The Real Cost of Living in Da Nang: What YouTube Budget Breakdowns Won't Tell You
Expat Life
Da Nang

The Real Cost of Living in Da Nang: What YouTube Budget Breakdowns Won't Tell You

Linh Nguyen
Linh Nguyen
December 16, 2025 5 min read 33

The real cost of living comfortably in Da Nang is $800-$1,200/month, not the $400 you see on YouTube. Those budget videos ignore visa runs, health insurance, social life, and the reality that eating bánh mì twice daily gets old fast. Here's what expats actually spend after the honeymoon phase ends.

Yes, You Can Live on $400/Month. Here's What That Actually Looks Like.

The math is simple: $1.33 per day for food, cheap rent in the suburbs, no social life, no travel, no contingencies. Every single YouTube creator who made that video lived exactly like this—until they didn't.

You eat bánh mì or street food every meal. Sometimes the same thing twice. You live 30 minutes from the city center because that's where the cheap rent is. You don't go out. You don't drink. You don't date. You don't have unexpected medical issues. You don't want new clothes or a laptop upgrade or literally anything.

I'm not saying this to be cruel. I'm saying it because this budget exists only in theory. In practice, $400 a month is the budget of someone in crisis, not someone building a life.

The Hidden Costs Nobody Mentions

Food isn't really $1/day: A filling meal at a street stall is 25,000-40,000 VND (~$1-1.50). But after three months of eating nothing but bánh mì and cơm, you'll crave variety. That $3 bowl of actual vegetables, $4 coffee that doesn't taste like death—these add up. Real food budget: $30-50/month minimum if you're not eating like a robot.

You need bottled water: Tap water here isn't great. You're buying water constantly. $10-20/month.

Phone and internet: Not optional. $5-10/month.

Laundry and household stuff: Clothes wear out. You need soap, shampoo, toothpaste. $10-20/month.

Occasional transportation: You can't walk everywhere. Grab, taxis, maybe a motorbike. $30-50/month.

Health insurance: You don't have it in the $400 budget. When you get sick (and you will), you're paying out of pocket. Or you're going to a sketchy clinic. $20-100/month if you want actual safety.

Visa runs: Vietnam doesn't want you staying forever. You need to leave every few months. Flights to Cambodia or Thailand cost $50-150. $30-50/month amortized.

Social life: A beer costs $1. A decent meal with friends costs $5-10. If you have zero social life, this is free. If you're actually living, not just existing: $50-100/month.

The honest breakdown: Surviving = $400. Actually living = $800-1000/month minimum. Comfortably = $1200-1500/month.

What "$400/Month" Actually Means

It means you're treating Da Nang like an economics experiment, not a home. It means you're optimizing for "how cheap can I be" instead of "how well can I live." It means you're one medical emergency away from financial crisis.

Here's what I notice about the people actually living here long-term: They budget $1000-1500/month and don't talk about it on YouTube because it's less clickable than "$400."

The Scams and Reality Checks

If you're new and trying to live on minimal budget, locals know it. You'll get charged "foreigner prices." ATMs will eat your cards. Landlords will take advantage. You'll overpay for everything until you learn the system.

The people who actually save money here are the ones who can afford to not optimize every penny. Counterintuitive? Yes. But true. When you have some cushion, you don't make desperate decisions. You don't get scammed as easily.

The Real Equation

I came to Da Nang on the "$400/month challenge" mindset. I lasted about two months before I realized I was just... unhappy. Living in a cheap area. Eating the same food. Not going anywhere. Not doing anything. Not really living.

Then I started spending $1200/month. Same city. Completely different experience. I could eat good food. Go out with friends. Take trips. Actually enjoy being here.

The $400 budget is real. But it's not the experience YouTube is selling you. It's deprivation with better weather.

What I Actually Recommend

If you're thinking about moving here: Budget $1000-1200/month. This gives you actual quality of life, not optimization stress. This covers emergencies. This lets you be a human instead of a living spreadsheet.

If you're already here and broke: The $400 budget works temporarily. But start planning to make money or leave. Living this way is not sustainable.

If you found a way to live well on less: You're either living a different life than I described, or you're made of stronger stuff than I am. Either way, respect.

The Bottom Line

Da Nang is genuinely affordable. You absolutely can live better here for less money than most Western countries. But the "$400/month life" is a YouTube thumbnail, not reality. It's surviving, not living.

Come for the affordability. But budget for quality of life, not just bare survival. You'll be much happier, and honestly? You'll save more money by not being miserable and making stupid decisions.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can you really live on $400/month in Da Nang?
Technically yes, but it means eating street food twice daily, living far out, zero social life, no insurance. Survival mode, not sustainable.
What's a realistic budget for Da Nang?
$800-$1,200/month for comfortable living: decent apartment, varied food, health insurance, visa runs, social activities.
What costs do YouTube budgets ignore for Da Nang?
Health insurance, visa runs every 90 days, social life, varied food, household supplies, transportation, emergencies.
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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