Northeast Vietnam Motorbike Tours from Hanoi
The northeast is where the riding gets quiet, the roads get interesting, and the landscape changes every hour. Tours run 5 to 8 days from Hanoi through Cao Bang, Ba Be Lake, Ban Gioc, Bac Kan, Lang Son, and Thac Ba Lake. Guided, fully supported, and built for riders who want real terrain off the beaten track.
Motorbike tours in Northeast Vietnam: Sample Itineraries
All tours depart from Hanoi and cover the best riding roads in northeast Vietnam. Choose from short 5-day loops to full 8-day circuits through Cao Bang, Ba Be Lake, and the China border roads. Every route is guided, fully supported, and open to custom adjustments around your dates and experience level.
Motorcycle Tours by Destination
Request a Custom Northeast Vietnam Motorbike Tour
Not every rider fits a fixed departure. Tailor-made northeast Vietnam motorbike tours are built around your dates, experience level, and pace.
Start from Hanoi and ride through Cao Bang, Ba Be Lake, Ban Gioc, Bac Kan, and Lang Son at your own speed. Route planning, bikes, and local guides are all handled from start to finish.
How Long Does a Northeast Vietnam Motorbike Tour Take?
A solid northeast loop from Hanoi takes a minimum of 5 days, covering the core stops without feeling rushed.
A 7 to 8 day itinerary gives you the right pace to ride the best roads, spend proper time at Ba Be Lake and Ban Gioc waterfall, and explore the quieter tracks through Bac Kan and Cao Bang without cutting anything short.
Custom itineraries can be built shorter or longer depending on your available time and how deep into the northeast you want to go.
FAQ About Northeast Vietnam Motorbike Tours
How many days is a northeast Vietnam motorbike tour?
A comfortable northeast loop runs 5 to 8 days from Hanoi. Five days covers the highlights. Eight days gives you the full circuit with proper stops.
Is northeast Vietnam good for beginner riders?
Yes, more so than the northwest or Ha Giang. The terrain is varied but manageable. A guided tour is still strongly recommended for anyone new to riding in Vietnam.
What is the best time to ride northeast Vietnam?
October to April. September and October are the standout months when the landscape is greenest and Ban Gioc waterfall runs at full volume.
Is Ban Gioc waterfall worth the ride from Hanoi?
Completely. The road from Cao Bang to Ban Gioc is one of the best riding days in the northeast. The waterfall itself is the largest in Southeast Asia outside the Mekong system.
Can I combine the northeast loop with other northern Vietnam routes?
Yes. The northeast pairs well with the northwest circuit or the Ha Giang loop for riders with 12 days (or a bit more). A combined northern loop is one of the best ways to see the full range of Vietnam’s riding country in one trip.
Do I need an offroad bike for northeast Vietnam?
Not for the main circuit. A CB500X handles the sealed roads comfortably. For secondary tracks around Ba Be and the Cao Bang border area an XR 150, OR 190 as well as CRF250 or CRF300 gives you more capability for the off-roads trails.
Introduction to Northeast Vietnam Motorbike Tours
The northeast of Vietnam is one of those regions that experienced riders tend to discover after they have already done the more famous routes. Ha Giang gets the attention, the northwest gets the reputation for dramatic passes, and the northeast quietly sits between them offering something that neither of those circuits fully delivers: sustained, varied riding through genuinely remote terrain with almost no tourist infrastructure in the way.
The provinces of Cao Bang, Bac Kan, Lang Son, and Yen Bai cover a landscape that shifts between limestone karst country, dense national park forest, wide river valleys, and border terrain that feels far removed from the Vietnam most visitors see. Roads here are less travelled, towns are more functional than touristy, and the cultural communities along the route, Tay, Dao, Nung, San Chay, and Lo Lo, live at a pace that has not been reshaped by the tourism economy the way some highland areas further west have.
This is not a route that rewards impatience. The northeast is best ridden by people who are happy to let a good road unfold at its own pace and are not measuring the day by how many kilometres they covered.
Best Destinations on a Northeast Vietnam Motorbike Tour
Hanoi, Where Every Northeast Loop Begins
The northeast circuit heads north from Hanoi through Thai Nguyen before the landscape starts its transition into highland terrain. The first few hours out of the capital are straightforward riding, well-surfaced roads with manageable traffic, which gives riders time to settle into the bike and the rhythm of the road before the more demanding sections further north begin. Hanoi is where the route briefing happens, bikes are checked over, and the loop begins in earnest.
Thac Ba Lake, Yen Bai’s Overlooked Riding Country
Thac Ba Lake sits around 180 kilometres from Hanoi in Yen Bai province and rarely appears on northeast itineraries despite being one of the most quietly enjoyable stops on the circuit. The lake was created when the Chay River was dammed in the 1970s and now covers a wide area scattered with small forested islands. Dao minority villages sit along the shoreline and the roads around the lake are narrow, tree-lined, and carry almost no traffic. It is the kind of stop that adds texture to a loop without demanding anything from the rider.
Ba Be Lake, Bac Kan’s Most Remarkable Destination
Ba Be Lake sits inside Ba Be National Park in Bac Kan province and is one of the largest natural freshwater lakes in Southeast Asia. The road into the national park drops through dense forest on a narrow route that follows the river valley to the lake, and the arrival at the water after that enclosed forest riding is genuinely striking.
