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What to Bring When You're Invited to a Vietnamese Home | Vietnam Wayfarer

🇯🇵 日本語 translation pending — showing English. View original →

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What to Bring When You're Invited to a Vietnamese Home

Showing up empty-handed is fine in some cultures. In Vietnam, it isn't. Here's what to bring, what to skip, and how to hand it over without causing awkward silences.

Nam Nguyen 著May 30, 20264 分で読める
Traditional Vietnamese gift basket for Tet with decorated items, perfect for celebrations.
↑ Traditional Vietnamese gift basket for Tet with decorated items, perfect for celebrations.Photo by Thái Trường Giang on Pexels
Tags
#etiquette#culture#gifts#home visit#vietnamese customs#travel tips#tet#food gifts
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最終更新 · May 30, 2026 · 独自取材、スポンサーなし。

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If a Vietnamese family invites you into their home — for a meal, a holiday, or just an afternoon visit — arriving with a gift is expected, not optional. It doesn't need to be expensive, but it does need to be thoughtful. Get it right and you've already made a good impression before you sit down.

The Basics: What Actually Works

Fruit

Fruit is the default gift for a reason. It's always appropriate, it reads as generous without feeling like a bribe, and almost every host will genuinely use it. A basket or bag of mixed fruit — dragon fruit, mangoes, rambutans, mangosteens — runs about 80,000–150,000 VND at a good market stall and looks more substantial than the price suggests. Buy from a proper fruit shop rather than a convenience store; presentation matters here.

Avoid buying a single type of fruit in odd numbers. Five pieces is fine. Four is bad luck in some parts of the country (the word sounds like "death" in certain regional dialects). Stick to five, six, or eight pieces if you're assembling something yourself.

Tea and Coffee

A box of quality loose-leaf tea — particularly "tra Oolong" or "tra Thai Nguyen" green tea — is a safe, appreciated gift across all age groups. Older hosts especially welcome it. Expect to spend 100,000–250,000 VND for something that looks genuinely considered. Avoid the mass-produced supermarket sachets; they telegraph that you bought it at the last minute.

If the household you're visiting is known to be coffee drinkers, a bag of quality Vietnamese coffee works just as well. A 250g bag of whole-bean or ground coffee from a reputable roaster in Hanoi or Saigon costs around 80,000–180,000 VND and is the kind of thing people don't always buy for themselves.

Cakes and Sweets

Boxed cakes — "banh" from a bakery rather than a supermarket shelf — are common gifts and well-received. "Banh dau xanh" (mung bean cakes), "banh pia" from the Mekong region, or a box of mooncakes around the Mid-Autumn Festival season are all appropriate. A decent boxed selection sits in the 120,000–300,000 VND range.

For Tet specifically, the calculus shifts. Bringing "banh chung" — the traditional sticky rice cake stuffed with pork and mung bean — is deeply appropriate and meaningful. It signals that you understand what the holiday actually means, not just that you bought something from the airport.

Alcohol

A bottle of wine or a small box of beer isn't wrong, but read the room first. Older or more traditional households may not drink, and showing up with a bottle of red wine to a Buddhist family can feel off. If you know the host drinks, a bottle of decent imported wine (300,000–500,000 VND) or a box of Tiger or Saigon (사이공 / 西贡 / サイゴン) Beer works fine for a casual family dinner.

What to Avoid

Chrysanthemums

This is the one that catches most visitors off guard. Chrysanthemums — the pale yellow or white varieties especially — are funeral flowers in Vietnam (베트남 / 越南 / ベトナム). They're placed at altars and used in mourning rituals. Bringing them to a home visit is the floral equivalent of arriving with condolences. Skip them entirely. If you want to bring flowers, go with sunflowers, gerberas, or a small orchid arrangement.

Clocks and Watches

A clock as a gift is considered bad luck — it implies you're counting down someone's remaining time. This is a shared superstition across much of East and Southeast Asia. Don't overthink it, just don't do it.

Shoes

Gifting shoes — particularly to an elder — implies you want them to walk away from you, or in some readings, to walk away from life. It's not a hard rule for all families, but the association is common enough that it's not worth the risk.

Anything Wrapped in Black or White

Both colours are associated with mourning. If you're wrapping a gift, use red, yellow, or pink. Most gift shops in Vietnam will wrap purchases in appropriately coloured paper automatically — let them.

Close-up of a beautifully wrapped gift with a yellow bow on a decorated table setting.

Photo by Ditta Alfianto on Pexels

How to Present the Gift

Use both hands when offering the gift. This applies to handing over anything to someone older than you, and it's simply good manners in most situations. Don't make a production of it — a brief, understated gesture as you arrive is the norm. Something like "I brought a little something" rather than drawing attention to the value or the thought that went into it.

Don't be surprised if the host sets the gift aside without opening it in front of you. This is common and not a sign of indifference. Opening gifts immediately in front of the giver can feel like you're evaluating the gift's worth, which runs counter to how hospitality is managed here. If they do open it, compliment what they do with it, not the gift itself.

If you're visiting during Tet, gifts of money in red envelopes — "li xi" — for children in the household are expected and very welcome. Denominations like 50,000 or 100,000 VND per child are perfectly appropriate; the gesture matters more than the amount.

Traditional Vietnamese Tet meal featuring various dishes and decorations on a round table indoors.

Photo by Nguyen Truong Khang on Pexels

Bottom Line

You don't need to overspend or overthink this. A fruit basket, a box of tea, or a decent cake from a proper bakery covers almost every situation. The effort of buying something considered — rather than grabbing the nearest thing at a petrol station — is what actually gets noticed.

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