Itinerary:
Day 1: Hanoi Motorbike Tour to Ba Be Lake (240 km)
Your journey starts early, leaving Hanoi behind while the city is still yawning. Within an hour, the scenery begins to shift—flat streets become rolling hills, and the air feels cleaner with every kilometer. Today is a “warm-up day,” but it’s far from ordinary. You’ll ride a beautiful mix of countryside asphalt and smaller backroads that wind through rice paddies, tea hills, and quiet villages where buffalo still rule the lanes.
As the terrain becomes more rugged toward the Northeast, the ride turns playful: short dirt tracks and broken concrete lanes appear—perfect for getting comfortable with the bike’s balance, standing position, and throttle control. Your guide will pace the group carefully, choosing optional offroad lines when conditions are good. Along the way, you’ll stop for local coffee, photos of limestone ridges, and quick chats with villagers—those little “human moments” that make a Vietnam motorbike tour feel deeply real.
By late afternoon, you arrive near Ba Be Lake, a hidden gem wrapped in jungle-green mountains. If time allows, enjoy a gentle walk to a nearby viewpoint or riverside hamlet before settling into a welcoming homestay/lodge. Dinner is home-style and hearty—fresh river fish, seasonal vegetables, and warm sticky rice—fuel for the days ahead. Tonight, you fall asleep to the sound of crickets and water, knowing tomorrow takes you deeper into Vietnam’s wild frontier.

Day 2: Ba Be Motorbike Tour via Meo Vac to Dong Van (210 km)
Morning in Ba Be is calm and misty, the kind of silence that makes you speak softer without thinking. Before gearing up, you’ll experience Ba Be the local way—by water. Drift across the lake on a bamboo raft (or local boat depending on season), passing limestone cliffs and pockets of rainforest that feel almost untouched. It’s a perfect contrast: serenity first, adrenaline later.
Then the ride begins—today is where Northern Vietnam starts showing its teeth. The route climbs steadily into higher altitude landscapes, with sharper curves, narrower roads, and valleys that drop away dramatically. Your guide will take you through a mix of paved mountain passes and rugged connectors, including optional single trails and offroad shortcuts when conditions are safe—earthy, rocky sections where you’ll stand on the pegs and let the bike dance beneath you.
As you approach Meo Vac, the scenery turns legendary: jagged karst peaks, stone fences, and H’mong villages perched on the slopes. You’ll pause at viewpoints that make people go quiet—because photos never fully capture the scale. Rolling into Dong Van in the late afternoon, you’ll feel that satisfying tiredness that only a real ride gives you: dusty boots, big smiles, and the sense that you’ve earned every kilometer.
Evening is for exploring Dong Van’s old quarter—stone houses, lantern light, grilled street snacks—and swapping stories over dinner. The mountains hold the night close here, cool and starry.

Day 3: Dong Van Motorbike Tour to Ha Giang (180 km)
Today is built around one word: iconic. After breakfast, you head out into the limestone kingdom again, carving through a web of mountain roads that feel like they were designed for motorbikes. Depending on timing and interest, you can detour to panoramic lookouts near the Dong Van Karst Plateau and small villages where daily life unfolds slowly—corn drying on rooftops, children laughing in the lanes, horses and goats wandering without urgency.
This is also a great day for technical fun: sections of rough surface, gravel corners, and optional dirt tracks that branch off the main road into quieter valleys. Your guide can offer alternative lines for riders who want more challenge—short offroad climbs and narrow tracks that deliver you to viewpoints without the crowds. The riding remains engaging but manageable, with frequent stops to rest hands, hydrate, and reset.
As the route drops toward Ha Giang, the landscape softens slightly—still mountainous, but greener and more open. You’ll feel the change in culture too: different house styles, different languages, different faces at roadside markets. Arriving in Ha Giang by late afternoon, you can enjoy a relaxed evening—hot shower, cold drink, and the comforting feeling of a “base town” after days in remote terrain.
Overnight in Ha Giang, ready for a longer crossing tomorrow toward the highlands of Sa Pa.
Day 4: Ha Giang Motorbike Tour to Sa Pa (220 km)
This is a full riding day—one of those “big map” days that makes the tour feel truly epic. Leaving Ha Giang, you follow a ribbon of road through river valleys and remote passes. The morning is smooth and flowing, perfect for settling into rhythm: steady throttle, clean cornering, and enjoying the scenery without rushing.
By mid-route, the surface starts to vary—patches of broken asphalt, gravel shoulders, and optional offroad connectorsthat cut through backcountry farming areas. When conditions allow, your guide can lead the group onto dirt tracksrunning between rice terraces and forest edges—short bursts of adventure that add texture to the day without overloading the schedule. You’ll stop for local lunch in a small town where smiles are curious and genuine, then continue climbing toward Sa Pa’s cooler air and cloud-wrapped peaks.
Arriving in Sa Pa feels like stepping into a different world: pine-like mountain air, layered valleys, and ethnic hill communities moving through town in traditional clothing. If time permits, you can do a gentle afternoon loop on single trails around the outskirts (season-dependent), or simply walk to a viewpoint café and watch the fog roll over the mountains.
Overnight in Sa Pa—rest well. Tomorrow shifts from high peaks to lakeside village life.

