Ha Giang Loop 3 Day Itinerary: Day by Day Guide

Ha Giang Loop · Day by Day Itinerary

Ha Giang Loop 3 Day Itinerary (Day by Day)

Three days is the sweet spot for a first trip to the far north, and this Ha Giang Loop 3 day itinerary maps it out hour by hour, from the first pass out of the city to the road home.

You get the headline scenery, the best of the food, and two nights on the plateau, without the trip turning into a marathon. Everything below is built around a private jeep with a local driver, so the pace stays relaxed and you can stop wherever you like. If you have ever wondered what to expect on a Ha Giang jeep tour, reading this plan is the closest thing to riding along. Let's get into the days.

Ha Giang Loop 3 day itinerary: a private jeep at a Ma Pi Leng Pass viewpoint

Is 3 Days Enough for the Ha Giang Loop?

Yes, with a caveat: three days means full, rewarding days rather than lazy ones. In three days you can comfortably see Quan Ba, the Dong Van plateau, the Dong Van Old Quarter, Ma Pi Leng Pass, and a handful of villages in between. What you trade away is slack time, the extra afternoon to swim at a waterfall or sit longer at a viewpoint.

If your schedule is tight, three days delivers the classic loop and the moments people remember. If you have a fourth day to spare, you will feel the difference in how relaxed it all becomes, and we will cover that later. For now, here is how the three days flow.

Ha Giang Loop 3 Day Itinerary at a Glance

The quick overview before the detail:

DayRouteSleepHighlights
Day 1Ha Giang City to Dong VanDong VanQuan Ba, Yen Minh, Dong Van Old Quarter
Day 2Dong Van to Meo Vac or Du GiaMeo Vac or Du GiaLung Cu, Sung La, Ma Pi Leng, Nho Que River
Day 3Back to Ha Giang CityHome or onwardDu Gia waterfall, quiet roads, final views

The loop can run in either direction and the overnight stops flex a little with the season and your group. Treat this as the intended shape, not a fixed clock. Your driver adjusts on the day.

Is 3 days right for your group?

Send us your dates and who is coming, and we will help you decide between 3 and 4 days in a couple of messages.

Day 1: Ha Giang City to Dong Van

The first day climbs from the valley floor to the high karst plateau. It is the day the scale of this place lands.

Morning: Quan Ba and the Twin Mountains

You leave Ha Giang City and start climbing almost right away. The first big stop is Quan Ba, where the Heaven's Gate viewpoint opens onto the Twin Mountains and a wide patchwork valley. It is a good spot to stretch, take photos, and feel the altitude change. Near here, some trips pause at the Lung Tam linen village to see traditional weaving.

Quan Ba Twin Mountains and valley from Heaven's Gate on day one of the Ha Giang Loop

Afternoon: Yen Minh to the Dong Van plateau

The road rolls on through Yen Minh, past pine forests and cornfields, with a lunch stop in a small town. The afternoon takes you deeper onto the Dong Van Karst Plateau, a UNESCO Global Geopark, with viewpoints and photo stops along the way. The landscape shifts from green valleys to grey stone the higher you go.

Winding road and pine hills near Yen Minh on the Ha Giang Loop

Evening: Dong Van Old Quarter

You arrive in Dong Van by evening and settle into a homestay. The stone built Old Quarter is worth a slow wander after dark, when the lanterns come on and the day cools. Dinner is usually a shared table of local dishes, maybe your first taste of com lam or a warming bowl of something after a long day on the road.

Dong Van Old Quarter stone houses lit up in the evening on the Ha Giang Loop

Day 2: Lung Cu, Ma Pi Leng and the Nho Que

The big scenery day. This is the stretch that ends up on everyone's camera roll.

Morning: Lung Cu and Sung La

Many trips start with a run up to the Lung Cu flag tower, the symbolic northern tip of Vietnam, with views toward the border. On the way back you pass through the Sung La valley, one of the prettiest pockets on the plateau, with stone houses and, in season, fields of flowers. Pho Bang, a quiet old town nearby, makes a nice short detour.

Lung Cu flag tower at the northern tip of Ha Giang
Stone houses and flowers in the Sung La valley in Ha Giang

Midday: Ma Pi Leng Pass and the Nho Que River

Then comes the headline. Ma Pi Leng is the pass everyone comes for, a cliff road carved above the Nho Que River, with viewpoints where you will want to linger. On a jeep you get the full sweep of it without watching the road yourself. Many travelers add a boat trip on the Nho Que through the Tu San gorge, seeing the cliffs from the water looking up. It is one of the best hours on the whole loop.

Ma Pi Leng Pass road above the Nho Que River gorge in Ha Giang
Boat trip on the Nho Que River through the Tu San gorge below Ma Pi Leng

Evening: Meo Vac or Du Gia

Over the pass sits Meo Vac, a smaller town with its own market rhythm. Depending on your route and the pace you want, night two is either in Meo Vac or a little further along in Du Gia, a laid back village known for its waterfall and easy evenings. Either way, you finish the biggest day with the biggest views behind you.

