Southern Vietnam (south-west of Ho Chi Minh City)
Mekong Delta
The honest Mekong Delta from Saigon: why the My Tho day tour is the rushed one, when to stay overnight in Can Tho for the dawn Cai Rang floating market, and what the cheap boat trips actually show you.
In short
Mekong Delta at a glance
The Mekong Delta is the waterway maze south-west of Ho Chi Minh City where the river splits into nine channels before the sea — coconut groves, stilt houses and the floating markets Vietnam is famous for. The catch most first-timers miss: the cheap one-day tour out of Saigon only reaches My Tho and Ben Tre, about two hours away, and shows you a tourist-boat loop and a coconut-candy workshop rather than a real market. The floating markets that earn the postcards — Cai Rang, biggest in the delta — are at Can Tho, 170km and 3.5–4 hours from the city, and only worth it if you stay overnight and take a sampan out at dawn. Decide which delta you want before you book.
The Mekong Delta is the green, water-laced south-west of Vietnam where the great river fans into nine arms before the South China Sea — coconut groves, stilt houses on the dykes, and the floating markets that fill every brochure. The trap for first-timers is the price tag: a one-day tour out of Ho Chi Minh City costs almost nothing and goes only as far as My Tho and Ben Tre, about two hours away, where you get a tourist-boat loop around Unicorn Island, a honey-tea stop and a coconut-candy workshop. It is a pleasant river day. It is not a floating market.
The market worth the journey is Cai Rang, outside Can Tho, 170km and the best part of four hours from Saigon — a wholesale crush of boats trading from poles at first light, all but over by eight in the morning. That maths only resolves one way: stay overnight on the Ninh Kieu quay, book a sampan the night before, and be on the water by half past five. If a full day in the delta is all you have, take the My Tho tour and accept it as a taster; if the floating market is the reason you came south, give Can Tho a night and set the alarm. And if your road runs onward to Cambodia, end in Chau Doc and take the boat to Phnom Penh rather than backtracking to the city.
The route
Two honest shapes for the delta, and they barely overlap. A one-day version from Ho Chi Minh City reaches only My Tho or Ben Tre and is a taster — boats, fruit gardens, coconut candy, back by evening. The version that delivers the floating markets needs an overnight in Can Tho and an early alarm. Drive times below are from central Ho Chi Minh City along the CT01 expressway and National Highway 1; the morning markets run on river time, so the dawn start isn't optional.
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Day trip option
My Tho and Ben Tre from Saigon
The standard one-day tour: about 1h45 down the expressway to My Tho, a boat out to the river islands (Thoi Son / Unicorn Island) for honey tea and tropical fruit, then a hand-rowed sampan through the narrow Ben Tre canals and a coconut-candy workshop. Back in Ho Chi Minh City by early evening. Honest expectation: it's a pleasant river day, not a floating market.
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Day 1 (overnight version)
Down to Can Tho
Take a Futa (Phuong Trang) bus from Ho Chi Minh City's Mien Tay terminal to Can Tho — about 3.5–4 hours for around ₫150,000 (£4). Check into a riverfront guesthouse on Ninh Kieu quay, walk the night market and book a sampan with your guesthouse for the next morning's market run before you turn in.
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Day 2
Cai Rang floating market at dawn
Be on the water by about 5.30–6am — the Cai Rang wholesale floating market is busiest at first light and thins out by 8am, with traders hanging sample produce from poles above each boat. Carry on to a smaller market or a rice-noodle workshop, then either bus back to Saigon (3.5–4h) or push on west to Chau Doc to continue toward Cambodia.
Where to base yourself
Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.
Ho Chi Minh City (day-trip base)
££ mid-rangeIf the delta is a day out rather than the trip, don't move your luggage — stay in District 1 and take a My Tho or Ben Tre tour, which leaves and returns the same day. You'll see the taster delta, not the floating markets, but you keep the city as your anchor.
Best for: Travellers fitting the delta into a Saigon stay
Can Tho (Ninh Kieu riverfront)
£ valueThe only base that makes the dawn Cai Rang market work, since the boats leave before any day tour from Saigon could arrive. Stay on or near the Ninh Kieu quay for the night market and easy sampan pick-ups; a spread of riverfront guesthouses and a couple of mid-range hotels.
Best for: Anyone serious about the floating markets
Ben Tre
£ valueThe rural, low-key alternative to My Tho's tour-coach pier — homestays and a few eco-lodges tucked among the coconut canals, where the sampan rides are quieter and you can cycle the dykes. Best for travellers who want the slow, green delta over the market spectacle.
Best for: A quiet, rural overnight among the canals
Getting around Mekong Delta
There is no need for a hire car here, and most UK visitors shouldn't drive in Vietnam anyway. For My Tho or Ben Tre, the easy move is a guided day tour from Ho Chi Minh City that bundles the transfer, the boat and the workshops; doing it independently means a local bus to My Tho and haggling for a boat at the pier, which rarely saves enough to be worth it. For Can Tho, the comfortable option is a Phuong Trang (Futa) coach from the Mien Tay bus terminal — roughly every 30–60 minutes, about ₫150,000 (£4) and 3.5–4 hours via the CT01 expressway. Once in the delta the real transport is water: sampans and motorboats arranged through your guesthouse or a guide are how you reach the markets and canals, and a dawn Cai Rang trip is the one outing worth setting an alarm for. Further west, Chau Doc is where the slow boats and speedboats to Phnom Penh leave, so chain the delta into an onward Cambodia leg rather than backtracking to Saigon if that's your route.
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Mekong Delta FAQs
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