expedia
One Key

Earn OneKeyCash when you sign in and book an activity

Discover Hanoi: A Self-Guided Tour

By CloudGuide S.L
Free cancellation available
Price is CA $11 per adult

Features

  • Free cancellation available
  • 9h 30m
  • Mobile voucher
  • Instant confirmation

Overview

Discover Hanoi's timeless elegance and revolutionary spirit with your self-guided audio tour, allowing you to explore Vietnam's ancient capital at your own pace. Begin at the serene Hoan Kiem Lake where the legendary golden turtle reclaimed the emperor's sword. Wander through the Old Quarter where 36 guild streets have specialised in their traditional trades—silk, tin, paper, medicine—for over a 1000 years. Marvel at the Temple of Literature, Vietnam's first university where scholars pursued Confucian learning from 1070 until French colonisation disrupted centuries of tradition. Explore the Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum complex where the revolutionary leader's embalmed body rests, Discover the elegant French Quarter where tree-lined boulevards, colonial villas, and the magnificent Opera House recall the era when Hanoi served as the capital of French Indochina. Experience the water puppet theatre's thousand-year-old art form, then lose yourself in the sensory chaos of Dong Xuan Market.

Activity location

  • Temple Ngoc Son
    • P. Dinh Tien Hoang, Hang Tr_ng, Hoan Ki_m, Ha N_i, Viet Nam
    • Hanoi, Vietnam

Meeting/Redemption Point

  • Ngoc Son Temple
    • Phố Đinh Tiên Hoàng
    • Hoàn Kiếm, Hà Nội, Vietnam

Check availability

Discover Hanoi: A Self-Guided Tour
  • Activity duration is 9 hours and 30 minutes9h 30m
    9h 30m
  • English
Language options: English
Price details
CA $11.34 x 1 AdultCA $11.34
Total
Price is CA $11.34

What's included, what's not

  • What's includedWhat's included
    Access to the audio guide for 50+ Hanoi attractions and hidden spots.
  • What's includedWhat's included
    Offline content.
  • What's includedWhat's included
    Self-guided walking tour (app)
  • What's excludedWhat's excluded
    Private transport
  • What's excludedWhat's excluded
    Entry fees to tourist attractions or museums.
  • What's excludedWhat's excluded
    Our app-based self-guided tour has no physical guide on-site.

Know before you book

  • Not recommended for travellers with spinal injuries
  • Not recommended for travellers with poor cardiovascular health
  • Public transport options are available nearby
  • Suitable for all physical fitness levels

Activity itinerary

Temple Ngoc Son

  • 30m
The spiritual and geographic heart of Hanoi surrounds a lake whose legend tells of a golden turtle that surfaced to reclaim a magical sword the emperor had used to defeat Chinese invaders. The Ngoc Son Temple, reached by the iconic red Huc Bridge, occupies a small island where worshippers honour the scholar saint Van Xuong and the 13th-century general Tran Hung Dao who repelled Mongol armies. Dawn brings elderly residents for tai chi and badminton while dusk attracts strolling couples and families who make the lakeside circuit a daily ritual that reveals Hanoi at its most peaceful.

Hang Gai Street (Street of Hemp)

  • 1h
Hanoi's ancient commercial heart has specialised in guild-based trades since the 11th century, its narrow streets still named for the products traditionally sold there—Hang Bac (Silver Street), Hang Gai (Silk Street), Hang Ma (Paper Street). The quarter's tube houses, built narrow to minimise taxes assessed by street frontage, extend deep into blocks where family workshops continue producing goods by traditional methods. Navigating the maze of motorbikes, vendors, and tourists requires patience, but the sensory overload of commerce, cooking, and daily life rewards

Temple of Literature & National University

  • 30m
Vietnam's first university educated the nation's elite for 700 years beginning in 1070, its five courtyards progressing through ceremonial gates to the temple where Confucius and his disciples receive veneration from students seeking academic success. The 82 stone stelae mounted on tortoise bases record the names of doctorate graduates from 1442 to 1779, representing the Confucian meritocracy that governed Vietnamese society until French colonisation. The complex's peaceful gardens, bonsai trees, and refined architecture provide refuge from Hanoi's frenetic streets while students photograph each other before examinations, hoping the scholars' spirits will grant them wisdom.

Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum (Pass by)

The embalmed body of Vietnam's revolutionary leader has rested in this granite mausoleum since 1975, despite Ho Chi Minh's explicit wish to be cremated and scattered across the country he united. The austere Soviet-style structure dominates Ba Dinh Square where Ho declared independence in 1945, and visiting requires joining the silent procession that files past the glass sarcophagus in an atmosphere of enforced solemnity. The surrounding complex includes the Presidential Palace, Ho's simple stilt house, and the Ho Chi Minh Museum, creating a pilgrimage destination that reveals how Vietnam honours and mythologizes its founding father.