Quiet mountain village at Du Gia on the eastern side of the Ha Giang Loop

Day 3: The Road Back to Ha Giang City

The last day is gentler, a chance to enjoy the quieter side of the loop before closing the circle.

Morning: Du Gia or a slow start

If you slept in Du Gia, the morning is perfect for the waterfall and pool, an easy walk and a cool swim before the drive. If you stayed in Meo Vac, you take the scenic route back with a few final stops. Either way, day three is about winding down, not rushing.

Du Gia waterfall and pool on the Ha Giang Loop

Afternoon: closing the loop

The road curves back toward Ha Giang City through valleys and small villages you have mostly to yourself. You will notice how much you have relaxed into the rhythm by now. You reach Ha Giang City by afternoon, loop complete, with plenty left in the tank for onward travel. Full details of this route are on the 3 days 2 nights loop tour page.

What You Eat on the Loop

Food is half the fun, and a private jeep means you can stop at any stall or market that catches your eye. A few things to try over three days:

  • Com lam, sticky rice grilled in bamboo, a roadside classic.
  • Banh cuon trung, soft steamed rice rolls with egg and a warm dipping broth.
  • Thang den, sweet rice balls in ginger syrup, ideal on a cold Dong Van night.
  • Chao au tau, a warming, slightly bitter porridge unique to the region.
  • Ruou ngo, the local corn wine, poured freely at homestay dinners.

Here is the quiet perk foodies love: after a glass of ruou ngo at lunch, the driving is not yours to worry about. You just eat, toast your hosts, and enjoy the ride.

Family style homestay dinner with com lam and corn wine in Ha Giang

What to Pack for 3 Days

The jeep handles comfort and weather, so a light bag is enough for three days:

  • Layers, including a jacket or fleece. Mornings and passes get cold even in warm months.
  • A rain shell, even though the soft top has you covered.
  • Sunscreen and sunglasses for bright, open air days.
  • Comfortable shoes for short walks to viewpoints and the Du Gia waterfall.
  • A power bank and your camera or phone.
  • Personal medication and a small daypack.
  • Cash in small notes for markets, snacks, and tips.

No riding gear, no helmet, no heavy waterproofs needed.

Practical Tips Before You Go

Getting to Ha Giang from Hanoi

Most travelers reach Ha Giang City from Hanoi by night bus, limousine van, or private transfer. Schedules and operators change, so confirm current times close to your dates. The loop starts and ends in Ha Giang City.

Permits and border areas

Parts of the plateau sit in a border zone that requires permits, including the Lung Cu area. We arrange these as part of the tour. Rules can change, so we confirm the latest requirements when you book.

Weather and the best time to go

Every season has its look, from spring flowers to autumn rice terraces to crisp, cold winters up high. The jeep works in all of it thanks to the soft top and heater. Check current seasonal conditions before you pick your dates.

How far ahead to book

Once your dates are set, book as early as you can. Most guests book 1 to 3 months in advance. Jeep availability is limited, so early booking helps us line up the right vehicle, homestays, and permits.

Should You Add a Day? 3 Days vs 4, 5 or 6

Three days is great. Here is when to consider more:

  • Add a fourth day if you want to slow the whole thing down and add a proper village night at Du Gia. The 4 days 3 nights tour is the most relaxed way to do the full loop, and the one we recommend most for families.
  • Go 5 or 6 days if you want to keep going east to Cao Bang and finish at Ban Gioc Waterfall, with the God's Eye Mountain and Ngoc Con Valley along the way. See the 5 days combo or the slower 6 days combo.
  • Prefer your own wheel? A confident driver can take a Jeep Wrangler Rubicon rental and set the pace entirely.

Which Ha Giang Jeep Tour Is Right for You?

A quick match, based on how much time you have:

Guests relaxed in an open air jeep on the Ha Giang Loop

FAQ

Yes. Three days covers Quan Ba, Dong Van, Ma Pi Leng, and villages in between, with two nights on the plateau. It makes for full days rather than lazy ones, so add a fourth if you want more slack.
A mix of driving and stopping: viewpoints, villages, a market if the timing is right, a roadside lunch, and a homestay by evening. The pace is relaxed and flexes around your group.
Usually night one in Dong Van and night two in Meo Vac or Du Gia, in local homestays or small guesthouses. Exact stops can shift with the season.
No. On a guided tour you are a passenger with a local English speaking driver. No license and no experience needed.
Yes. The route can go either direction, and your driver may adjust the order of stops for weather, markets, or road conditions.
Yes. The jeep keeps everyone comfortable and no one has to ride. For a more relaxed pace, the 4 days plan spreads the same route over an extra day.
Every season has its appeal. Spring flowers, autumn rice terraces, and crisp winters all reward the trip. The jeep works year round, so check current conditions and pick your scenery.
By night bus, limousine van, or private transfer to Ha Giang City, where the loop begins.
Yes. Border area permits, including for Lung Cu, are arranged as part of the tour, with current rules confirmed at booking.
Most guests book 1 to 3 months ahead. Jeep availability is limited, so earlier is better once your dates are set.

Ready to drive the loop?

This is the trip, mapped out. Pick your dates and secure a seat, or message us with any questions. Only a handful of jeeps run each day.

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