Day 5: Sa Pa Motorbike Tour to Vu Linh Village (Thac Ba Reservoir)
After days of sharp karst and high passes, today brings a beautiful transition—down from the mountains into the softer, lake-filled heartland. The route begins with sweeping descents and countryside roads that invite a relaxed pace. This is a day where Vietnam changes color: from gray limestone and mist to warm greens and water reflections.
Along the way, your guide will seek out quieter lines and backroads, mixing smooth riding with playful detours onto dirt tracks and village lanes. You’ll pass through farming communities and small markets, where a quick stop for tea can turn into an impromptu cultural exchange. Riders who want more technical riding can take optional offroadsegments—short, scenic trails threading through forest edges or hillside tracks.
In the afternoon, you arrive at Vu Linh, a peaceful ethnic Dao community on the shores of Thac Ba Reservoir. The vibe here is slow, welcoming, and deeply local. You can enjoy a lakeside walk, take a small boat ride at sunset, or simply relax in the stilt-house homestay and watch daily life unfold—children playing, fishermen returning, smoke rising from kitchens.
Dinner is often a highlight: fresh ingredients, family-style dishes, and sometimes a shared toast of local rice wine. This is the kind of night travelers remember—not because it’s luxurious, but because it’s human and real.

Day 6: Thac Ba Motorbike Tour to Hanoi

Your final day begins gently. Wake to birdsong and soft lake breeze, then enjoy breakfast with views over the reservoir. If you’d like a last small adventure, you can take a short single trail / dirt track loop around the village outskirts—easy, scenic riding to say goodbye to the countryside properly.
Then it’s time to head back toward Hanoi. The route is designed to avoid the harshest traffic where possible, using secondary roads and countryside stretches to keep the experience pleasant. You’ll stop for coffee, photos, and one final local meal before the city skyline gradually returns.
By afternoon, you roll back into Hanoi—dusty bikes, tired arms, and full hearts. You’ve crossed wild mountain frontiers, carved legendary roads, played on dirt and trails, drifted on bamboo raft waters, and shared meals in villages far from the tourist map. This isn’t just a ride—it’s a story you now carry with you.
* Inclusions:
+ Motorbike(s) (Honda or Yamaha)
+ Basic riding gears of Helmet(s), elbow + knee pads & gloves
+ Gasoline on tour
+ English speaking guide
+ Mechanic (only for a group from 7 passengers)
+ Accommodation as indicated in the itinerary (based on twin or/and triple shared)
+ Homestay permission
+ Meals as indicated in the itinerary (5 breakfasts, 6 lunches & 5 Dinners)
+ Entrance fees & Sightseeing fees
+ Boat trips
+ Fruits & coffee + bottled water on roads everyday
+ Government’s taxes
* Exclusions:
+Travel insurance
+Visa
+Air-ticket
+Tips
+Personal expenses







