top of page

Why You Should Leave Vietnam Before Tet Holiday 2026

Vietnam is incredible. Tet is incredible. But Vietnam during Tet? Well, that depends on what kind of traveler you are.


Every year, we meet backpackers who say some version of: “Wow, Tet sounds amazing, I’ll just stay a bit longer.”


And then we meet the same backpackers five days later eating supermarket bread, unable to find transport, wondering why every shop is shuttered and why their budget suddenly doubled.


So let’s have the honest conversation most travel blogs avoid.


This isn’t about scaring you. It’s about timing it right.


If you want to experience Vietnam without logistical chaos, inflated prices, closed businesses, and transport nightmares, there’s a strong argument for planning your exit before Tet Holiday 2026—or at least knowing exactly what you’re signing up for.

Quick Summary: Should You Leave Vietnam Before Tet Holiday 2026?


  • Tet (Vietnamese Lunar New Year) is Vietnam’s biggest holiday and brings the country to a near standstill.

  • Before Tet, Vietnam is lively and festive: flower markets, decorations, and pre-holiday buzz everywhere.

  • During Tet, many businesses close, transport is limited, prices increase, and flexibility disappears.

  • Traveling before Tet Holiday 2026 lets you experience the atmosphere without dealing with closures or chaos.

  • Backpackers and Ha Giang Loop riders are especially affected, as tours pause and local services shut down.

  • Leaving before Tet begins means smoother travel, better prices, and fully operating tours.

  • This guide breaks down what actually happens before, during, and after Tet 2026—so you can plan smart and avoid travel regrets.

What Is Tet Holiday in Vietnam (and Why It’s a Big Deal)


Tet, short for Tết Nguyên Đán, is Vietnam’s Lunar New Year—and calling it a “holiday” doesn’t quite do it justice.


Tet is:


  • A cultural reset

  • A family reunion on a national scale

  • A spiritual fresh start

  • And essentially a country-wide pause button


The phrase loosely translates to The Feast of the First Morning, which sets the tone nicely. This is about renewal, luck, ancestors, and starting the year on the right foot—emotionally, spiritually, and culturally.


Rooted in agricultural traditions and shaped by centuries of history, Tet marks:


  • The arrival of spring

  • The end of the old lunar year

  • A symbolic reset of fortune and family bonds


It blends ancestor worship, temple visits, rituals, serious eating, serious drinking, and serious symbolism into one giant national exhale.


And crucially: Vietnam revolves around Tet.


This is not a festival you casually squeeze in between sightseeing days.


For more festivals this year, click here: The Best Festivals on the Ha Giang Loop in 2026.

Three people smiling, standing by a calm river flanked by tall, lush cliffs. One wears a striped sweater reading "Ader." Vibrant backdrop.

Tet Holiday 2026: Important Dates You Need to Know


If you’re planning travel before Tet Holiday 2026, these dates matter more than any packing list.


  • Tet Day (Lunar New Year’s Day): February 17, 2026

  • Official public holiday: February 14 – February 22, 2026


But here’s the catch: Businesses don’t magically close and reopen on those exact dates.


What the Timeline Actually Looks Like


  • February 10–13: Pre-Tet energy ramps up. Flower markets explode with color, families shop for offerings, and cities buzz with anticipation.

  • February 14–16: Closures begin. Transport fills up fast. Prices climb. Staff start heading home.

  • February 17 (Tet Day): Vietnam hits pause. Families gather. Businesses shut. Streets go quiet.

  • February 18–19: Celebrations continue. Some places slowly reopen, many don’t.

  • February 20–22: Services return unevenly. Things work… kind of.

  • February 23 onward: Vietnam is fully back online. Normal schedules resume.


If you’re leaving before Tet Holiday 2026, aim for on or before February 12–13 for the smoothest experience.


Red Vietnamese New Year banners with gold details hang over vibrant yellow chrysanthemums. Text reads "Chúc Mừng Năm Mới" and "Tấn Tài Tấn Lộc".

The Reality of Traveling During Tet Holiday 2026


Tet offers something rare and beautiful—but it also comes with very real trade-offs.