The lake is calm, deep green, and surrounded by limestone karst hills thick with jungle. The Tay community that has lived around Ba Be for generations still farms the land and fishes the water in a way that feels unchanged by outside influence. A boat trip to Puong Cave, where the river passes directly through a limestone cavern, and to the Dau Dang waterfall at the northern end of the lake, rounds out a stop that deserves at least a full day rather than a passing visit.
Bac Kan, Forest Roads Through the Heart of the Northeast
Bac Kan province forms the geographical centre of the northeast loop and is largely covered by forested hills and river valleys that see very little through traffic. The roads connecting Ba Be National Park to Cao Bang to the north run through long stretches of tree cover with rivers tracking alongside them for much of the distance. These are not technically demanding riding days but they are deeply enjoyable ones, the kind where the road quality and the surroundings combine in a way that makes the kilometres disappear without effort.
Cao Bang, Raw Provincial Capital of the Far Northeast
Cao Bang province is where the northeast circuit reaches its most remote and dramatic terrain. The province borders China along its northern edge and the landscape reflects that geography, towering karst peaks rising sharply from wide valley floors, river systems that carve through limestone at unexpected angles, and market towns that operate on a schedule entirely their own.
Cao Bang city is a working provincial capital with no particular concession to tourism, which gives it a character that more visited towns have long since lost. The food is good, the pace is slow, and it sits perfectly as an overnight stop before the ride to Ban Gioc the following morning.
Ban Gioc Waterfall, The Northeast’s Most Spectacular Road
Ban Gioc sits on the border between Vietnam and China in Cao Bang province and is the largest waterfall in Southeast Asia outside of the Mekong system. The falls drop across wide limestone terraces into a calm pool below, framed by karst hills and bamboo on both sides. In full flow after the rainy season, the volume and width of the falls is hard to take in from a single viewpoint.
The road from Cao Bang city to Ban Gioc is consistently rated as one of the best riding days in northern Vietnam. The route crosses through karst country on a road that curves and climbs steadily through scenery that builds toward the waterfall without revealing it until the final approach. Arriving early before the day tour groups cross from the Chinese side gives you the falls in near silence, which is a completely different experience from the midday crowds.
Lang Son, Border Country at the End of the Loop
Lang Son sits close to the Chinese border in the southeastern corner of the northeast circuit and serves as the natural final stop before the loop closes back toward Hanoi. The town has been a trading and military frontier for centuries and that history is readable in the architecture, the border markets, and the mix of communities that move through it daily.
The karst landscape around Lang Son is dramatic and the roads back toward Hanoi through the limestone hills make for a strong final riding day that closes the circuit on a high note.
Northeast Vietnam Riding Trails and Offroad Routes
The northeast’s secondary road network is one of its least talked about strengths. Away from the main provincial highways, a series of village tracks and forest roads connect communities through terrain that rarely sees anything other than local traffic. The tracks around Ba Be National Park drop into the forest on loose gravel that rewards riders comfortable with unpredictable surfaces.
The border roads north of Cao Bang toward Ban Gioc cross streams and run through working farmland on routes that are technically straightforward but feel genuinely remote. Around Thac Ba Lake, quiet backroads connect Dao villages along the shoreline through terrain that suits a lighter, more nimble bike far better than anything road-oriented. These are the routes where a CRF250 or CRF300 earns its place over a larger touring bike, and where the riding shifts from covering ground to actually exploring it.
What Makes Northeast Vietnam Different From Other Northern Routes
Riders who arrive in the northeast after completing the northwest circuit or the Ha Giang loop often comment on how different the experience feels despite the geographic proximity. The northwest is defined by its passes and elevation. Ha Giang is defined by its karst drama and the loop format that concentrates it all into a short circuit. The northeast is defined by something harder to summarise but easier to feel on the road: variety at a human pace.
There are no single roads here that generate the kind of viral attention that Ma Pi Leng or O Quy Ho command. What the northeast has instead is a full week of riding where every day feels distinct from the one before it.
Forest roads through Bac Kan feel nothing like the karst country around Cao Bang. The border terrain near Ban Gioc feels nothing like the lake riding around Thac Ba or Ba Be. That variety, spread across five to eight days without a single dominant centrepiece, is what keeps experienced riders coming back to the northeast when they want a northern Vietnam loop that still feels fresh.
The ethnic diversity along the route adds another layer. Tay, Dao, Nung, San Chay, and Lo Lo communities all have a presence across the northeast provinces and their weekly markets, traditional dress, and village rhythms give the riding days a cultural depth that goes well beyond the scenery. Stopping at a small market in a Cao Bang border town on the right morning is often the moment riders point to when asked what they remember most about the northeast.
Book Your Northeast Vietnam Motorbike Tour
Scheduled northeast loop departures run weekly from Hanoi, covering Thac Ba Lake, Ba Be, Cao Bang, Ban Gioc waterfall, Bac Kan, and Lang Son. Custom routes are available year-round for solo riders, couples, and small groups. Share your dates and riding experience and the itinerary gets built around you.
