Long Read

Hoi An, Vietnam – My Coffee Snob's Chaotic Escape

@Chloe Weaver2/12/2026blog

i arrived in Hoi An yesterday, after a 12‑hour bus ride that left me both exhausted and strangely excited about the prospect of a city that claims to have more street cafés than Instagram hashtags. the air smelled like fried bananas and jasmine, and the weather was *immediately on my mind.
i just checked and it's a comfortable 19.9°C, feels like 20.27°C, with a humidity that makes my hair want to form a permanent halo. hope you like that kind of thing.
The first stop was
Café Thạnh on Lantern Street, a little nook tucked between a souvenir stall and a glow‑in‑the‑dark sign that read ‘Free Wi‑Fi, coffee not included’. i ordered a single‑origin medium‑roast from Viet Coffee and a splash of condensed milk. the barista used a burr grinder that whirred like a tiny jet engine, grinding beans to the exact coarseness that old‑school roasters swear by. i told the barista i was a Coffee Snob, and she laughed, handing me a tiny handwritten tip sheet. Link: Yelp page for the same place - make sure you check it before you go, because the weekend crowd can be brutal.
if you get bored, the towns of
Da Nang or Hue are just a short drive away. i heard from a drunk guide at the market that the coastal road to Da Nang is lined with giant bánh mì carts that hand‑out free espresso samples (i didn’t believe it, but i tried). someone told me that the owners of Café Thạnh switched to a cold‑brew espresso after a tourist complaint about overly bitter shots. the locals apparently still whisper about the old espresso machine in the back, which allegedly runs on a 1960s French press - but that’s just rumor.
Another
overheard rumor from a teeny booth at the night market: “The new Vietnamese bean they’re sourcing is from a secret plantation on Lăng Bát island, so it tastes like you’re sipping a river.” I tested it and it felt like a full‑body espresso, almost too smooth for my palate. a local warned me that the humidity can mess with the grind, so always keep a portable hygrometer in your bag. TripAdvisor review of the same coffee roastery has a comment that says, “The beans are fresh but the air conditioning is weak - bring a wet wipe for the sticky tables.”
My
pro tip: always scout the side alleys before committing to a coffee shop, because the best brews hide behind neon signs and tiny hand‑drawn menus. Check out the Hoi An Travel Forum coffee thread for extra tips. a travel board on Hoian Travel Forum suggested bringing a thermal flask that can keep coffee at 60°C for a whole morning, which is perfect for the constant 89% humidity. also, don’t forget to ask for a splash of local coconut water on the side - it adds a subtle sweetness that no amount of sugar can beat.
i snapped a few photos of the bustling
Old Town market and the riverfront cafés that line the Thu Bon River. they look like they belong on a mood board for a retro‑travel vibe.

Here’s the map if you want to navigate the maze of lanterns without getting lost:

Bottom line: Hoi An is a coffee‑snob’s playground if you’re willing to sweat a little, ask locals where the hidden roasters are, and keep your gear in a ziplock bag* because the humidity loves to eat paper.


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About the author: Chloe Weaver

Bringing a fresh perspective to age-old questions.

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