One Pillar Pagoda

  • 30m
This iconic Buddhist temple rises from a single stone pillar in a lotus pond, its design inspired by Emperor Ly Thai Tong's 1049 dream of the Bodhisattva of Mercy presenting him a son on a lotus flower. The original pagoda was destroyed by the French in 1954 and reconstructed by the new communist government, its modest scale belying its spiritual significance as one of Vietnam's most revered Buddhist sites. The temple's location within the Ho Chi Minh complex means most visitors encounter it while exploring the mausoleum grounds, though early morning visits capture the pagoda in peaceful solitude before tour groups arrive.

French Quarter

  • 1h
The broad tree-lined boulevards south of Hoan Kiem Lake preserve the colonial urban planning that transformed Hanoi into a showcase of French Indochina during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The Hanoi Opera House, modelled on the Palais Garnier in Paris, anchors a district of government buildings, embassies, and elegant villas that reveal the confidence of French imperial architecture. Today's French Quarter mixes official buildings with upscale hotels, restaurants, and boutiques that cater to visitors seeking Hanoi's more refined pleasures away from the Old Quarter's overwhelming energy.

Hanoi Opera House

  • 30m
This faithful replica of the Palais Garnier, completed in 1911, served as the cultural centre of French Indochina and witnessed the revolutionary events of 1945 when the Viet Minh seized power and proclaimed independence from the opera's balcony. The building's ornate neo-baroque facade, grand staircase, and lavish interior represent colonial ambition at its most confident, while today's programming includes opera, ballet, symphony, and traditional Vietnamese performances. Evening performances provide the best opportunity to experience the

Dong Xuan Market

  • 1h
Hanoi's largest covered market has anchored the northern Old Quarter since 1889, its Soviet-era reconstruction housing three floors of wholesale goods that supply retailers throughout northern Vietnam. The ground floor's fresh produce, meat, and fish sections provide the most authentic market experience while upper floors sell textiles, electronics, and household goods at prices that reveal the wholesale nature of commerce here. The surrounding streets extend the market's reach with specialised traders whose goods spill onto pavements in the chaotic abundance that has characterised Hanoi commerce for centuries.

Hoa Lo Prison (Pass by)

Built by the French in 1896 to imprison Vietnamese revolutionaries, this prison gained international notoriety during the American War when it housed captured pilots including future senator John McCain. The museum's exhibits present dramatically different perspectives—Vietnamese revolutionary martyrdom versus American POW experience—reflecting the contested memories that still surround the conflict. The remaining gatehouse and preserved cells provide a sobering reminder of colonial oppression and wartime suffering, with exhibits on both periods revealing how different nations construct historical narratives.

St. Joseph's Cathedral

  • 30m
Hanoi's neo-Gothic cathedral was completed in 1886 on the site of a demolished Buddhist pagoda, its twin towers and stained glass windows representing the confident Catholicism of French colonial missionaries. The cathedral remains an active parish serving Hanoi's Catholic community, its weekend masses filling the nave while the surrounding plaza has become a popular gathering spot for young Hanoians who come for the cafes, ice cream shops, and people-watching. The church's Parisian atmosphere and the lively street scene surrounding it create one of the Old Quarter's most appealing destinations.

Tay Ho

  • 30m
Hanoi's largest lake has attracted royalty, poets, and pleasure-seekers since the city's founding, its shores now lined with pagodas, restaurants, and the upscale residential developments that house the city's expatriate and elite Vietnamese communities. The Tran Quoc Pagoda, dating to the 6th century, occupies a small island and ranks among Vietnam's most sacred Buddhist sites while the Quan Thanh Temple honours a Taoist deity who defended the city from northern invaders. The lakeside promenade offers escape from central Hanoi's intensity while restaurants serving fresh seafood and traditional Vietnamese cuisine draw diners for sunset views.

Thang Long Water Puppet Theatre

  • 1h
This thousand-year-old Vietnamese art form brings wooden puppets to life on a waist-deep water stage, their handlers hidden behind a bamboo screen while a traditional orchestra provides music and narration. The performances depict agricultural life, folk tales, and historical legends through the unique medium of water, developed in the rice paddies of the Red River Delta where farmers entertained themselves during flood season. Evening performances provide an accessible introduction to Vietnamese traditional arts, with the puppets' expressive movements and the musicians' haunting melodies transcending language barriers.

Location

Activity location

  • LOB_ACTIVITIESLOB_ACTIVITIES
    Temple Ngoc Son
    • P. Dinh Tien Hoang, Hang Tr_ng, Hoan Ki_m, Ha N_i, Viet Nam
    • Hanoi, Vietnam

Meeting/Redemption Point

  • PEOPLEPEOPLE
    Ngoc Son Temple
    • Phố Đinh Tiên Hoàng
    • Hoàn Kiếm, Hà Nội, Vietnam

Best Deals on Things to Do

Experience the wonders of the world up close with great deals on things to do near and far. Expedia offers one-of-a-kind activities that allow you to explore Hanoi your way. Whether you love nature, culture, food, or a bit of adventure, we have the perfect activity for you.

Top experiences in Hanoi

With so many things to do in Hanoi, planning the perfect day out may seem like a daunting task. Expedia is here to take the hassle out of finding the best attractions, tours, and activities in Hanoi. Families, couples, and business travellers can all find the perfect activity in Hanoi to create life-long memories with the help of Expedia.