COST OF LIVING IN DA NANG, VIETNAM 2025 GUIDE
Planning to live in Da Nang, Vietnam? Our 2024 cost of living guide covers rent, food, transportation, utilities, and lifestyle expenses. Find out how much you need to live comfortably as an expat, digital nomad, or retiree. Explore budget-friendly tips and real monthly expense estimates.
WHY DA NANG?
How does retiring, living, or just spending a year in a beautiful beach town filled with white sand beaches, great food, and a chill lifestyle for less than $900 bucks a month sound to you? Well, then welcome to Da Nang, Vietnam! Once an R&R spot for GIs, it is becoming increasingly popular among retirees and digital nomads looking for affordability and quality of life.
BEACH TOWN LIVING
Tucked along Vietnam’s central coast, Da Nang offers the perfect blend of modern conveniences and an insanely low cost of living compared to the US or the West. Da Nang has about 1.2 million people in it at any given time, so it’s large enough to provide most of the Western amenities you want, but small enough to avoid the “New York in Asia” feel of cities like Ho Chi Minh City or Hanoi.
IT IS A ‘CLEAN’ CITY
And unlike every other beach town in Southeast Asia, Da Nang does not have a sin district, and therefore it does not have the expat scumbag crowd and all of the local hustlers and crime that inevitably follow.
DA NANG BY AGE
FOR FOLKS IN THE 18 to 35 RANGE
If you are in your 20s or 30s and are single and ready to mingle, trust me, the beach bars in Da Nang are filled with early 20s backpackers and digital nomads. But to be honest, if you are looking for a party place with big nightclubs and full-moon parties, Da Nang won’t be your cup of tea.
FOR THE MORE WELL-AGED FOLKS HERE
If you are at the point in your life where you just want to chill, have a coffee in the AM, take a walk on the beach, see a movie, maybe finally write that novel you always dreamed of, and finish the day throwing back a few cold ones with some new friends in a pub, then look no further than Da Nang.
THE MOST BANG FOR YOUR BUCK IN SOUTHEAST ASIA
The biggest appeal of living in Da Nang is that how much you spend on your monthly living expenses is completely up to you. You can live a three-minute walk from the beach for as little as 700 bucks a month or in a huge penthouse apartment eating T-bone steak every night for less than 2K a month. No matter your budget, you can live in Da Nang for a fraction of what it would cost back home.
SAFETY
Da Nang is also an extremely safe place to live. Stranger-on-stranger violent crime against expats is almost unheard of here. It does happen, but if you avoid getting into drunken brawls, don’t do anything stupid, and are not a criminal, then nothing will happen to you. I leave my $4,000 laptop in my room, take walks on the beach at midnight, and don’t think twice about it.
WESTERN-LIKE STANDARD OF LIVING
You can go down to sub-$500 a month, but then you are living below a Western standard of living. There is nothing wrong with that, but for most people from the West, it is too much of a lifestyle change, and they just can’t handle it.
For this article, we are going to stick to a minimum Western standard of living that includes an apartment in a clean hotel or building with an en-suite bathroom, hot water, AC, fast internet, a cell phone with a data plan, eating Western food a few times a week, buying some imported groceries, and some entertainment.
HOUSING & UTILITIES
APARTMENT
A fully furnished non-serviced one-bedroom apartment or a serviced hotel room (that includes water, weekly cleaning and linen service, and internet) close to the beach or city center costs between $199 and $500+ per month, depending on how fancy you are. If you go the apartment route, then add another $30 for internet, utilities, the extra cost of laundering your sheets and towels, and a bunch of cleaning supplies.
UTILITIES
Add another $30 to $50 a month for electricity, no matter what type of accommodation you choose. Summer is the hottest, so if you are like me and run your AC non-stop 24/7, then expect the higher end for most of the summer, and the lower end in the winter.
LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION
Moving further inland and away from the beach can bring costs down even more, but why not spend the extra $30 and live by the beach? Living in an apartment stuffed in a city block next to a shopping mall takes away one of the major attractions of living in Da Nang: the ability to live within a two-minute walk to the beach starting at just over a couple of hundred bucks a month.
TYPICAL EXPAT HOUSING
I pay $230 a month for a serviced room in a long-term stay hotel with a 24/7 manned front desk, on a floor above the 6th so I can open the windows without bugs getting in. Internet and water are included, the room is serviced with cleaning, and all linens are changed twice a week, the building has an elevator, and it is a 1½-minute walk to the beach. I prefer a building with a manned front desk 24/7 just in case of some sort of emergency (like stroking out) and for the added security.
COST EXAMPLE:
For a place to live, you are looking at a minimum of $199 to $500 a month + $30 to $50 for Electricity for a one-bedroom non-serviced apartment or a serviced one-room hotel. This can go up to over $1000 depending on how big you want the place.
FOOD AND ENTERTAINMENT
Local chow is cheap, even in restaurants catering to the expat crowd. In places with AC, a meal will cost you around $7 to $15 and up for a full meal and drinks—double or triple that if you want surf and turf. At the local sit-down spots, a meal will cost you $4 and up with a drink.
WESTERN FOOD, EATING OUT, & DELIVERY
The food scene here is top-notch, with every type of cuisine represented—, rom Korean BBQ to Indian to vegan and so-so pizza. Local spots are crazy cheap, just give yourself a few weeks to get your stomach used to the local bacteria first. with
WESTERN FOOD
Western and international restaurants are expensive by Vietnamese standards but still cheap from a Western perspective. For example, a meal with ten huge fried chicken wings and large fries delivered to your apartment at 11 PM is about $7, including delivery.
If you like steak a 10.5 oz ribeye from Australia and two beers at a sit-down restaurant will run you $33. Expensive for a single meal compared to the local chow, but fundamentally free if you are from NYC.
LOCAL CHOW
Street food and the local sit-down restaurants that specialize in one thing are excellent here. You can get half a grilled chicken with sides going for four bucks US, and a bowl of Pho starting at less than two bucks.
WATCH YOUR WAISTLINE
Be forewarned about the ubiquitous Bánh mì sando, you can not go half a block without walking past someone selling them. They are one of the most delicious and addictive things you will ever eat, they cost less than a dollar for a simple one, and up to three for a fancy one. I gained a gut in a month because I was eating so many of them, then spent two months burning it off at the gym.
GROCERIES
Groceries are also affordable if you shop at local markets and grocery stores. The large superstore grocery stores in the malls and the specialty expat stores range from the same price as in the States to 100%++ more for Western and Korean imported items. For example, a box of Kraft Mac & Cheese is $4 here!
LIQUID COURAGE
Booze is cheap if you buy local brands. One can of beer is 45 cents, and a fifth of rum is $5.30. For the imported Western brands of booze like Jack Daniels and Budweiser, you can double to triple the price you would pay back home.
THE EATING HABITS OF A TYPICAL EXPAT IN DA NANG
I usually eat locally for one meal and internationally for the other, with cooking at home spattered in here and there. I also buy Western food items like dill pickles, yellow mustard, and imported Korean and American groceries at expat shops, along with buying normal groceries at local shops. Doing that, I spend more than the average expat who is trying to stay under a budget. On the other hand, I don’t drink at bars or drink regularly anymore, so for me, it evens out.
YOUR FOOD COSTS WILL VARY DEPENDING ON YOUR TASTES
How much you end up spending on ordering in, eating out, groceries, and booze is completely up to you and depends on your tastes. One thing to keep in mind is that if you have never lived overseas before and you are used to Western food, you will get bored of the local chow fast.
HOW MUCH FOR FOOD AND HOOCH?
I eat Western food 4 to 5 times a week, buy some imported groceries, and shop and eat at local spots for my other meals (I eat so many Banh Mi sandwiches).
