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Hue, Vietnam
Hue

Thua Thien Hue (Central Vietnam)

Hue

Slot the former imperial capital in for one or two nights between Hanoi and Hoi An: give the walled Citadel a half-day, ride out to the royal tombs on the Perfume River, and arrive over the scenic Da Nang train rather than only flying.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026

Best length

1-2 nights

Airport

Phu Bai (HUI), ~15km south; or fly to Da Nang (DAD), ~95km

Airport to centre

Phu Bai taxi ~25 min; Da Nang train ~2.5h over the Hai Van Pass

Best base

South bank near Le Loi and Vo Thi Sau for restaurants

In short

Hue at a glance

Hue is best as a one- or two-night history stop, not a base: spend a half-day inside the walled Imperial City, ride out to one or two of the royal tombs on the Perfume River, and arrive or leave by the scenic Da Nang train rather than only flying. Treat the Citadel as the main event and book a tomb circuit by Grab car or boat rather than trying to walk it.

The short version

  • One or two nights is enough โ€” Hue is a day-and-a-half of imperial history, not a multi-day base like Hoi An.
  • The Imperial City (Citadel) is the must-do; the royal tombs are the worthwhile add-on, but pick two, not all seven.
  • Arrive over the Hai Van Pass from Da Nang โ€” the 2.5-hour train hugs the coast and is the prettiest leg in Vietnam.
  • Stay on the south bank near Le Loi street for walkable restaurants; the Citadel sits across the Perfume River.
  • Time it for February to May โ€” Hue takes the brunt of the autumn rains and is the wettest city on the central coast.

Hue is the history stop on the central coast, and it works best when you treat it as exactly that rather than a base. This was Vietnamโ€™s imperial capital under the Nguyen emperors, and whatโ€™s left โ€” the walled Citadel across the Perfume River, the scattered royal tombs to the south โ€” is a day and a half of measured sightseeing, not a town you settle into the way you do Hoi An an hour down the road. The mistake first-timers make is over-staying: three nights here leaves you padding, when the same nights in Hoi An would have earned their keep. Come for the Imperial City, ride out to a couple of tombs, and move on.

The other thing people get wrong is flying straight in and straight out. Hueโ€™s own Phu Bai airport is fine for a domestic hop, but the journey to or from Da Nang is half the point โ€” the coastal railway climbs over the Hai Van Pass in two and a half hours of the best window views in the country, for a couple of pounds. Train one direction, take a private car the other so you can stop at the pass and Lang Co lagoon, and youโ€™ve turned a transfer into a highlight. Below, the structured planning โ€” what the Citadel ticket covers, how to do the tombs without overpaying, and a realistic budget in pounds โ€” picks up from here.

Plan your Hue trip

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Hue

Imperial City (Hue Citadel)

Buy a combined route ticket at the Ngo Mon gate rather than separate entries: the Citadel plus any two royal tombs is โ‚ซ420,000 (about ยฃ12), or all three tombs โ‚ซ530,000 (about ยฃ15.50), versus โ‚ซ200,000 (about ยฃ5.70) for the Citadel alone โ€” far cheaper than paying โ‚ซ150,000 per tomb later. You can't pre-book online, but you don't need to: the queue at the gate is short, so the real planning is getting across the Perfume River and going early before the unshaded courtyards bake. Allow 2.5โ€“3 hours, and start at opening in summer.

2.5โ€“3 hours ยฃ5.70

Tomb of Khai Dinh

Buy your Tomb of Khai Dinh ticket on the spot at the gate โ€” it doesn't sell out, so the real decision is whether to take the single โ‚ซ150,000 entry or a combined Citadel-and-tombs ticket if you're seeing more than one. This is the most ornate of Hue's royal tombs: a steep grey concrete hillside that opens into the Thien Dinh Hall, where the walls and ceiling are covered in glass-and-porcelain mosaic. Allow about an hour, go early to beat both the tour coaches and the heat on the open steps, and reach it by Grab car or a half-day tomb tour rather than trying to walk from the centre.

About 1 hour: 10โ€“1โ€ฆ ยฃ4.70

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier โ€” not an exhaustive directory.

South bank (Le Loi / Vo Thi Sau)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The riverside strip of hotels and the walkable restaurant quarter around Vo Thi Sau and Pham Ngu Lao. The sensible first base: dinner on your doorstep and a short ride or walk over Trang Tien bridge to the Citadel.