What’s Genuinely Amazing


  • Authentic family celebrations you’d never see otherwise

  • Streets filled with flowers, calligraphy, and decorations

  • Temples glowing with incense and quiet reverence

  • Regional traditions and symbolic foods

  • Locals in a warm, generous holiday mood


What’s Objectively Challenging


  • Restaurants, cafés, and shops closed (often without notice)

  • Limited transport and sold-out tickets

  • Prices jumping 30–100%

  • Fully booked accommodation weeks in advance

  • Reduced tour availability

  • Zero flexibility if plans go sideways


Tet isn’t “hard” travel—but it is rigid travel.


And that’s why many backpackers realise too late that they would’ve enjoyed Vietnam more before or after Tet Holiday 2026 rather than during it.


People gather around a large bonfire at night in a dark landscape. Sparks fly upward, creating a lively, communal atmosphere.

What Actually Stays Open During Tet Holiday 2026?


Here’s a sneak peak at which services remain open during Tet Holiday, and how they are affected:

Service Type

Feb 14–16 (Pre-Tet)

Feb 17–19 (Peak Tet)

Feb 20–22

Feb 23+

Major hotels

Open

Open

Open

Open

Restaurants

~60% operating

~20% operating

~50%

~90%

Museums & attractions

~50%

~10%

~70%

100%

Street food

~70%

~10%

~60%

100%

Tour operators

Available

Very limited

Partially available

Full service

Local transport

Crowded

Severely limited

Crowded

Normal

Shopping

Full

Minimal

Moderate

Full

Percentages are approximate and vary by city; smaller towns and rural areas tend to shut down more completely than major hubs like Hanoi or Ho Chi Minh City.


Is Tet Holiday a Good Time to Visit Vietnam?


The honest answer: It depends on your travel style.


Tet Works If You:


  • Want deep cultural immersion

  • Book everything by December–January 2025

  • Are okay paying premium prices

  • Don’t mind closed businesses

  • Enjoy slower, quieter days


Tet Is Not Ideal If You:


  • Travel on a budget

  • Like spontaneity

  • Prioritise nightlife, food variety, or shopping

  • Want full tour availability

  • Plan things last minute


For many travelers, the sweet spot is arriving before Tet, soaking up the atmosphere, then leaving before the shutdown.


Here’s a breakdown so you can decide if you should visit Vietnam during Tet or leave before the holiday begins:


Travel Style

Best Timing

Why It Works

Trade-Offs

Culture-focused travelers

Feb 10–20, 2026 (Tet week)

Deep cultural immersion, authentic traditions

High prices, closures, limited transport

Most travelers

Arrive & leave before Tet Holiday 2026 (Feb 7–13)

Festive build-up without shutdown stress

Requires early planning

Budget & flexible travelers

After Feb 23, 2026

Normal prices, full services restored

Misses Tet atmosphere

Why Leaving Vietnam Before Tet Holiday 2026 Makes Sense


Here’s where things get practical.


1. You Get the Festive Energy — Without the Shutdown


The weeks leading up to Tet are magic.


Flower markets are bursting with colour. Streets are decorated. Locals are excited, generous, and proud to share traditions.


You get:


  • The vibe

  • The visuals

  • The cultural buzz


Without:


  • Closed restaurants

  • Empty streets

  • Transport chaos


Peak pre-Tet atmosphere hits around February 7–12.


That’s the window savvy travelers aim for.


2. Transport Still Works (Mostly)


Before Tet Holiday 2026:


  • Flights still run regularly

  • Buses still operate

  • Trains still have seats (if booked early)


During Tet:


  • Everything sells out

  • Missed connections become multi-day delays

  • Taxis are fewer

  • Flexibility evaporates


Leaving Vietnam before Tet means you travel with the system—not against it.



3. Prices Haven’t Gone Full Lunar New Year Yet


Tet pricing is real.


Hotels, transport, and tours can jump 30–50%, sometimes more for premium services.


Before Tet Holiday 2026:


  • Prices are higher than low season

  • But still reasonable

  • And far more predictable


Your budget stretches further when the country isn’t in holiday mode.


4. Tours Run Properly


Guides don’t want to be working during Tet. Drivers want to be with their family. Homestays close.


Before Tet:


  • Tours run normally

  • Staff are fully present

  • Experiences feel complete


During Tet:


  • Tours pause

  • Routes shorten

  • Services are patchy


This is especially important in northern Vietnam.


