The best Hoi An cycling routes are not in the Ancient Town — they start where the tour buses stop. Hoi An sits on a flat coastal plain with no hills, a dense web of concrete farm lanes, and rice paddies, rivers, herb gardens and beaches all inside a 10 km radius. And there is one advantage no motorbike guide will tell you: bicycles are allowed inside the pedestrian zone when motorbikes are banned.
This guide maps five Hoi An cycling routes turn by turn — from a 5 km warm-up loop to a 30 km countryside circuit. Each one has real distances, honest timings, surface notes, where to stop, and a Google Maps link you can open on your phone. No vague “just head north” advice.
📌 CYCLING IN HOI AN — QUICK FACTS
Why Hoi An is Vietnam’s best town for cycling
Most Vietnamese cities are hostile to bicycles. Hoi An is the exception, and it is why the Hoi An cycling routes below work for absolute beginners. Four concrete reasons:
1It is genuinely flat
Hoi An sits on the Thu Bon delta. Every route in this guide has essentially zero elevation gain. You do not need gears, fitness or technique — you need a saddle and a morning.
2The good stuff is close
Herb village at 3 km. Beach at 5 km. Coconut forest at 6 km. Pottery village at 3 km. Almost nowhere else in Vietnam packs this much variety inside one easy ride.
3Farm lanes, not highways
The countryside is laced with 2-metre concrete lanes built for farmers. Cars physically cannot use them. You will share them with scooters, buffalo and not much else.
4Bicycles beat the Old Town ban
This is the big one. When the pedestrian zone closes to motorbikes, bicycles still roll straight through. A cyclist in Hoi An has more access than a rider — the opposite of everywhere else.
Before you ride: the Old Town rule that shapes every Hoi An cycling route
Hoi An closes its Ancient Town core to vehicles in blocks through the day. Most guides explain this for motorbike riders and skip what it means for cyclists — which is the more useful half.
| Time window | Cars | Motorbikes | Bicycles |
|---|---|---|---|
| Before 09:00 | Banned | Allowed | Allowed |
| 09:00 – 11:30 | Banned | Banned | Allowed |
| 11:30 – 15:00 | Banned | Allowed | Allowed |
| 15:00 – 21:30 | Banned | Banned | Allowed |
| After 21:30 | Banned | Allowed | Allowed |
Full detail on the current schedule is in our guide to Hoi An Old Town vehicle restriction hours.
The 5 best Hoi An cycling routes at a glance
| # | Route | Distance | Time | Difficulty | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Ancient Town & Cam Nam warm-up | ~5 km | 45 min | Very easy | First ride, testing the bike, sunset |
| 2 | Tra Que & An Bang Beach loop | ~12 km | Half day | Easy | The classic. Do this one first. |
| 3 | Cam Thanh coconut forest loop | ~13 km | Half day | Easy | Water scenery, basket boats |
| 4 | Thanh Ha Pottery & Cam Kim Island | ~22 km | Half–full day | Moderate | Craft villages, ferry, fewest tourists |
| 5 | The full countryside circuit | ~30 km | Full day | Moderate | Anyone with a whole day and a decent bike |
Route 1 — Ancient Town & Cam Nam warm-up loop (5 km)
| Distance | ~5 km | Time | 45 min – 1 hr |
| Difficulty | Very easy | Surface | Paved throughout |
| Best time | 16:00 – 17:30, so you end with the lanterns coming on | ||
Do this on your first afternoon — it is the gentlest of the Hoi An cycling routes here. It is short, it is impossible to get lost, and it tells you whether your saddle height is right before you commit to 20 km.
Turn by turn
- 0.0 kmStart: Japanese Covered BridgeHead east along Tran Phu — the spine of the Old Town. Slow. This is a pedestrian zone in the afternoon, so ride at walking pace and expect to weave.
- 0.8 kmTurn right onto Hoang Van Thu, then right again to the riverfrontYou pop out on Bach Dang, the river road. The boats, the market, the noise.
- 1.3 kmCross the Cam Nam BridgeSmall bridge on your right heading south. The moment you cross it the tourist density halves.
- 2.0 kmLoop Cam Nam island anticlockwiseA single lane rings the island past vegetable plots and riverside cafés. Stop at any of them — this is where Hoi An eats banh dap (smashed rice cracker) and che bap (corn sweet soup).
