đŸ‡»đŸ‡ł Vietnam with Kids

đŸ‡»đŸ‡ł Vietnam with Kids → Mekong Delta to PhĂș Quốc (What Actually Worked)

Vietnam wasn’t a typical vacation for us. It was a return → to family, culture, and a completely different pace of life.

Traveling there with kids? Meaningful, chaotic, exhausting
 and absolutely worth it. The hardest part is often just getting everyone through the long-haul flight in one piece.

This trip was part of our ongoing content development for Tiny Tales Expedition, focused on long-haul travel with kids, cultural experiences, and navigating family travel in Southeast Asia.


Family visiting Vinpearl Safari in Vietnam with kids standing at the colorful entrance sign


Mom and child feeding a goat at Vinpearl Safari Phu Quoc during a Vietnam family trip

✈ Getting There (Plan for This)

Getting to Vietnam from the U.S. is a commitment.

  • ~18–22 hours total travel time
  • Multiple flight segments
  • Then long drives depending on your destination

For us, reaching the Mekong Delta meant another 4–5 hour drive from Ho Chi Minh City.


Family relaxing inside private car transfer in Vietnam with kids

We used private car transfers between cities, and it made a huge difference with kids. The rides were comfortable, air‑conditioned, and gave everyone space to nap or snack. Our transfers typically cost between 500,000 and 1,000,000 VND depending on distance, which felt very reasonable compared to home.

đŸȘ Travel tip: Book your first few transfers ahead of time through your hotel or a trusted driver, then save their WhatsApp number. Once you find a reliable driver, it makes the rest of the trip much easier with kids.

Family gem: Pack a lightweight blanket, kid headphones, and a small snack bag just for the drives. It turns long Vietnamese road days into mini movie‑and‑nap sessions instead of battles.

đŸ›« Long-Haul Flights with Kids (What Actually Helped)

The flight to Vietnam can feel intimidating with little ones, but a few small strategies made a big difference for us.

We split boarding: Jan went onto the plane first with our carry‑ons and got everything set up. I stayed at the gate with Paxton and boarded last so he could run around and get his energy out instead of sitting on the plane longer than necessary.

  • Toys & activities: Two favorite toys, two new tiny surprises, a fidget spinner, coloring books, and silk crayons. New + familiar was the perfect balance.
  • Books: A couple of new airplane books plus one comfort favorite to keep bedtime routines feeling familiar at 35,000 feet.
  • Clothes & diapers: One full change of clothes for Paxton (and an extra shirt for us), plenty of diapers, and a fresh diaper change right before boarding so we weren’t wrestling him in the tiny airplane bathroom right away.
  • Snacks: Easy, non‑crumbly snacks he already liked—nothing brand‑new in case his stomach felt off.

Routine matters: We kept the day’s routine as normal as possible leading up to the flight—meals, nap, and bedtime cues—so he wasn’t starting the trip already overtired and extra grumpy.

Extra gems for long-haul flights: pre‑download shows and playlists, pack snacks in small “surprise” portions you can hand out slowly, and think in 30–45‑minute blocks (snack → toy → aisle walk → screen time → repeat) instead of trying to entertain for the entire flight at once.

🌮 Part 1 → Mekong Delta (Sóc Trăng)

The Mekong Delta is a different side of Vietnam.

  • Rice fields stretching for miles
  • Coconut groves everywhere
  • Local markets and slower‑paced daily life

It’s not polished tourism → it’s real, everyday Vietnam.

And what stood out most was the people.

In Vietnam, hospitality shows up as food.

  • Home‑cooked meals throughout the day
  • Fresh fruit constantly being brought over
  • Coconuts cut open on the spot

It’s generous, overwhelming (in a good way), and something kids remember.

Family gem: If you’re staying with relatives or at a homestay, bring a few small gifts from home (stickers, crayons, magnets). They’re an easy way for your kids to connect with cousins and local children without sharing a language.

👩 What Kids Experience Here

For kids, this part of Vietnam feels completely different than home.