COST EXAMPLE:
I spend $300 to $400 a month on food. This is on the medium side of food spending. I rarely drink so if you are a drinker you may want to throw another hundo onto that.
ENTERTAINMENT/HANGING OUT
COFFIE
Coffee at a nice coffeehouse with Wi-Fi where you can chill out or work is $2; at a local coffee street vendor, you can cut that price to less than half that.
MOVIES
If you want to see the latest flicks, it is $2.30 to $3.50 for a regular movie; a 3D or VIP seat will run you around $4.70 to $6.25.
FANCY DINNER OUT
Sit-down Medium to High-End dinners can run between $12 for a Detroit Deep Dish Pizz to $100 for a lobster feast.
BARS/PUBS
At beer gardens and expat bars, local brands of beer are about $1, and a mixed drink is $3. Again, double or triple those prices for the imported stuff or if you go somewhere fancy. So, if you are a drinker, you can kill a six-pack at a bar for $6.
NIGHTLIFE
The nightlife in Da Nang is mostly the bars I mentioned before. Yeah, sure, they do have the big hostess karaoke clubs and a casino for Korean and Chinese tourists if you want to spend $500+ a night. But overall, Da Nang is more of a beach bar town with a beach bar vibe. Most of the places where expats drink are open-air bars and some AC pool halls.
SHOPPING MALLS
There are two big Western-style malls, modern electronics stores, and tons of local goods markets. The area you want to live in is the My Khe Beach area; it is walkable for all your needs, and walking around is entertainment itself in Southeast Asia.
OTHER FUN STUFF TO DO IN DA NANG:
Take Vietnamese cooking classes: $21
1-on-1 Da Nang street food tour: $32
Safari to look for endangered monkeys: $40
Take a day trip to Ba Na Golden Bridge: $26
Shoot some pool: Free if you buy a beer
I like to just sit on the beach and chill, this is the one thing I do every day.
There are a million things to do in Da Nang.
COST EXAMPLE:
So, maybe 30$ to “sky’s the limit” on entertainment a month.
CELL PHONE SERVICE AND INTERNET
For up to 8 gigs a day, it’s $7.80 a month; the SIM will cost you $2. I get between 30 and 50 Mbps down on my phone, depending on what time of day it is and if I’m using a VPN or not.
MOST SERVICED APARTMENTS AND ALL HOTELS HAVE FREE INTERNET
My apartment comes with Wi-Fi included in the rent and gets mid-200s Mbps no matter what time of day it is. So, less than $8 a month for internet and cell service. You can get a hotspot for your home if the internet is not included, and that will set you back about the same, plus the router.
COST EXAMPLE:
Phone service and internet: $8 a month.
TRANSPORTATION
Renting a motorbike costs $40 per month or $4 a day; some places charge more, so shop around and check their reviews. The Vietnamese version of Uber here is Grab. You can get just about anywhere in the city for less than $4 in a car and 50 to 90 cents on a motorbike. I don’t rent a motorbike monthly because I know I’ll crash it in the crazy traffic here—I tend to zone out whenever I get behind the wheel of a vehicle these days.
RIDESHARE IN DA NANG
So, I just use Grab for getting around when I need to and for food delivery. You can add your credit card to your Grab account or pay cash.
COST EXAMPLE:
I spend maybe $20 for a dozen motor taxi rides and a bunch of food deliveries a month. If you rent a motorbike it will cost you $40 bucks.
VISAS AND VISA RUNS
The only disadvantage of Vietnam is the longest visa stay you can get is a 90-day visa. It costs $25 for a single entry or $50 for a multiple-entry visa. You have to leave the country and then go back through Vietnamese immigration to get a new stamp.