- 4.0 kmRecross the bridge, turn left along Bach DangRide the river west into the sun.
- 5.0 kmFinish: back at the Japanese BridgeLanterns should be on by now.
Route 2 — Tra Que & An Bang Beach loop (12 km)
| Distance | ~12 km loop | Time | 3 – 4 hrs with stops |
| Difficulty | Easy | Surface | Paved + concrete farm lanes |
| Best time | Leave at 06:00. Seriously. | ||
This is the definitive Hoi An cycling route, and the reason is timing: leave at six and you hit Tra Que exactly as the farmers start watering, reach the beach before the sun turns cruel, and are back in town for lunch. Leave at ten and you get a hot, empty version of the same ride.
Turn by turn
- 0.0 kmStart: north end of the Old Town, onto Hai Ba TrungHead north. This is the main artery towards Da Nang — a bit of traffic for the first kilometre, then it thins out fast.
- 3.0 kmCross the first bridge → Tra Que Vegetable Village on your rightTicket 35,000 VND. Park at the gate. Walk the beds — do not cycle on them.
- 3.0 – 4.5 kmRide the village lanesBrick paths between the herb beds. No cars can get in here. This is the prettiest 1.5 km of cycling in Hoi An.
- 6.0 kmExit east towards An Bang BeachLeave Tra Que on the eastern lane and follow the signs. Rice paddies, occasional buffalo, no traffic.
- 7.5 kmAn Bang BeachFree public access at the main entrance. Coffee, breakfast or a swim. Bike parking at every café for a few thousand dong.
- 9.0 kmHead south on the coast road (Lac Long Quan)Sea on your left the whole way. Flat, wide, quiet in the morning.
- 12.0 kmTurn inland on Cua Dai road → back to the Old TownStraight shot west. You are back before the heat.
Full detail on the village itself: Tra Que Vegetable Village guide.
Route 3 — Cam Thanh coconut forest loop (13 km)
| Distance | ~13 km return | Time | 3 – 4 hrs with stops |
| Difficulty | Easy | Surface | Paved + narrow concrete lanes |
| Best time | 06:30 – 10:00, or 15:30 onwards | ||
Of the five Hoi An cycling routes here, Route 2 is rice and sea. This one is water — nipa palm channels, basket boats, crab traps and a river delta that looks nothing like the rest of Vietnam. It is the same effort as Route 2 in a completely different landscape.
Turn by turn
- 0.0 kmStart: Old Town, east on Nguyen Duy Hieu → Cua Dai roadHead southeast. Wide road, moderate traffic for 2 km.
- 2.5 kmTurn right onto Tran Nhan TongThis is the turn most people miss. It drops you into Cam Thanh and the traffic disappears within 200 m.
- 4.0 kmNipa palm channels startThe lane narrows to about two metres and water appears on both sides. Slow down — this is the scenery, not the commute.
- 6.0 kmBay Mau Coconut ForestBasket boat rides are the headline attraction. Be warned: the “party boats” here are loud, with speakers and spinning. If you want the quiet version, ask for a plain paddle without music, or just skip the boat and ride the lanes.
- 6.0 – 9.0 kmWander the Cam Thanh lanesA grid of farm tracks between the channels. Genuinely hard to get lost — the river bounds you east, the main road west.
- 10.0 kmRejoin Cua Dai road heading westOr continue 2 km east to Cua Dai Beach if you want a swim.
- 13.0 kmFinish: Old Town
Route 4 — Thanh Ha Pottery & Cam Kim Island loop (22 km)
| Distance | ~22 km loop | Time | Half to full day |
| Difficulty | Moderate | Surface | Paved + long stretches of farm lane |
| Best time | Start 07:00. Bring water — few shops on Cam Kim. | ||
This is the Hoi An cycling route for people who have already done the beach loop and want to know where the tourists aren’t. Cam Kim is an island in the Thu Bon river, reachable by bridge, and it is the closest thing to 1990s Hoi An still standing.
Turn by turn
- 0.0 kmStart: Old Town, west along the riverFollow Bach Dang then Nguyen Thi Minh Khai past the Japanese Bridge, heading west.
