How to NOT Be That Tourist in Da Nang: A Reality Check on Traveler Etiquette
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Da Nang

How to NOT Be That Tourist in Da Nang: A Reality Check on Traveler Etiquette

Linh Nguyen
Linh Nguyen
December 16, 2025 7 min read 23

Da Nang receives over 2.5 million tourists annually, but a specific type of visitor ruins the experience for everyone, not because of where they're from, but how they behave. If you want to visit Da Nang without becoming "that tourist," understanding respectful travel etiquette is essential for locals and fellow travelers alike.

I've watched tourists get drunk and demand things from waitresses like they're servants. I've seen people yell at bus drivers, speak loudly in streets like they own them, and treat local staff like props in their vacation story instead of actual humans.

Here's the thing: Da Nang's locals are genuinely hospitable. That's not a marketing slogan, that's real. But hospitality has limits. When you abuse it, you're not just being rude. You're actively harming people who are trying to make a living.

The Reality: You're Not in Your Home Country

Explore Da Nang's expat community and you'll find people who understand that respect is the foundation of good travel. The city welcomes visitors who treat it as a home, not a playground.

The Problem Isn't What You Think It Is

Travel blogs want to blame "Western tourists" for bad behavior. That's lazy. The truth is more complicated and more important: Bad behavior comes from everywhere. I've seen Indian tourists, Russian tourists, Israeli tourists, Chinese tourists, Korean tourists, all treating locals like they don't matter.

The common thread isn't nationality. It's entitlement. It's people who think the normal rules of human decency don't apply when they're traveling. It's people who use a different country as a playground for behavior they'd never get away with at home.

That's the actual problem.

What "That Tourist" Looks Like

Drunk and demanding: Getting intoxicated and yelling orders at service workers like they're servants. This happens more than it should, and locals remember every time.

Loud and inconsiderate: Speaking at maximum volume everywhere you go. Restaurants, streets, transportation. Treating public spaces like they're your personal soundtrack.

Disrespectful of culture: Ignoring local customs because you don't think they apply to you. Touching sacred objects at temples. Treating holy sites like Instagram backdrops. Making fun of traditions you don't understand.

Entitled and demanding: Expecting everything to conform to what you're used to. Complaining about portions, prices, "cleanliness standards." Using locals as props in your story instead of seeing them as people.

Sexually exploitative: This one deserves its own category. There are tourists who come to Da Nang specifically to take advantage of locals' economic desperation. This isn't tourism, this is predation.

Disrespectful of the environment: Leaving trash, taking photos without permission, treating beaches like they're disposable.

How Locals See "That Tourist"

I've heard it from people who work in hospitality. They can spot bad tourists from a distance. The energy is different. The moment someone walks in being demanding instead of respectful, the entire dynamic changes.

Here's what's brutal: One bad tourist creates work for service staff that goes way beyond their job description. Locals then have to absorb that emotional labor, that disrespect, that entitlement, and they can't say anything back because they'll lose their job.

That's not okay. And if you know this and still act that way? You're choosing to cause harm.

The Real Impact

Bad tourist behavior doesn't just "sour the experience" for other tourists (though it does). It actively harms the people who live here. It normalizes disrespect. It makes locals less willing to be hospitable to the next traveler. It reinforces stereotypes and creates walls between communities.

You might leave Da Nang thinking "I had a great trip." Meanwhile, a waitress is still processing being yelled at by a drunk person who thought entitlement was a travel visa.

How to Actually Be a Decent Traveler

Start with respect: Assume locals are people with feelings, families, and dignity. Because they are. Treat service staff like humans, not servants. Say please and thank you. Make eye contact.

Learn basic phrases: "Hello," "thank you," "excuse me" in Vietnamese. It takes five minutes to learn. It shows you made an effort to meet the culture halfway.

Understand you're a guest: You're visiting someone else's home. Act accordingly. Don't get drunk and loud. Don't demand things. Don't expect everything to work your way.

Respect sacred spaces: Temples, shrines, cultural sites, these matter to locals. Don't treat them like theme parks. Remove your shoes when asked. Don't touch things you're not supposed to touch. Dress appropriately. Take it seriously.

Eat where locals eat: This isn't just good for experiencing "authentic" food. It puts money in local businesses instead of tourist chains. It shows you respect the culture enough to participate in it rather than observe it from behind a resort wall.

Ask before taking photos: Especially of people. A simple "Can I take your picture?" shows respect and often leads to better photos anyway because people relax.

Don't exploit anyone: This should be obvious, but apparently it's not. Don't use your money or privilege to take advantage of people's economic vulnerability. Just don't.

Leave places better than you found them: Pick up your trash. Don't damage things. Respect the beach, respect neighborhoods, respect the city.

Call out bad behavior: If you see another tourist being disrespectful, say something. Not aggressively, but firmly. "Hey, that's not cool" goes a long way. Creates social pressure for better behavior.

The Bottom Line

Da Nang is genuinely welcoming to visitors. It's beautiful, affordable, and the people are kind. You can have an incredible experience here.

But that only works if you show up as a respectful guest, not an entitled consumer. If you can't do that, if you need to get drunk and demanding, if you need to treat locals like servants, if you need to treat the culture like it exists for your entertainment, then honestly, don't come.

There are plenty of other tourists who will show respect and create the kind of community that makes Da Nang worth visiting in the first place.

Be that person. Not "that tourist."

Ready to explore Vietnam responsibly? Join travelers who understand that respect creates better experiences for everyone.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the biggest mistakes tourists make in Da Nang?
The biggest mistakes include treating service workers disrespectfully, getting drunk and loud in public spaces, ignoring cultural norms at temples and sacred sites, and expecting everything to work exactly like it does at home. These behaviors harm local communities and create negative experiences for everyone.
Do I need to speak Vietnamese to be respectful in Da Nang?
You don't need fluency, but learning basic phrases like "xin chào" (hello), "cảm ơn" (thank you), and "xin lỗi" (sorry/excuse me) takes just minutes and shows locals you respect their culture. Even small efforts at speaking Vietnamese are greatly appreciated and make interactions more positive.
How should I behave at temples and cultural sites in Da Nang?
Remove your shoes when required, dress modestly (covered shoulders and knees), don't touch sacred objects or statues, speak quietly, and ask permission before taking photos of people or ceremonies. These sites are active places of worship, not just tourist attractions, so treat them with the reverence locals do.
What's the best way to support local businesses in Da Nang?
Eat at local restaurants instead of international chains, shop at markets run by Vietnamese vendors, hire local guides, and stay in locally-owned accommodations when possible. Being respectful, tipping appropriately, and treating staff well also supports the community beyond just financial transactions.
Written by
Linh Nguyen
Linh Nguyen
Vietnam From Hanoi, Vietnam | Vietnam Living in Da Nang, Vietnam

Marketing strategist and content creator based in Da Nang. After five years in Ho Chi Minh City's corporate scene, I relocated to Central Vietnam for a better quality of life. I write about Vietnamese business culture, hidden local spots, and building a career along the coast.

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