An Bang Beach near Hoi An has 47 beach clubs on 2km of coastline and reaches capacity by 10am. For those exploring Hoi An beaches, Tam Ky’s beaches 30 minutes south (Tam Thanh Beach) see 90% fewer tourists with comparable water quality and cost $12 by taxi or 5 minutes if staying there.

๐ Hoi An Beaches: At a Glance
๐ An Bang Beach: 47+ beach clubs on 2km, peak capacity by 10am daily
๐ฅ Crowd Reality: 3,500+ daily visitors in peak season vs. 350 at Tam Ky beaches
โฑ๏ธ Travel Time: 30 minutes south by taxi ($12) from Hoi An to Tam Thanh Beach
๐ค๏ธ Water Quality: Identical clear conditions, same South China Sea coastline
๐ฐ Cost Savings: 40-60% cheaper lodging in Tam Ky vs. Hoi An beachfront
โ ๏ธ Peak Crowds: An Bang hits capacity 9:30-10am weekends, 11am weekdays
๐ซ Skip An Bang if: You need personal space, hate beach club music, or visit weekends

๐๏ธ Why Hoi An Beaches (An Bang, Cua Dai) Hit Capacity by 10am
An Bang Beach transformed from sleepy fishing village to Vietnam’s most commercialized 4km coastline in under a decade. What locals describe as “the beach that ate itself,” An Bang now packs more beach clubs per meter than any Vietnamese destination outside Nha Trang. The main entrance at Hai Ba Trung Street sees tour buses disgorging groups starting at 8:30am, with lounger availability gone by 9:45am on weekends.
The mathematics of overcrowding are brutal. An Bang’s swimmable beach area measures roughly 2km long by 40 meters wide at high tide, creating 80,000 square meters of usable sand. With 47 registered beach clubs (as of January 2025, up from 31 in 2022), each operating 30-50 loungers, you’re competing with 1,600+ pre-reserved spaces before factoring in walk-up visitors, locals, and the 200+ daily tour group arrivals. Check U.S. State Department Vietnam travel advisory before your trip.

An Bang Beach Now Has 47 Beach Clubs on 2km of Sand
Beach club density reached tipping point in 2024 when Nguyen Phan Vinh Street (the beachfront road) ran out of buildable lots. Developers now stack two-story operations with rooftop bars, live DJs starting at 11am, and aggressive lounger hosts who chase beachgoers down the sand. The north and south ends offer marginally less chaos, but you’ll walk 15-20 minutes from parking to reach them. Water quality remains excellent, the same South China Sea conditions found at every Quang Nam beach, but elbow room disappeared.
Local expats who’ve watched An Bang’s evolution describe a 2019 inflection point. Before COVID, An Bang balanced charm with tourism. Post-reopening in 2022, investors flooded in. The Vietnam National Tourism Administration reports An Bang receives 3,500 daily visitors during peak months (April through August), with 70% concentrated in the central 800-meter
stretch. By 10am on weekends, you’re stepping over towels, dodging football games, and navigating a gauntlet of seafood vendors. The beach you came for exists only before 9am or after 5pm.

โ๏ธ Hoi An Beaches vs Tam Ky Beaches: The Crowd Differential
Tam Ky’s beaches sit 30 minutes south but operate in a parallel tourism universe. The provincial capital of Quang Nam, Tam Ky (population 122,000) remains unknown to 95% of Hoi An visitors despite sharing the same coastline. Tam Thanh Beach, the most developed of Tam Ky’s coastal areas, sees roughly 350 visitors daily during peak season, a 90% reduction from An Bang’s crowds. The same golden sand, same water temperature (26-29ยฐC year-round), same gentle waves, but with actual space to breathe.
The comparison becomes stark when you examine infrastructure. An Bang’s 47 beach clubs generate constant noise, from competing sound systems to jet ski touts to the 3pm loudspeaker announcements (in Vietnamese) that wake nappers. Tam Thanh Beach operates maybe 8 low-key restaurants, most playing soft music or none at all. An Bang parking costs 10,000-20,000 VND with aggressive attendants; Tam Thanh offers free beach parking monitored by sleepy locals. The trade-off? An Bang delivers nightlife, diverse dining, and that buzzy beach scene energy. Tam Thanh gives you actual relaxation.

Tam Thanh Beach Sees 90% Fewer Tourists, Same Water Quality
Water quality along Quang Nam’s coastline remains consistent whether you’re at An Bang or Tam Thanh. Both beaches share the same South China Sea conditions: clear water with 4-6 meters visibility, warm temperatures (26-29ยฐC year-round), and gentle waves most months. The ocean doesn’t care about tourism development. What differs radically is beach maintenance and crowd impact.
An Bang’s heavy foot traffic requires daily trash collection, yet plastic still accumulates near the Hidden Beach transition area. Tam Thanh’s light usage means cleaner sand, fewer cigarette butts, and that “untouched” aesthetic travelers expect but rarely find at An Bang. The beach stretches 2 kilometers with coconut groves providing natural shade, shallow calm water extending 400-500 meters from shore, and minimal tourist infrastructure. For current safety updates, review CDC Vietnam travel health information regarding waterborne considerations.