- 3.0 kmThanh Ha Pottery VillageA working pottery village, 500+ years old. Watch a wheel, buy a whistle, keep moving.
- 5.0 kmSouth over the Cam Kim BridgeThe bridge is the gateway. Once across, traffic essentially stops.
- 7.0 kmKim Bong Carpentry VillageHoi An’s oldest craft village — the boatyard is the real draw. Wooden fishing boats built by hand, exactly as they were built for the merchants 400 years ago.
- 8.0 – 16.0 kmCircle Cam Kim island clockwiseThe best 8 km in this guide. Rice fields, mat weaving, a market, no cafés, no signs in English, no one selling you anything. Just follow the perimeter lane — it loops.
- 17.0 kmBack over the bridge northOr, if you time it right, take the small passenger ferry from Cam Kim directly to the Old Town — bicycles ride free or for a few thousand dong. Ask at the jetty.
- 22.0 kmFinish: Old Town
Route 5 — The full countryside circuit (30 km)
| Distance | ~30 km | Time | Full day |
| Difficulty | Moderate | Surface | Mixed — some rough lane |
| Best time | 06:00 start, long lunch, home by 15:00 | ||
Three Hoi An cycling routes — 2, 3 and 4 — stitched into one day. Still flat, but 30 km on a 50,000 VND town bike with no gears is a real day out — this is the one route where an e-bike genuinely earns its rental price.
The shape of it
- 06:00 · 0 kmOld Town → Tra QueSunrise at the herb beds while the farmers water.
- 07:30 · 7 kmTra Que → An Bang BeachBreakfast facing the sea.
- 09:00 · 12 kmAn Bang → Cua Dai on the coast roadSea on your left, flat and fast.
- 10:00 · 17 kmCua Dai → Cam Thanh coconut forestInland into the water channels.
- 11:30 · 22 kmCam Thanh → Cam NamLunch on the island. Banh dap and a long sit.
- 14:00 · 26 kmCam Nam → Thanh HaWest along the river for the pottery village.
- 15:00 · 30 kmThanh Ha → Old TownRoll in as the lanterns go up. You have earned it.
Bicycle or e-bike for these routes?
| Route | Distance | Plain bicycle | Electric bike |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 — Ancient Town loop | 5 km | ✓ Perfect | Overkill |
| 2 — Tra Que & An Bang | 12 km | ✓ Ideal | Nice in summer heat |
| 3 — Coconut forest | 13 km | ✓ Ideal | Nice in summer heat |
| 4 — Cam Kim island | 22 km | Doable if you’re fit | ✓ Recommended |
| 5 — Full circuit | 30 km | Hard work | ✓ Strongly recommended |
The honest rule across all five Hoi An cycling routes: under 15 km, take the plain bicycle — it’s cheaper, lighter and there is nothing to run out of. Over 20 km, or in April–August heat, take the e-bike. Our full breakdown: bicycle vs e-bike vs motorbike in Hoi An.
What to bring on a Hoi An cycling route
1More water than you think
1.5 litres minimum for anything over 10 km. Routes 4 and 5 have long stretches with no shops.
2Sunscreen and a hat under the helmet
The farm lanes have zero shade. Reapply at the beach.
3Small cash
Tra Que ticket, bike parking, ferry, roadside drinks. Nowhere out here takes cards.
4Offline map
Download the Hoi An area in Google Maps before you go. Signal drops on Cam Kim.
5A rain jacket, Oct–Dec
Hoi An’s rainy season is sudden and total. The lanes flood fast.
6Your accommodation’s name written down
Not the address — the name. Everyone knows the hotels; nobody navigates by street number.
Safety tips for Hoi An cycling routes
- Traffic flows around you, not at you. Ride predictably in a straight line and let scooters filter past. Sudden swerves are what cause accidents here, not speed.
- Right of way goes to the bigger vehicle. That is not the law, it is the practice. Never assume a bus or truck will yield.
- Wear a helmet even though you don’t have to. Vietnamese law requires helmets on motorbikes, not bicycles. Wear one anyway.
- Don’t ride after dark on farm lanes. No lighting, no reflectors, deep drainage ditches on both sides. Be back on paved road by sunset.
- Watch for sand on the coast road. Blown sand on tarmac behaves like gravel in a corner.
- Buffalo have right of way. Stop, wait, let them pass. Do not ring your bell at them.
