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Fansipan Cable Car, Vietnam
Fansipan Cable Car

Lao Cai

Fansipan Cable Car

How to ride the Fansipan cable car from Sapa: the โ‚ซ800,000 fare, the funicular to the summit steps, and why the mountain forecast matters more than your booking.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 10 Jun 2026

Where

Sapa, Vietnam

Opening hours

The cable car runs daily, roughly 07:30โ€“17:30, with the last car up usually around 16:30. The Muong Hoa funicular from the upper station runs on a similar schedule. Confirm your date on fansipanlegend.sunworld.vn, as the last-car time tightens in winter.

Tickets

Adult cable-car round trip about โ‚ซ800,000 (~ยฃ23); child (height 1.0โ€“1.4m) about โ‚ซ550,000 (~ยฃ16); under-1.0m free. The Muong Hoa funicular up to the summit steps is a separate add-on of about โ‚ซ150,000 (~ยฃ4) return. Prices use ยฃ1 โ‰ˆ โ‚ซ35,000 (June 2026).

Time needed

Half a day, including the ride up, time at the summit complex and the climb or funicular to the peak; add about 10 minutes' walk or a short buggy ride from central Sapa to the station.

In short

Visiting Fansipan Cable Car

The Fansipan cable car runs from the Sun World station in central Sapa to a complex just below Indochina's highest peak at 3,143m, climbing about 1,410m of vertical in roughly 15 minutes โ€” a Guinness-record three-rope ropeway. The โ‚ซ800,000 round-trip fare gets you to the upper station, but the final 600-odd steps to the true summit are still a climb, or you pay extra for the Muong Hoa funicular that cuts most of them out. The single biggest decision is the weather: the cable car runs in any conditions, so on a cloudy day you pay full price to stand in a white-out at the top. Check the mountain forecast the morning you go and ride the first car around 07:30 for the best chance of a clear view.

How to ride it without wasting the fare

The Sun World Fansipan Legend station sits right in central Sapa, about a 10-minute walk from the lake and stone church, so this isnโ€™t a separate excursion โ€” you can do it from a lie-in. A short Hoang Lien mountain train shuttles you the last stretch to the cable-car base, then the ropeway itself climbs about 1,410m of vertical to the upper station in roughly 15 minutes. It holds Guinness records as the longest three-rope cable car of its kind, and on a clear morning the haul over the Hoang Lien Son range is the spectacle, not the summit pagodas.

The adult round trip is about โ‚ซ800,000 (~ยฃ23), which gets you to the upper station at around 3,000m and the landscaped complex of pagodas and the giant bronze Buddha. The true peak at 3,143m is still a climb of roughly 600 steps from there; if your knees object, the Muong Hoa funicular removes most of them for about โ‚ซ150,000 (~ยฃ4) more. Children between 1.0 and 1.4m tall pay a reduced fare and under-1.0m go free.

Clear sky or donโ€™t bother

Ride the first car around 07:30. The cable car runs daily from about 07:30 to 17:30 whatever the weather, and that is exactly the trap: on a cloudy day you pay the full โ‚ซ800,000 to stand in a white-out at the top with nothing to see. The mountain clouds in from late morning far more often than not, so check the Fansipan forecast the morning you plan to go and decide on the day rather than locking in a fixed date. Late August to mid-September and the spring months of March to May give you the best odds of an open sky.

Worth it on a clear day, a waste of the fare in fog. The engineering and the view are the draw โ€” the summit complex itself is a built tourist development rather than a remote mountaintop, with shops and snack stalls at the top, so come for the ride and the panorama, not solitude. If the forecast is socked in, spend the morning on a Muong Hoa Valley trek instead and save Fansipan for a clearer window. Most visitors book it as a guided half-day with hotel pickup; if you self-drive the mountain roads up here, note a UK licence isnโ€™t valid to ride a motorbike in Vietnam, which is also GOV.UKโ€™s standing advice.

Planning the rest of your trip? See the Sapa city guide.

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Fansipan Cable Car FAQs

How much is the Fansipan cable car and what does the ticket cover?
The adult round-trip cable-car fare is about โ‚ซ800,000 (~ยฃ23), with reduced child rates and free entry under 1.0m tall. That covers the ropeway to the upper station at around 3,000m and the landscaped summit complex with its pagodas and giant Buddha. Reaching the true 3,143m peak means either climbing roughly 600 steps or paying about โ‚ซ150,000 (~ยฃ4) more for the short Muong Hoa funicular, which removes most of them.
Is the Fansipan cable car worth it?
Only on a clear day. The ropeway is a genuine feat of engineering and the view over the Hoang Lien Son range is extraordinary when the sky is open. The catch is that it runs in any weather, so in cloud you pay the full โ‚ซ800,000 to stand in fog at the top with nothing to see. Check the mountain forecast the morning you plan to go and decide then, rather than pre-booking a fixed date and hoping.
How do you get to the Fansipan cable car from Sapa town?
The Sun World Fansipan Legend station sits right in central Sapa, about a 10-minute walk from the lake and stone church, so you don't need a separate trip out. From the station, the optional Hoang Lien mountain train trundles a short way to the cable-car base before you board the ropeway itself. Ride the first car around 07:30 to beat both the domestic tour groups and the midday cloud that often closes the summit in.

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