Most people blowing through Kien Giang province are thinking about Phu Quoc — the big beach, the resort strip, the familiar itinerary. Ba Lua sits roughly 20 km southwest of Ha Tien and gets a fraction of the attention, which is exactly the point.

What Ba Lua Actually Is

Ba Lua is an archipelago of around 45 small islands — some forested, some bare karst — rising out of the Gulf of Thailand in the same dramatic way that Ha Long Bay's towers rise from the water. Locals and a few travel writers have started calling it the "Halong (하롱 / 下龙 / ハロン) of the south," which is a bit of a marketing shortcut but not entirely wrong. The limestone geology is similar. The scale is far smaller. The crowds are not comparable at all.

The islands are spread across a shallow bay edged by mangroves and fishing villages on the mainland side. Some islands have caves. A few have small sandy beaches accessible only at low tide. Most are uninhabited. The whole area sits within Kien Giang Biosphere Reserve, which has kept heavy development out so far.

Getting to Ba Lua

The base for visiting Ba Lua is Ha Tien, a small coastal town on Vietnam (베트남 / 越南 / ベトナム)'s southwestern tip near the Cambodian border. Ha Tien is easy to reach:

  • From Phu Quoc: a fast ferry takes around 1 hour, with multiple daily departures. Tickets run 150,000–200,000 VND one way.
  • From Can Tho or Saigon: bus routes connect through Rach Gia or direct to Ha Tien. Saigon to Ha Tien by bus is roughly 7–8 hours depending on the operator.
  • From Rach Gia: about 90 km, around 2 hours by road.

From Ha Tien, you hire a boat to reach the archipelago. The Ha Tien boat pier is the main departure point. A chartered wooden boat for a half-day trip typically costs 500,000–800,000 VND depending on the vessel and group size — bargain before you board, and agree on which islands you'll visit. A full-day trip runs closer to 1,200,000–1,500,000 VND. There are no fixed-schedule ferries to Ba Lua; everything here is hired privately or through a guesthouse.

A traditional fishing boat and floating village in the serene waters of Ha Long Bay, Vietnam.

Photo by Karolina on Pexels

What to Do on the Water

The boat trip itself is the experience. You move between islands slowly, with the driver often stopping to point out cave entrances or fishing traps. A few specific things worth asking your boatman to include:

Hon Trong and Hon Mai — Two of the larger islands, with beaches that appear briefly at low tide. Swimming is possible, water is clear, but check conditions first — currents can be unpredictable between islands.

The cave passages — Some limestone outcroppings have sea caves accessible by small boat or on foot at low water. Nothing on the scale of Phong Nha, but atmospheric in the way that any dark karst passage opening onto bright green water tends to be.

Fishing villages — A couple of floating or stilted settlements exist within the archipelago. Watching the daily catch come in around midday is worth building into the route.

If you're into kayaking, a few guesthouses in Ha Tien can arrange kayak rentals. Paddling between the smaller outcroppings at your own pace is genuinely good, especially in the early morning before the wind picks up.

Staying Overnight

Ha Tien is where most visitors sleep. It's a proper small town — you'll find guesthouses from around 200,000–400,000 VND per night at the budget end, and a handful of cleaner mid-range options in the 600,000–900,000 VND range. The riverfront near the night market is the convenient zone.

A few basic homestay options exist on the mainland edge of the archipelago, near the fishing communities. These are simple — fan rooms, shared bathrooms, meals cooked by the family — and rarely bookable online. Ask at the Ha Tien boat pier or through a local guesthouse owner who knows the fishing families. Rates are typically 150,000–250,000 VND per person including dinner and breakfast, which usually means freshly caught fish, steamed rice, morning broth.

Spending a night in or near the archipelago rather than just doing a day trip is worth it if your schedule allows. The light at dawn over the karst islands is the kind of thing you don't see from a Phu Quoc resort.

Tourists paddle through stunning limestone cliffs in Ninh Binh, Vietnam, enjoying a peaceful boat ride.

Photo by Menderes Kahraman on Pexels

Eating in Ha Tien

Ha Tien has its own food identity, shaped by the Khmer influence that runs through this corner of the country. Look for "bun canh" at the market stalls near Dong Ho lagoon — the local version is thick-noodled and heavily laden with seafood. Grilled squid and crab are available at most waterfront spots, priced by weight. A solid seafood meal for two with rice and a beer won't exceed 200,000–300,000 VND at a local place.

For breakfast, the market near the main bus station has "banh mi" and rice porridge stalls open from around 6 a.m. Simple, cheap, the right way to start a boat day.

Practical Notes

The best time to visit Ba Lua is November through April, when the Gulf of Thailand is calm and visibility on the water is good. From May onward, the southwest monsoon can make boat trips rough or outright cancelled — check with your boatman the evening before. Bring cash; Ha Tien's ATM coverage is thin and the islands have none. A half-day on the water is enough to get a real sense of the place; a full day lets you slow down and actually swim.

— FIN —

Last updated · May 29, 2026 · independently researched, never sponsored.