Most visitors to Vietnam try to squeeze Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City and Phu Quoc into one trip. Kerri King did the opposite. The travel writer and content creator from Aotearoa, New Zealand, parked her family in one place for nearly two weeks — and those 11 days in Hoi An turned out to be the highlight of the whole journey.
The decision started as something practical. Travelling with her nine-year-old daughter, King wanted to avoid the exhausting cycle of packing, transferring and re-checking into a new hotel every other day. So the family booked 11 nights in Hoi An and let the town set the pace.

What 11 days in Hoi An looks like
Spread across 11 days in Hoi An, the family’s routine settled into an easy rhythm: mornings cycling out to An Bang Beach, slow lunches of cao lau and white-rose dumplings, a nap through the midday heat, then lantern-lit evenings drifting through the Ancient Town. With nothing to rush toward, they could return to favourite cafés, pick up a few words of Vietnamese, and let the children set the pace. For ideas on where to wander next, our guide to the best Hoi An motorbike routes maps out five easy day trips from the old town.
That unhurried approach is exactly why slow travel in Hoi An suits families. Short, flat rides between the beach, the market and the rice paddies keep younger travellers happy, while parents get to actually relax instead of racing between transfers. By day three the nine-year-old had her own favourite smoothie stall — the kind of detail you only collect when you stay put.
Mornings at the beach, afternoons in the Ancient Town
The rhythm was gentle. Mornings were for An Bang Beach, where the family could swim and unwind without a schedule. Afternoons were for wandering the Ancient Town — the glowing yellow walls, the cascading bougainvillea and the lantern-lit lanes that make Hoi An one of the most photogenic places in Vietnam. Because nothing was rushed, every day felt like a small holiday inside the holiday.
This is exactly the kind of trip that rewards independence. With your own motorbike rental in Hoi An, you can be at the beach by sunrise, back in town for lunch and out exploring the rice fields by afternoon — all without waiting on taxis or tour timetables.
Food that turned into a love affair
Cuisine was one of King’s most memorable takeaways. Alongside international dishes, she fell for local specialties like cao lau and com ga (Hoi An chicken rice). After several rooftop coffees, she became a devoted fan of Vietnamese coconut coffee and ca phe sua da. Eleven days gave the family time to eat their way slowly through the town instead of ticking off a single famous bowl and moving on.
The people made it unforgettable
What stayed with the family most was the warmth of the locals — hotel staff who took time to braid her daughter’s hair, tailors who chatted openly, hospitality that showed up in dozens of small moments. It’s a reminder that Hoi An’s biggest attraction isn’t a monument; it’s the feeling of being welcomed.
If you’re planning your own slow trip, having a scooter or electric bike on hand makes spontaneous discovery effortless — pull over for a coffee, chase a quiet beach, or ride out to a village whenever the mood strikes.

Why 11 days in Hoi An beats a flying visit
Hoi An’s compact, UNESCO-listed Ancient Town rewards repetition. On a two-day stop you photograph the Japanese Bridge and move on; over 11 days in Hoi An you begin to recognise the shopkeepers, time your walks for the golden hour, and venture past the postcard streets into Cam Thanh’s coconut groves and the quiet lanes of Cam Kim. The extra time also takes the pressure off the weather — a rainy afternoon simply becomes a cooking class or a long lunch instead of a ruined plan.
For families, that flexibility is priceless. Children nap when they need to, parents ride out to the beach when the sun returns, and nobody is glued to a tour schedule. It is the difference between seeing Hoi An and actually living in it for a while.
FAQ
Is Hoi An worth visiting for more than a few days?
Absolutely. Many travellers find that a slower, longer stay reveals the beaches, food and countryside that day-trippers miss entirely.
What’s the best way to explore Hoi An at your own pace?
Renting a motorbike, electric scooter or bicycle gives you total freedom to move between the Ancient Town, An Bang Beach and the surrounding rice fields.
How many days do you need in Hoi An?
Two or three days covers the highlights, but as this family discovered, 11 days in Hoi An lets you swap the checklist for a real sense of place — beaches, back-lanes, food and friendships included.

Explore Hoi An your way
Ready to explore Hoi An on your own terms? Rent a motorbike, electric scooter, electric bike or bicycle at hoianit.com — free delivery to your hotel and 24/7 support!
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