On 30 May 2016, President Barack Obama and chef Anthony Bourdain sat on plastic stools in a Hanoi street stall, ate bún chả for $6, and drank Hanoi Beer at $0.80 a bottle. The photograph went around the world. That moment — the President of the United States, knees tucked under a child's chair, in an alley of a communist capital — captures something essential about Hanoi: it is a city that makes equals of those who agree to come down to its level, and that rewards generously those who do.
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Daily life & housing
Housing in Hanoi is slightly cheaper than HCMC at equivalent levels. A quality furnished studio in Tây Hồ or Hoàn Kiếm rents for between $400 and $750 per month all-inclusive. A 2-bedroom apartment in a modern Tây Hồ residence with pool starts at $900–1,400. Townhouses (nhà phố) in the Old Quarter's lanes can be rented from $600–1,000 for 2–3 floors — an option very popular with expats who want to live the Old Quarter experience from the inside.
Hanoi's gastronomy is distinct from Saigon's — more restrained, more herbaceous, less sweet. Bún chả (charcoal-grilled pork + broth + vermicelli + herbs) is the city's culinary signature — made universally famous by the 2016 Obama–Bourdain dinner at Bún Chả Hương Liên (Lê Văn Hưu street, $6). Phở gà (chicken phở) from Hanoi is considered by purists to be superior to Saigon's — clearer broth, finer herbs. Chả cá Lã Vọng (turmeric-grilled fish with dill and spring onions, served at the table on a burner) is a Hanoi-exclusive culinary experience dating from the 19th century that deserves a dedicated visit in any serious stay.
Transport in Hanoi also relies on Grab — but the city is more cycling-friendly than Saigon in its central areas. Tây Hồ is practically cyclable for most daily journeys. The public bus network covers the city well. Nội Bài Airport is 35 km away — further than Saigon's airport, and trips can take 45–75 minutes depending on traffic.
Working from Hanoi
Hanoi is the seat of government and ministries — making it the centre of gravity for companies dealing with the public sector, international organisations (UN, World Bank, ADB), embassies and NGOs. The economic fabric is more institutional and less startup-oriented than HCMC. Major presences: Samsung (massive factory in Thai Nguyen, 80 km away), Intel Capital, LG, hundreds of diplomatic representations and UN agencies. The startup scene is growing — VinGroup is headquartered in Hanoi, and startups like VNPT and Viettel (the two major telecoms operators) are based here.
Coworking is less developed than HCMC but well represented — Toong (multiple locations), Cogo Work, Up Co-working Space at $80–200/month. Internet is good quality in modern buildings (Viettel fibre, 150–300 Mbps). The work-café scene (work cafés) is very developed in Tây Hồ and Hoàn Kiếm — numerous coffee shops with good connectivity, power outlets and pleasant working atmosphere for $1–3 of consumption.
Health & safety
Health in Hanoi follows the same recommendations as HCMC: international insurance mandatory, international private hospitals for all serious care. Main options: Hanoi French Hospital (Hôpital Việt Pháp — the city's best, Franco-Vietnamese co-ownership), Vinmec International Hospital (Times City), MEDLATEC. Quality is comparable to FV Hospital in HCMC. Preventive vaccinations (dengue, hepatitis A/B, typhoid, Japanese encephalitis) are recommended.
Hanoi is generally considered safer than HCMC for expats. The city's slower pace, more homogeneous neighbourhoods and weaker mass-tourism presence contribute to a calmer atmosphere. The same precautions apply: phone in pocket, Grab rather than street taxis, vigilance with personal belongings.
Anecdotes & History
In 1010, King Lý Thái Tổ decided to relocate the capital of the Đại Việt kingdom from Hoa Lư to the Red River plain — on the site of present-day Hanoi. According to legend, on reaching the riverbanks, he saw a yellow dragon emerge from the river and rise toward the sky. He named the new capital Thăng Long — "the ascending dragon." This mythological founding has remained vivid in collective memory: the first great temple built on the site, the Temple of Literature (Văn Miếu, 1070), is considered Vietnam's first university and still welcomes Vietnamese students for prayer sessions before exams today. The 82 stone stelae listing the names of the 1,307 doctors admitted between 1442 and 1779 constitute the most complete educational archives of medieval Southeast Asia.
Hoan Kiem Lake (Lake of the Restored Sword) is at the heart of one of Asia's most poetic legends. In the 15th century, King Lê Lợi, who had just driven the Ming Chinese invaders out with a magical sword, was boating on the lake when a great golden turtle emerged from the waters and took the sword from him — returning it to the gods who had lent it for the war. The giant turtle of Hoan Kiem Lake (Rafetus swinhoei) was real — a species of giant freshwater turtle whose last known specimen actually lived in the lake until its death in 2016. It was the largest and oldest freshwater turtle ever documented in Vietnam. Its death was announced as a national bereavement. It was 130 years old.
Who is Hanoi right for?
Hanoi is Vietnam's institutional capital. UN, World Bank, embassies, international NGOs — all have their headquarters or main representation here. For profiles in the international public sector, it's the unmissable city.
Tây Hồ and Ciputra offer an exceptional family setting — calm, green, secure. Quality international schools (UNIS, BIS, French Lycée). Better air quality than HCMC. Cheaper than HCMC for families. The number-one choice of diplomats with children.
Hanoi's cultural and historical density makes it one of Asia's most inspiring cities. Old Quarter, colonial architecture, museums, active local art scene. For creatives who want a city to inhabit as much as observe.
Hanoi is ideal for remote workers who want to combine distance work with deep cultural immersion. Fewer distractions than HCMC, more quiet for focus, very low cost, pleasant seasons. Coffee shops everywhere in Tây Hồ.
Hanoi: the capital of deep Vietnam — for those who want to understand, not just enjoy
Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City are two different answers to the same question: what do you want from Southeast Asia? HCMC is the answer if you want energy, professional opportunities, international community, hedonism and maximum pace. Hanoi is the answer if you want cultural depth, everyday quality of life, authenticity, calm and four seasons. There's no right or wrong answer — there are two profoundly different cities in the same country.
What to anticipate: winter can be depressing (misty, damp, 15°C for weeks). The expat community is less dense and less international than HCMC's. Professional opportunities in the private sector are more limited. And air pollution, while generally better than HCMC's, can be severe during the straw-burning season (April–May).
✓ Strengths
- Thousand-year Old Quarter · colonial architecture
- 4 seasons · exceptional autumn (22–27°C)
- Bún chả · phở gà · chả cá · unique gastronomy
- Hoan Kiem Lake · Tây Hồ · urban natural setting
- Cheaper than HCMC · very accessible
- Institutional hub · NGOs · diplomacy
- Human pace · life-sized city
✗ Limitations
- Cold and misty winter (Dec–Feb · 15–20°C)
- Less dense expat community than HCMC
- Fewer private-sector professional opportunities
- Airport far (35 km · 45–75 min)
- Heavier bureaucracy than HCMC
- Seasonal pollution (straw burning Apr–May)
- Less English outside expat zones than HCMC
Frequently asked questions
Hanoi or HCMC — how to choose?
Hanoi's Old Quarter — navigating the 36 lanes
Day trips from Hanoi — Ha Long Bay and beyond
What's a realistic monthly budget in Hanoi in 2026?
WiggMap — Indicative data: Savills Vietnam / Batdongsan.com.vn Jan. 2026, GSO Vietnam 2024, Speedtest Ookla 2025. Rents in USD (reference rate 1 USD ≈ 25,000 VND). This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, real estate or legal advice.