๐ How to Reach Tam Ky Beaches From Hoi An (Or Skip Hoi An Entirely)
Getting to Tam Thanh Beach from Hoi An requires zero Vietnamese language skills and minimal planning. Open the Grab app, enter “Tam Thanh Beach, Tam Ky” as destination, and you’ll see quoted prices of 250,000-280,000 VND ($10-12) for the 35-40 minute drive. Drivers know the route (Highway 1A south, exit at DT614 toward the coast). Request a car (GrabCar) rather than motorcycle for comfort, though xe om (motorbike taxis) quote 180,000 VND for brave souls.
The alternative strategy: base yourself in Tam Ky and day trip to Hoi An Ancient Town. Accommodation in Tam Ky runs 40-60% cheaper than Hoi An’s beachfront rates. A 4-star hotel room in Tam Ky averages $35-45/night vs. $70-90 for equivalent An Bang properties. You’ll spend $12 on taxis to visit Hoi An’s lantern-lit streets (30 minutes), enjoy cheaper local restaurants, and wake up 5 minutes from empty beaches. The tourism board doesn’t promote this option because Hoi An collects the hotel tax revenue, but financially savvy travelers already know.

30-Minute Taxi Costs $12, Staying in Tam Ky Puts You 5 Minutes Away
Tam Ky City Center hotels and guesthouses cluster along Hung Vuong and Phan Chu Trinh streets, a 10-minute motorbike ride (or $3 taxi) from Tam Thanh Beach. Grab works perfectly here with 5-minute wait times max. Most accommodations offer complimentary bicycles, allowing self-sufficient beach access. The ride down DT614 passes rice paddies and the famous Tam Thanh Mural Village (worth a 20-minute photo stop on your first beach run).
Daily routine optimization: wake at 6am, bike or taxi to Tam Thanh Beach for sunrise swimming (local families do this too, it’s lovely), return to hotel for breakfast, spend midday exploring Tam Ky’s markets or the Vietnam Heroic Mother Statue, then late afternoon beach return when temperatures drop. Evening taxi to Hoi An Ancient Town (30 minutes, 250,000 VND round trip if driver waits) for dinner and lantern shopping. You’ve just saved $50+ on accommodation while accessing better beaches and seeing tourist Hoi An on your terms. For visa requirements and entry procedures, consult the Vietnam Immigration Department official portal.

โฐ When Hoi An Beaches Are Still Worth It: Despite the Crowds
An Bang redeems itself under specific conditions that reward strategic timing and realistic expectations. First-light arrivals (6:30-8am) discover the beach locals treasure, before lounger wars and tour buses. The sunrise over Cham Islands creates Instagram moments, local fishermen still pull nets, and you’ll actually hear waves instead of EDM. Morning swimmers (mostly Vietnamese families) create communal energy that disappears once the beach clubs wake up. This window closes fast. By 9am weekdays, 8:30am weekends, the transformation begins.
The second redemption window: late afternoon post-4pm when day-trippers evacuate and beach clubs shift to sunset cocktail mode. The party energy mellows, staff stop aggressively
selling, and the golden hour light makes even packed beaches photogenic. Soul Kitchen and The Deckhouse host decent sunset sets (live music, not DJs) around 5:30pm. If your vacation prioritizes social beach scenes over solitude, An Bang delivers. You’ll meet travelers, join impromptu volleyball games, and access 40+ dining options without leaving the sand.

An Bang Still Best for Beach Clubs and Seafood, Just Go Before 9am
Culinary variety remains An Bang’s undeniable advantage over Tam Ky beaches. From Esco Beach Bar’s wood-fired pizzas to The Fisherman’s vegan menu to Sound of Silence’s overpriced (but expertly made) coconut coffee, An Bang feeds every craving. Tam Thanh offers maybe 6 restaurants, all serving similar fresh seafood and Vietnamese staples. No craft cocktails, no international menus, no beach club brunches. For foodies willing to sacrifice tranquility for variety, An Bang wins.
The pre-9am strategy works best on weekdays (Tuesday through Thursday) when tour schedules lighten. Arrive at 7:30am, stake a lounger at the north end near Tan Thanh Beach transition, swim during the golden hour calm, order breakfast from a beach club (free loungers if you spend 150,000+ VND), and evacuate by 10:30am before peak chaos. You’ve experienced An Bang’s best elements while dodging its worst. The Government of Canada Vietnam travel advice provides additional safety and health considerations for coastal activities. Pair this with a late afternoon Tam Thanh beach run (4pm taxi south, 30 minutes, catch sunset at empty beach, return to Hoi An by 7pm) and you’ve optimized both destinations’ strengths without surrendering to overcrowding.