🚲 Rent a bicycle in Hoi An with Anh Khoa
Every route in this guide starts from your hotel door. We deliver bicycles, e-bikes and scooters across central Hoi An — free — and pick them up when you’re done.
- Bicycles from 50,000 VND/day (~$2)
- Electric bikes from 200,000 VND/day
- Free delivery to your hotel or homestay
- Helmet and lock included
- 24/7 support if anything breaks mid-route
- Up to 30% off booking online
Prefer an engine for these Hoi An cycling routes? See our motorbike routes around Hoi An, or read why bicycles are the best way to explore Hoi An. Also useful: delivery fees, current deals and rental FAQs.
Hoi An cycling routes FAQ
What are the best cycling routes in Hoi An?
The five best Hoi An cycling routes are: the Ancient Town & Cam Nam loop (5 km), the Tra Que & An Bang Beach loop (12 km), the Cam Thanh coconut forest loop (13 km), the Thanh Ha Pottery & Cam Kim Island loop (22 km) and the full countryside circuit (30 km). If you only ride one, ride the Tra Que & An Bang loop.
Can you cycle in Hoi An Ancient Town?
Yes. Bicycles are permitted in the pedestrian zone at all normal hours, including the 09:00–11:30 and 15:00–21:30 blocks when motorbikes and cars are banned. The one exception is full-moon lantern nights, when all wheeled transport including bicycles is banned roughly 16:00–21:00.
How much does bicycle rental cost in Hoi An?
From 50,000 VND per day (about $2) for a standard town bicycle, and from 200,000 VND per day for an electric bike. Many hotels include a free bicycle with the room — worth asking before you rent.
Is cycling in Hoi An safe?
Yes. By Vietnamese standards the Hoi An cycling routes are unusually safe: the terrain is flat, the countryside lanes are too narrow for cars, and traffic moves slowly. The real risks are heat and dehydration rather than collisions. Ride predictably, wear a helmet, carry water, and avoid unlit farm lanes after dark.
Is Hoi An flat for cycling?
Completely. Every one of these Hoi An cycling routes is flat — the town sits on the Thu Bon river delta on a coastal plain. None of them require gears or cycling fitness.
What is the best time of day to cycle in Hoi An?
For every one of the Hoi An cycling routes in this guide, 06:00 – 08:30 is the best window — cool, golden light, farmers working, empty lanes. The second-best is 16:00 – 17:30. Avoid 10:00–15:00 between April and August: the farm lanes have no shade at all.
How far is An Bang Beach from Hoi An by bicycle?
About 5 km, roughly 20–25 minutes at a relaxed pace on flat roads. Going via Tra Que Vegetable Village makes it about 7.5 km and turns a transfer into the best ride in Hoi An.
Do I need an e-bike or is a normal bicycle enough?
For anything under 15 km — Routes 1, 2 and 3 — a plain bicycle is ideal and cheaper. For the 22 km Cam Kim loop or the 30 km full circuit, or for riding in April–August heat, an electric bike is worth the extra.
Can you cycle from Hoi An to Da Nang?
You can — it’s about 30 km along the coast road and flat the whole way — but it is not one of the Hoi An cycling routes in this guide because it isn’t a pleasant ride. The route is exposed, busy with resort traffic and there’s nothing to stop for. If you want to get to Da Nang, take a motorbike or a car.
Where can I rent a bicycle in Hoi An?
Anh Khoa Hoi An delivers bicycles and electric bikes free to hotels, homestays and resorts across central Hoi An, from 50,000 VND per day with helmet and lock included. Many hotels also lend bicycles free — but they’re often heavy single-speeds better suited to Route 1 than Route 4.
Final thoughts
The best Hoi An cycling routes reward one thing above all: getting up early. The same 12 km that is a hot slog at 11:00 is the best morning of your trip at 06:30 — mist on the herb beds, farmers filling their watering cans, buffalo in the paddies, and the beach to yourself. The bike costs two dollars. The alarm clock is the actual price.
Start with Route 2. If you finish it wanting more, you have four more Hoi An cycling routes to go — and a whole flat delta that most visitors never see past the lantern shops. Grab a bicycle from Anh Khoa, set an alarm for 05:45, and go. 🚲
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