If Tet is one of the worst times to visit Vietnam, click here to discover the best times: When is the Best Time to Do the Ha Giang Loop? A Guide from Someone Who's Done It All Year Round.

Group of people in rain ponchos pose on a foggy mountain path. One holds a flag. Mood is cheerful and adventurous. Sparse greenery.

How Tet Affects the Ha Giang Loop in 2026


If the Ha Giang Loop is on your list, read this carefully.


During Tet:


  • Homestays close

  • Restaurants shut

  • Tour companies stop running tours

  • Fuel availability becomes inconsistent

  • Local families celebrate instead of hosting


At Bong Hostel, we’ve seen this play out year after year.


That’s why we always warn travelers to plan around Tet—not through it.


Is Bong Hostel Open During Tet Holiday 2026?


No—and that’s intentional.


Bong Hostel Tet Closure 2026


  • Closed: February 15 – February 20, 2026

  • Ha Giang Loop tours paused


This isn’t a logistics issue. It’s a respect issue.


Tet is family time. For our guides, drivers, and staff, this matters.


Psst! Any company running full Loop tours during Tet should raise a quiet eyebrow.


A group of motorcyclists in helmets raise arms joyfully against a foggy mountain backdrop, with text "Mèo Vạc" visible on a sign.

Last Ha Giang Loop Dates Before Tet Holiday 2026


If you want to ride the loop with Bong Hostel before the shutdown:


  • Last 4-day tour: February 11, 2026

  • Last 3-day tour: February 12, 2026

  • Last bus Ha Giang → Hanoi: February 14, 2026 (7pm)


After that, Ha Giang rests—and rightly so.


But Wait — Tet Isn’t All or Nothing


There is a middle ground.


Early February Tet Cultural Tours


Before the closures, Bong Hostel runs limited Tet cultural experience tours in early February.


February 2 – February 8, 2026


These focus on:


  • Making Bánh Chưng with local families

  • Village visits

  • Tet preparations 

  • Fire dances and fireworks

  • Cultural meaning, not logistics stress


You get Tet’s heart—without the shutdown.


Two smiling individuals pose on a misty hillside with terraced fields and winding paths in the background, wearing blue jackets.

Where to Go If You Don’t Leave Before Tet


If you ignore all advice (we get it) and stay anyway:


  • Halong Bay / Lan Ha Bay: Some cruises operate and offer peaceful escapes

  • Ninh Binh: Quiet landscapes, fewer services needed

  • Hanoi: Get an air bnb, stock the fridges, and wait it out with friends


Avoid relying on cities for food, nightlife, or flexibility during peak Tet days.


Weather in February & What to Pack


The weather in North Vietnam in February is rather cool, with temperatures between 15–20°C. But it can get even colder in mountainous regions along the Ha Giang Loop.


Ensure that you pack plenty of layers, including a warm hat, scarf and gloves, as well as respectful clothing, comfortable shoes, and a little patience.


Money, Logistics & Survival Tips


Here are a few extra survival tips if you aren’t leaving Vietnam before Tet Holiday in 2026:


  • Withdraw cash before February 13

  • Expect ATMs to be busy

  • Budget 30–50% extra if staying during Tet

  • Download translation apps

  • Make sure your visa isn’t about to expire 

  • Buy some red lucky money envelopes for kids in case you are invited to a family’s home

  • Expect slower responses everywhere


Group of people cheerfully posing on a rocky hilltop, waving a red flag, with misty mountains in the background on a cloudy day.

Final Thought: Should You Leave Vietnam Before Tet Holiday 2026?


For most backpackers, solo travelers, and Loop riders? Yes. Absolutely.


You’ll:


  • Experience Tet energy

  • Avoid Tet chaos

  • Save money

  • Travel smoother

  • Enjoy Vietnam at its best


Tet isn’t going anywhere. But your travel days are limited.


Timing matters.


Our Honest Recommendation


Arrive in Vietnam in late January or early February.

Experience the build-up.

Ride the Ha Giang Loop: Tet Edition with Bong Hostel.

Soak in the atmosphere.


Then leave before Tet Holiday 2026 kicks into full shutdown mode.


And if you want help planning the perfect pre or post-Tet itinerary, that’s literally what we do best > Ha Giang loop tour | best Hà Giang hostel motorbike tour | Bong Hostel Hà Giang.


See you on the road—before the fireworks start.

Comments


bottom of page