or kayak on the Nho Que River through the gorge, then settle in Meo Vac for the night.
Day 3: Meo Vac to Bao Lac Today you leave the tourist track. Ride southeast off the Loop and into the Gam River valley. The scenery loosens up, traffic thins out, and by afternoon you reach Bao Lac. If you time it for market morning, the town square is one of the most colourful you will see all trip.
Day 4: Bao Lac to Cao Bang and toward Ban Gioc A long, rewarding riding day over the Cao Bang passes, through Nguyen Binh, and on toward the border country. Many riders push past Cao Bang City and overnight near Trung Khanh or Ban Gioc so they can hit the waterfall early the next morning before day trippers arrive.
Day 5: Ban Gioc, Nguom Ngao, then Cao Bang City Spend the morning at Ban Gioc Waterfall and the nearby Nguom Ngao Cave, then ride into Cao Bang City. From there you can catch an overnight bus to Hanoi, so you never have to retrace your route.
Want a slower version? Stretching to 6 days 5 nights lets you add Phia Oac, Thang Hen Lake, or a second night in the Ban Gioc area so the whole thing feels less rushed. Both formats cover the same core highlights.
Learn more: Ha Giang Loop 4 Days 3 Nights
Ha Giang gets the fame, but Cao Bang is why serious riders extend the trip. Here is what you are riding toward.
The big one. Ban Gioc sits right on the border between Vietnam and China, a wide, tiered curtain of water roughly 300 metres across, and it is the largest waterfall in Vietnam. In the right season it is genuinely enormous. You can take a bamboo raft out toward the base for the classic photo, with the falls straddling two countries in a single frame. Figures and access rules vary, so check the latest updates before you go.
Learn more: Cao Bang Loop 3 Days best kept secret
Just a few kilometres from Ban Gioc, Nguom Ngao (Tiger Cave) is a long limestone cave packed with stalactites and strange rock shapes, and it stays cool inside even on hot days. It pairs naturally with the waterfall, so most people do the two together in a morning.
Thang Hen is a cluster of interconnected mountain lakes ringed by forest and limestone, calm and quiet, good for a boat or a slow lunch. To reach the eastern part of the geopark you cross the Ma Phuc Pass, one of the prettiest passes in Cao Bang, where the road threads between two walls of rock.
For anyone interested in Vietnamese history, Pac Bo is where Ho Chi Minh set up base after returning to the country in 1941. The cave, the clear stream he named, and the surrounding valley make a peaceful, meaningful stop north of Cao Bang City.
West of the main sights, near Nguyen Binh, the Phia Oac and Phia Den National Park climbs into cool, misty forest. The French built hill station villas up here a century ago, and the ruins still sit among the trees. In deep winter the peaks can even see frost. It is a worthy add on if you have the extra day.
Beyond the headliners you also get the Quay Son River, the stone village of Khuoi Ky, the Phong Nam valley, and craft villages that still make incense and forge knives by hand. Cao Bang rewards slowing down.
Learn more: Ha Giang Motorbike Rental
There is no single right way to ride Ha Giang to Cao Bang. It comes down to how much you want to be in control of the bike versus how much you just want to soak in the views. Here is the honest breakdown.
You sit on the back of a semi automatic bike, an experienced local driver handles everything: navigation, road reading, that truck coming round a blind corner. Your only job is to look around and take photos. Over five days and some of the more remote Cao Bang passes, this is the format that lets you enjoy the scenery instead of managing it. It is the most popular choice on this route for good reason.
Learn more: Ha Giang Loop Self-Drive
You ride your own bike. This is the purest version of the trip and hugely rewarding if you have real riding experience and the right documentation. Be clear eyed about it though: the Meo Vac to Bao Lac section is more remote and less forgiving than the standard Loop, and the passes are long. This route rewards confident riders and is not the place to learn. Requirements and rules can change, so confirm what you need before you go.