  • More freedom and independence
  • Constant interaction with family
  • Outdoor play all day

Simple moments become highlights:

  • Morning bĂĄnh mĂŹ runs
  • Riding through town on a moped
  • Playing with cousins from morning to night


Child enjoying a large banh mi sandwich during a Vietnam family trip

Young child eating a bowl of Vietnamese pho for breakfast at a local market at dawn

Some of our favorite memories were those early mornings—pho at the crack of dawn at a local supermarket, steam rising from the bowls just after the roosters finished their morning calls.

Family gem: Street food can feel intimidating with kids, but look for busy stalls with lots of locals, short menus, and food cooked to order. We kept hand sanitizer and wet wipes in our daypack and it worked well.

đŸ˜”â€đŸ’« The Reality Check

Long‑haul travel with kids isn’t seamless.

  • Jet lag can take 3–4 days to reset
  • Schedules feel off at first
  • Kids may get sick (it happens)

This is where support matters.

Being surrounded by family made everything more manageable → something to factor in when planning trips like this.

Family gem: Build in at least one “nothing day” every 4–5 days where the only plan is naps, pool time, and easy food. In Vietnam’s heat and humidity, kids hit a wall faster than you expect.

đŸïž Part 2 → PhĂș Quốc (The Easy Finish)

After the Mekong Delta, we shifted to PhĂș Quốc → and it felt like a reset.

  • Short domestic flight from Ho Chi Minh City
  • Direct access to resorts
  • No long travel days once you arrive

This is one of the easiest places in Vietnam to travel with kids.


Mom lifting child near a metal tree sculpture on the beach in Phu Quoc Vietnam

Family with kids standing between two giant stone face statues on the sand in Phu Quoc Vietnam

đŸ‘šâ€đŸ‘©â€đŸ‘§â€đŸ‘Š Traveling with a Big Family

We were traveling with a large group, and surprisingly, it worked well.

  • Built‑in help with kids
  • Flexible schedules
  • Easy to split up and regroup


Large Vietnamese family grilling together at a hotel barbecue in Phu Quoc

Some of the best moments were the simple ones—like a big barbecue night at our hotel in PhĂș Quốc, kids running around while the grown‑ups cooked and caught up.

Family gem: When you travel with extended family, assign loose “kid shifts” for flights, pools, and outings. It keeps everyone from burning out and lets each adult sneak in real rest.

🎱 What to Do in PhĂș Quốc

If you’re visiting with kids, these are worth prioritizing:

  • VinWonders → theme park + water park, very family‑friendly
  • Hon Thom Cable Car → one of the longest overwater cable cars in the world
  • Beach and resort downtime → necessary after a long trip


Child posing in front of giant ferris wheel at VinWonders Phu Quoc theme park

Paxton loved VinWonders, especially the huge Sea Shell Aquarium inside VinWorld. It’s one of the largest turtle‑shaped aquariums in the world and ranks among the biggest aquaria in Southeast Asia, with thousands of marine animals and immersive tunnels kids can walk through.


Hon Thom sea crossing cable car above turquoise water near Phu Quoc Vietnam

The Hon Thom cable car holds a Guinness World Record as the longest non‑stop three‑rope cable car in the world, stretching nearly 8 km over the sea between An Thoi and Hon Thom Island. The ride takes around 15 minutes and feels like floating over turquoise water and fishing villages.

Family gem: For both VinWonders and the cable car, aim for weekday mornings, bring a lightweight stroller, and pack swimsuits in your day bag so you can move from rides to water play without heading back to the hotel.


Child riding on a moped with Vietnamese relative on a busy street during a Vietnam family trip

💡 Practical Takeaways

  • Build in recovery days at the start
  • Use private transfers whenever possible
  • Expect some disruption → it’s part of the experience
  • Mix cultural immersion with easier destinations like PhĂș Quốc

Vietnam with kids works best when you balance both.

Packing gem for Vietnam with kids: Our MVP items were a compact stroller, thin muslin blankets, electrolyte packets, a small medicine kit, and swimsuits that dried quickly. Everything else you can usually buy locally at markets or convenience stores.

💛 Final Thoughts

Vietnam isn’t the easiest destination with kids.

But it offers something different.

Connection, perspective, and experiences that go far beyond a typical family vacation.

Disclosure: This post may contain affiliate links.

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