Airport arrival
Noi Bai International (Hanoi)
Ride-hail pickup, SIM, ATMs, exit strategy, and scams — oriented for foreigners landing in Hanoi.
Terminal map overview
Most international arrivals funnel through immigration, baggage, then customs. Locate the nearest official airport map after customs — photograph it offline. Identify domestic transfer counters if you are connecting onward inside Vietnam.
Ride-hail pickup orientation
Ignore unsolicited drivers inside the baggage hall. Follow overhead signs to ride-hail corrals or licensed taxi queues. Confirm license plate and driver photo in your app before unlocking doors — Vietnam airports designate separate zones for app rides and street hail.
- Ignore unsolicited drivers inside the baggage hall.
- Follow overhead signs to ride-hail / public taxi queues.
- Confirm license plate and driver photo in your app before unlocking doors.
What most first-timers get wrong at Noi Bai International (Hanoi)
The biggest mistake at Noi Bai International (Hanoi) is accepting a ride from anyone who approaches you before you reach the official ride-hail or taxi zone. Vietnam airports have designated areas where licensed taxis and app rides operate — anywhere else is unmetered, unregulated, and consistently overpriced. The second mistake is rushing currency exchange at the first booth you see after customs. Airport exchange rates in Vietnam are often worse than what you will get from a bank ATM in the city. Withdraw just enough local cash for your first transfer and meal, then exchange larger amounts at downtown banks or reputable money changers.
Third: do not skip the SIM queue even if it looks long. Connectivity in the first 30 minutes determines whether your ride-hail app works, whether your accommodation can reach you, and whether your bank fraud alert clears before your card gets blocked. A local SIM costs the equivalent of one coffee and solves these problems immediately.
The Noi Bai International (Hanoi) scam pattern every foreigner should know
Every major Vietnam airport has the same core scam: someone in semi-official-looking clothing approaches you in arrivals and offers to help with your taxi, SIM, or exchange. They are not airport staff. The tell is that real airport workers do not approach passengers — they stand at fixed booths and answer when asked. Anyone who walks toward you has a commission motive.
The LandedGo app tracks active scam reports from the community at Hanoi — you will see a live feed of what has been reported at this airport in the last 30 days as soon as you land.
Timing your arrival
If you can choose your landing time, avoid mid-morning arrivals on Sundays and public holidays — that is when immigration queues are longest at most Vietnam international terminals. Early morning arrivals (05:00–08:00) typically clear fastest. Check your airline confirmation for any required online health or arrival declarations — Vietnam has used seasonal digital forms depending on port and policy.
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