Learn more: Ha Giang Loop by Wrangler Rubicon Jeep
Prefer comfort, riding with family, traveling with someone who does not want to be on a motorbike, or worried about weather? A jeep covers every single stop the motorbike tours do, with a guide handling everything and a roof for the rainy days. For a group of three or four the per person cost gets competitive, and nobody arrives exhausted. You miss none of the sights by not being on two wheels.
Here is a quick way to compare them:
| Mode | Best for | Effort level |
|---|---|---|
| Easy rider | Most travelers who want the motorbike feel without the stress | Low, you are a passenger |
| Self drive | Experienced riders with proper documentation | High, five days of mountain riding |
| Jeep | Families, non riders, older travelers, all weather comfort | Very low, fully relaxed |
Learn more: Ha Giang Loop Easy Rider
Quick decision guide:
Still not sure which mode fits your group? Message us on WhatsApp with your dates and who is coming, and we will tell you straight which format works best. No hard sell.
Learn more: Best time to visit Cao Bang
The short answer: the shoulder months around autumn are hard to beat. The longer answer depends on what you want to see.
September to November is the classic window. The rice terraces turn gold in late September into October, Ha Giang’s buckwheat flowers bloom around October and November, the air is clear, and the mountains show off. This is peak scenery on both sides of the trip.
December to February is cold, sometimes very cold in the high country, with mist rolling through the passes and the chance of frost up on Phia Oac. It is quieter and atmospheric if you pack for it.
March to May brings green hills, warming days, and the wildflowers coming back. A good all rounder.
May to August is the wet season in the northeast. This is when Ban Gioc Waterfall runs at its fullest and most powerful, which is a real draw, but it is also when mountain roads can get muddy and landslides are more likely on the remote sections. If you ride in these months, build in buffer time and check the latest road updates before each leg.
Weather in these mountains turns fast and roads change with it, so whatever the season, check current conditions rather than trusting a forecast from a week ago.
Learn more: Ha Giang Loop Price
Costs depend heavily on how you travel, so rather than throw a fake number at you, here is how to think about it.
A guided tour (easy rider or jeep) usually bundles the big line items into one price: bike or vehicle, fuel, driver or guide, homestays and hotels, most meals, entrance tickets, and the logistics of moving your luggage and ending in Cao Bang. That predictability is a big part of the appeal on a five day trip crossing two regions.
Self drive can look cheaper on paper, but it comes with a real catch on this route (more on that in the next section), plus you carry fuel, food, rooms, tickets, and any repairs yourself.
Prices change with season and group size, so for the current rate on any format, check the tour page or send us a quick message for a quote tailored to your dates and group. We will give you a clear, itemised number rather than a vague range.
See current pricing and departures on our Ha Giang to Cao Bang combo tour page, or get a fast WhatsApp quote.
Learn more: Ha Giang Border Area Permit 2026
A few things that regularly trip people up on this route.
One way motorbike rental is the big one. If you plan to rent a bike in Ha Giang and drop it in Cao Bang, know that most rental shops do not allow drop offs outside Ha Giang, so a one way self drive rental is very hard to arrange. This is the single most common reason travelers end up booking a guided easy rider, jeep, or a full self drive package where the operator solves the bike logistics. If self drive matters to you, sort the one way question before anything else.
Border permits. Ban Gioc sits on the border, and parts of the far north like Lung Cu are border zones too. Permit requirements for these areas do come and go, and a good operator arranges them for you as part of the trip. If you travel independently, check the latest updates on what is currently required.
Getting there and back. Most people reach Ha Giang City from Hanoi by night bus or limousine van, then start the trip. On the far end, Cao Bang City has overnight buses back to Hanoi, which is exactly why the combo makes sense: no backtracking. Book your onward bus with a little buffer in case a riding day runs long.
Documentation for self drive. If you self drive, you are responsible for having the correct licence and documents to ride legally in Vietnam. The rules can change and enforcement varies, so confirm current requirements before you rely on them. Do not assume.
Pack for mountains, not beaches. A rough quick list:
Common mistakes to avoid. Do not try to cram the combo into too few days: this is mountain riding, and rushing it is how people get tired and careless. Do not book a bike you cannot actually handle on remote passes. And be a little cautious with very cheap deals that seem too good to be true; ask exactly what is included before you pay, and use an operator that answers your questions clearly.