Best for: First-timers, walkable restaurants, short stays

Browse hotels South of the Perfume River

Backpacker streets (Pham Ngu Lao / Chu Van An)

ยฃ value

The cluster of cheap guesthouses, bars and tour desks a couple of streets back from the river. Best for budget rooms and easy tomb-tour booking; livelier and noisier at night.

Best for: Budget travellers, easy tour booking

Browse hotels South bank, two streets in

Riverside resorts (An Cuu / Vy Da)

ยฃยฃยฃ premium

Quieter garden hotels and a few riverside resorts spread away from the centre, where the heritage-hotel splurges sit. Calmer and greener, at the cost of needing a Grab to reach the restaurants.

Best for: Couples, a quieter or heritage-hotel stay

Browse hotels 10-15 min by Grab

Airport to city centre

Hue airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Phu Bai (HUI) taxi or Grab to the centre ~25 min about โ‚ซ220,000-280,000 (ยฃ6-8) Simplest if you fly domestic from Hanoi or Ho Chi Minh
Da Nang (DAD) train over the Hai Van Pass ~2.5-3h about โ‚ซ80,000-120,000 soft seat (ยฃ2.30-3.40) The scenic way in โ€” the best train leg in Vietnam
Da Nang (DAD) private car via the coast road ~2-2.5h about โ‚ซ1,200,000-1,500,000 (ยฃ34-43) one way Lets you stop at the Hai Van Pass and Lang Co
Da Nang (DAD) shared shuttle / limousine van ~2h about โ‚ซ150,000-200,000 per seat (ยฃ4.30-5.70) Cheapest road option, door to door
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: February to May is Hue's window: dry, warm and before the heavy autumn rains. The city is the wettest on the central coast, so its season is shorter than Hoi An's just down the road.

Hue is hot and mostly dry from February to August, then takes a battering in the September-to-December wet season, when October and November can flood the lower streets and the tombs turn to mud. July and August are very hot and humid for tramping round an unshaded citadel. The two-yearly Hue Festival (next in 2026) brings parades and river events but books out the riverside hotels, so check the dates before you fix a stay.

What it costs

There are no direct UK flights to Hue โ€” you reach it via a long-haul flight to Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City or Da Nang (Heathrow direct on Vietnam Airlines from around ยฃ790 return), then a ~ยฃ35-60 internal flight to Phu Bai or the train/car from Da Nang. Most people fold Hue into a wider Vietnam trip rather than flying to it directly.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 2-night mid-range stop in Hue for one person is roughly ยฃ120-ยฃ190 on the ground (excluding the international flight): ยฃ60-ยฃ110 hotel, ยฃ25-ยฃ40 food and Grab rides, and ยฃ20-ยฃ40 for the Citadel, two royal tombs and a Perfume River boat. Budget travellers staying in guesthouses and eating bun bo Hue at the market can do it for well under ยฃ80.

Hue is cheaper than Hanoi or Hoi An and the sights are inexpensive โ€” the combined Citadel-and-tombs ticket from โ‚ซ420,000 (about ยฃ12) is the single biggest spend. The cost that creeps up is transport to the tombs, so share a Grab-car circuit or a tour rather than paying for each leg.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Trains & rail passes

Book railvia Trainline

Also in Vietnam

See the full Vietnam guide

Hue FAQs

How long do you need in Hue?
One full day covers the headline sights โ€” a morning in the Imperial City and an afternoon tomb circuit โ€” so most people stay one or two nights and treat Hue as the history stop between Hanoi and Hoi An. Add a second night only if you want a slow Perfume River boat day or you're waiting on the weather.
Should I travel between Hue and Da Nang by train or car?
Take the train at least one way. The 2.5-to-3-hour Hue-Da Nang line hugs the coast over the Hai Van Pass and is the prettiest rail leg in Vietnam, with a soft seat about โ‚ซ80,000-120,000 (ยฃ2.30-3.40). A private car (about โ‚ซ1,200,000+) is faster door to door and lets you stop at the pass viewpoint and Lang Co, so many people train one direction and drive the other.
Is the Imperial City in Hue worth visiting?
Yes, with realistic expectations. The walled Citadel was heavily bombed in 1968 and is still being restored, so it's a mix of grand restored gates and empty foundations rather than a fully intact palace. Go for the scale, the Ngo Mon gate and the inner Forbidden Purple City, allow 2.5-3 hours, and pair it with a couple of the royal tombs for the full imperial-Hue picture.

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