VISA RUN OPTIONS IN DA NANG
You can fly out or take a bus, depending on your budget. A flight to Vientiane, Laos, and back will cost at a minimum $250 if booked ahead, plus a hotel in Vientiane for one night is $30—unless you want to fly back the same day, which will be miserable—another $35 for the Lao visa and another $20 for meals.
ALL-IN-ONE PACKAGE DEALS
Or you can take a bus in a package that includes the bus ride both ways, the Vietnamese 90-day visa, the Lao visa, and fixers on both sides of the border to make things go smoothly for $123 to $160 total.
I do both. The bus with fixers is great, especially if you forget to go online and get your eVisa and you have less than a week before your visa expires, or you just want to take the least expensive route.
COST EXAMPLE:
IF YOU FLY OUT: Flight out and in, hotel in Louse overnight and meals, and fly back to Vietnam is about $400+ (equivalent to $133.33 a month)
FULL-SERVICE PACKAGE: By bus once every 3 months is $160 (equivalent to $53.30 a month).
For detailed information on visa runs in Da Nang and My recommendation for the best visa run service in Da Nang check out this article: -VIETNAM VISA RUNS EXPLAINED: LYNN VISA REVIEW AND PRO TIPS
MISCELLANEOUS STUFF
Laundry service: $1–2 per kilo of your dirty drawers. Make sure and choose a shop that uses dryers as opposed to line drying because your clothes will smell like mildew.
COST EXAMPLE:
I spend $6 a month to have three large loads of laundry washed, dried, and folded.
STUFF: Probably throw in another $50 on things like toiletries, bottled water, condiments, grabbing a soda or coconut and all the normal stuff you have to buy here and there no matter where in the world you live. Add another $100 for your first month for buying “new apartment” stuff.
COST EXAMPLE:
Add another $50-$75 for stuff.
TOTAL MONTHLY EXPENSES FOR LIVING IN DA NANG
MY QUICK MONTHLY EXPENSES BREAKDOWN:
RENT: $199
ELECTRICITY: $30 to $55
FOOD: $300 to $400
ENTERTAINMENT: $50
CELL PHONE WITH DATA: $8
TRANSPORTATION: $20
MISCELLANEOUS STUFF: $50 to $75
COFFEEHOUSES: $100
TOTAL: 757 to $907
AVERAGES OUT TO: $832
ADD 3 VISA RUNS: $600
EQUALS: $882 A Month
BOOZE AND BARS
This does not include going out to bars and clubs and any alcohol at all. If you are a drinker and you go clubbing and bar hopping add 50% more to your monthly.
FLIGHTS
Flights back home to visit your folks, nor the initial flight to Da Nang is included as it will vary greatly depending on how far in advance you booked it and where you are flying from/to. So it is up to you to do the math and add it to your expenses.
THE MATH
For some, this is way on the low side, for others this is way on the high side. There are just so many factors that change the numbers there is no way I can account for them all here.
For a comfortable but modest lifestyle, you can expect to spend between $700 to $1,000 per month. Start adding money in $100 increments to that, and things only get easier and more luxurious. Can you even remember when an extra $100 a month made a difference in your lifestyle? Well, here in Da Nang, it does!
Between $882 to $1,200 per month minimum for a basic Western-style lifestyle in a one-bedroom apartment or single hotel room.
FINAL THOUGHTS AND ADVICE
For some people, having to do a visa run every three months could be a sticking point. But I do it, and honestly, it’s a zero-burger. I get a ton of work done on the VIP bus or watch movies the whole ride—it’s practically a vacation. Seriously, it isn’t a big deal, and if you are like me, after a while, you get stuck in a routine, and it’s good to break it up now and then. It also helps to keep the riff-raff out.
A GOOD MIX OF EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO LIVE
Overall, when you take into consideration the cost of living at a hybrid local/western standard, safety, cool local people, and a vibrant expat community of young and old, all wrapped up in a mostly walkable city, then you just can’t beat Da Nang.
If you have any questions, feel free to ask in the comments.
Have a nice day!