Learn more: Explore just the Cao Bang Loop
If you are still deciding how far to go, here is the simple version.
Ride just the Ha Giang Loop if time is tight, this is your first taste of northern Vietnam, or you want a shorter trip you can build on later. Three days covers the essentials, four days lets you slow down and add villages like Du Gia.
Ride the full Ha Giang to Cao Bang combo if you want the complete northeast, you have five days or more, and the idea of finishing somewhere new instead of doubling back appeals to you. It is more committing, and it is the version people talk about for years.
Either way, you are in for one of the best trips in the country. When you know your dates, the earlier you plan the smoother it goes, especially for jeep tours where availability is limited.
Ready to ride it? Book the Ha Giang to Cao Bang combo tour, browse our Ha Giang Loop tours if you want the shorter version first, or message us on WhatsApp and we will help you pick the right route, mode, and dates. Let’s get you up there.
Learn more: Ha Giang Loop Coporate Retreat
Five days four nights is the standard and covers all the highlights without rushing. If you want a slower pace or to add Phia Oac or Thang Hen Lake, a six day version works well. Fewer than five days means cutting real sights.
No, and that is one of the best things about this route. The trip ends in Cao Bang City, which has overnight buses straight to Hanoi, so you cross the whole northeast without riding the same road twice.
It is very difficult. Most rental shops do not allow drop offs outside Ha Giang, so one way self drive rentals are hard to arrange. This is why many riders book a guided tour or a self drive package where the operator handles the bike logistics.
Yes. The Meo Vac to Bao Lac section is more remote and less traveled, and the Cao Bang passes are long. Experienced riders will not find it technically extreme, but it demands energy over five days and help is further away if something goes wrong.
Absolutely. The jeep option covers every stop the motorbike tours do, with a guide handling everything and comfort for all weather. It suits families, older travelers, and anyone who would rather not be on two wheels.
September to November is the classic window for clear skies and golden rice. The wet season from May to August makes Ban Gioc Waterfall at its most powerful but brings muddier roads. Check current conditions before each leg whatever the season.
For most riders, yes. It is the largest waterfall in Vietnam, sits right on the Chinese border, and pairs with the nearby Nguom Ngao Cave. Seeing it is the payoff for extending the Loop east.
Some border zones, including around Ban Gioc, can require permits, and the rules change from time to time. A good operator arranges these for you. If you travel independently, check the latest updates on current requirements.
Most people take a night bus or limousine van from Hanoi to Ha Giang City, then begin the trip there. Your tour operator can advise on timing so you arrive ready to ride.
Yes for motorbike formats, where solo travelers join a group. Jeep tours usually need a minimum of two people. Message us and we will let you know current group departures.
A guided tour normally bundles the bike or vehicle, fuel, driver or guide, accommodation, most meals, entrance tickets, and luggage logistics into one price. Exact inclusions vary, so check the specific tour page or ask us for a full breakdown.
It costs more than a shorter Loop because it is longer and covers more ground, but far less than doing Ha Giang and Cao Bang as two separate trips from Hanoi. For a current, itemised price, check the tour page or ask for a quote.
Contact information for Loop Trails
Website: Loop Trails Official Website
Email: looptrailshostel@gmail.com
Hotline & WhatSapp:
+84862379288
+84938988593
Social Media:
Facebook: Loop Trails Tours Ha Giang
Instagram: Loop Trails Tours Ha Giang
TikTok: Loop Trails
Office Address: 54A Tran Phu, Ha Giang 2, Tuyen Quang
Address: 54A Tran Phu, Ha Giang 2, Tuyen Quang


Facebook X Reddit Table of Contents Learn more: Ha Giang Loop Tours Cao Bang is one of those places that rewards good

Facebook X Reddit Table of Contents Learn more: Ha Giang Loop Tours So you have decided to ride the Ha Giang Loop.