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Vietnam Train Stations: A Realistic Guide to Boarding | Vietnam Wayfarer

🇮🇩 Bahasa Indonesia translation pending — showing English. View original →

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  3. Vietnam Train Stations: A Realistic Guide to Boarding
🇮🇩 Travel Tips · all · hanoi

Vietnam Train Stations: A Realistic Guide to Boarding

Boarding a train in Vietnam is straightforward once you know the flow — here's what actually happens between arriving at the station and finding your seat.

Oleh Nam NguyenMay 30, 20264 menit baca
A bustling railway platform with a passenger train and commuters under a cloudy sky.
↑ A bustling railway platform with a passenger train and commuters under a cloudy sky.Photo by Pew Nguyen on Pexels
Tags
#train travel#transport#vietnam railways#reunification express#travel tips#getting around#overnight train#budget travel
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Beyond the Beach: Eating Your Way Through Vung Tau

The Reunification Express connecting Hanoi and Saigon is one of the more satisfying ways to move through the country. But if it's your first time boarding a Vietnamese train, the station process has a few wrinkles worth knowing before you show up.

How Early to Arrive

Thirty to forty-five minutes before departure is the practical window. Arrive much earlier and you'll be standing around a waiting hall with nowhere comfortable to sit. Cut it closer than twenty minutes and you risk missing the train entirely — not because boarding is slow, but because staff close the platform gate before the scheduled departure, not after.

Major stations like Hanoi's Ga Ha Noi and Saigon's Ga Sai Gon are busy enough that navigating the concourse, finding the right platform, and locating your carriage takes a real five to ten minutes. Smaller stations — Hue, Da Nang, Ninh Binh (닌빈 / 宁平 / ニンビン) — are compact enough that fifteen minutes is plenty, but the same gate-closing rule applies.

Ticket Check and Security

At the platform entrance, a staff member checks your ticket before you go through. Have it ready — printed or on your phone. They'll match your ticket to your ID (passport for foreign travelers), so keep that accessible too. This is not a fast queue at busy departure times, which is another reason not to cut it close.

Some stations have a basic X-ray belt for bags, similar to what you'd find at a domestic bus terminal. It's quick and not particularly strict, but don't pack anything you'd be uncomfortable pulling out — large knives, gas canisters, that kind of thing are legitimately not allowed.

Platform Announcements Are in Vietnamese Only

This is the part that catches most foreign travelers off guard. Departure announcements over the PA system are in Vietnamese, and they are not repeated in English. If you're waiting in the main hall and tuning out the announcements, you may miss the call for your train.

The practical fix: watch the departure board and watch other passengers. When people start moving toward a platform, follow them and confirm with a staff member. You can show your ticket and say "tau nay?" (this train?) — they'll point you in the right direction. Don't rely on anyone tapping you on the shoulder.

Dense forest with lush green trees growing on hilly area near sandy shore and calm sea in nature on summer day

Photo by Quang Nguyen Vinh on Pexels

Finding Your Carriage

Carriages are labeled on the outside of each car — typically a number or letter stenciled on the door, matching what's printed on your ticket under "toa" (carriage) and "so ghe" or "so giuong" (seat or berth number). Walk along the platform and match the number on the car to your ticket.

Trains don't always stop with carriage 1 at the front-most platform position, and they don't always pull in perfectly centered. Be prepared to walk a bit. On the Reunification Express, the SE trains (numbered SE1 through SE8) are the faster, more comfortable services — if you're on one of these, the rolling stock is usually in better condition and the carriage numbering is more clearly marked.

If you've booked a soft sleeper ("giuong nam mem") for an overnight leg — say, Hanoi down to Hue or Da Nang (다낭 / 岘港 / ダナン) — the berths are numbered top to bottom, with lower berths costing slightly more and being significantly more comfortable for taller travelers. Upper berths get stuffy and have no dedicated reading light.

Luggage Limits and Reality

The official luggage allowance on Vietnamese trains is 20 kg for a standard ticket. In practice, enforcement is loose and large backpacks are common. That said, storage space inside carriages is limited — overhead racks on hard seat and soft seat cars are narrow, and under-seat space is minimal.

For sleeper cars, bags typically go under the lowest berth or in a luggage area at the end of the carriage. There are no lockers. Keep valuables in your day bag and stow your main pack where you can see it or loop the straps around something fixed. Overnight trains between Hanoi and Hue, or Da Nang and Saigon, are generally safe, but basic situational awareness applies.

Oversized items — bicycles, surfboards — require advance arrangement with the railway (Vietnam Railways, or VNR) and are loaded into a separate cargo carriage. Don't assume you can just bring a bike on board.

A red train parked at a Vietnamese urban station under a covered platform. Industrial and urban feel.

Photo by 🇻🇳🇻🇳 Việt Anh Nguyễn 🇻🇳🇻🇳 on Pexels

Buying Tickets and the Booking Window

Book through the official Vietnam Railways site (dsvn.vn) or through a reliable third-party like Baolau or 12Go Asia if the official site frustrates you. Trains on popular routes — especially around Tet, when the entire country travels — sell out weeks in advance. Outside of peak season, you can usually find seats a few days out, but sleeper berths on the SE trains between Hanoi and Saigon go fast year-round.

For short hops — Hue to Da Nang is about 2.5 hours and costs around 70,000–120,000 VND depending on class — you can often buy at the station window on the day. The coastal stretch on that route, passing over the Hai Van Pass, is genuinely one of the better train views in Southeast Asia.

Practical Notes

Station food varies: Hanoi and Saigon stations have small vendors selling "banh mi" and packaged snacks, but don't count on a proper meal inside. Board with food if you're on a long haul. Platform vendors sometimes appear at intermediate stops — you'll see locals handing things through windows — but timing is unpredictable. Most soft sleeper cars have an attendant who sells instant noodles and drinks from a cart.

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