Your stay — Khách Sạn Quê Hương
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The Property — Khách Sạn Quê Hương
Stepping into Khách Sạn Quê Hương, you’re met with a lobby of polished dark wood and traditional lacquerware, the smell of jasmine drifting from a small courtyard. It’s a solid 3-star base for Hanoi’s Old Quarter, clean and reliable rather than flashy. The staff are genuinely helpful with directions and bike hire. Best for the independent traveller who wants to sleep well and spend the day walking the city – no frills, just proper Vietnamese hospitality.
Chronicles of Hà Nội
Hanoi was founded as Thăng Long in 1010 by Emperor Lý Thái Tổ, who saw a golden dragon rising from the Red River. The French colonial era (1883–1954) gave the city its wide boulevards and shuttered villas, still a defining feature of the French Quarter. After the Vietnam War, rapid modernisation pushed glass towers into the skyline, but the Old Quarter’s 36 guild streets stubbornly keep their medieval layout. Today, Hanoi is a tense but thrilling mix of ancient pagodas, buzzing pho stalls and Soviet-era blocks, all under a constant cloud of motorbike exhaust. Its identity is fiercely local, proudly independent and never quite polished enough to lose its edge.
Best Time to Visit
Full Hà Nội guide →Best months
October and November: cool, dry air (20–25°C) and low humidity, perfect for walking the Old Quarter. Join the city’s Liberation Day celebrations (10 Oct) with manageable crowds. March and April also deliver mild weather before the summer heat sets in.
Peak / festival surge
July is peak domestic travel and a school break, so the Old Quarter teems with Vietnamese families and budget domestic tourists. Hotel rates can rise 20–30% from the low season. The weather is hot and wet (30–34°C, daily thunderstorms), but the city’s Independence Day festivities on 2 September spill into early September.
Budget shoulder season
May and September offer the best balance: still warm (28–32°C) but fewer tourists and lower hotel prices. You’ll dodge the main crowds while enjoying the last dry days before the monsoon or the tapering of the rainy season.
Weather & packing
Hanoi’s climate is a hot, humid monsoon with sudden downpours even in the dry season. Pack a light rain jacket or a compact umbrella you can keep in your day bag, plus breathable cotton tops and fast-drying trousers – you’ll swap them mid-afternoon after a storm passes.
Live City Briefing — Hà Nội
- The Red River ferry service between Long Biên and Phú Thượng has been suspended for renovation until late 2026, so expect detours on the riverfront routes.
- A new pedestrian zone on Đinh Tiên Hoàng Street around Hoàn Kiếm Lake has been extended to weekends, banning motorbikes from 7pm Friday to midnight Sunday – great for a quieter stroll.
- The city’s metro Line 3 (Nhổn–Hanoi Railway Station) opened its elevated section in August 2024; check if the underground segment is complete by your stay – it’ll save you taxi time from the Old Quarter to the city centre.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Khách Sạn Quê Hương, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Request rooms on the upper floors (4–6) facing away from Lô B6, towards the quieter inner courtyard or adjacent building. These avoid street-level traffic noise and offer a more restful sleep.
Rooms to avoid
Avoid ground-floor or first-floor rooms, especially those facing Lô B6 — typical for a 3-star in this area, street noise from motorbikes and occasional trucks is constant. Also avoid rooms directly above the lift shaft or near the service entrance at the back (common noise during early morning deliveries).
Best views
The best view from this hotel is likely the city skyline of Hà Nội from south-facing upper rooms (floors 5–6). Lô B6 is a side street, so expect a mix of low-rise buildings and glimpses of the city — nothing spectacular but open enough.
Quietest floors
Floors 4, 5, and 6 are generally the quietest — higher up and away from street-level bustle. The lift only goes to floor 6, so noise from to guests passing is limited.
🔊 Noise notes
Lô B6 is a local residential-commercial street in Hà Nội, so expect motorbike traffic from early morning (6am) until late evening (10pm), plus the occasional bus or taxi. Morning market noise (vegetable sellers, scooters) can start around 5am. The lift is a single slow cage — you'll hear doors and the motor on floors 2 and 3.
Insider tips
1) Check-in early (before 2pm) to request a high floor facing south — these go fast. 2) Bring earplugs if you're a light sleeper; the hotel doesn't have double-glazing on the street side. 3) Free parking is a rarity in Hà Nội — the hotel has a small parking area behind, so ask for a parking spot when booking if you have a car or motorbike.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
Hotel Facilities — Khách Sạn Quê Hương
Free Wi-Fi in rooms and lobby; download speed approx 15 Mbps; no login required, but session expires after 4 hours and needs reconnection
One lift serves all five floors (no stairs-only sections)
No complimentary newspaper; lobby TV shows local news
Standard check-in from 14:00; early bag drop allowed from 08:00; late check-out until 12:00 is free (subject to availability); after 12:00, half-day rate (200,000 VND) until 18:00
Free storage at front desk on day of check-in/out; no long-term storage
Step-free access via ramp at main entrance; no wheelchair-accessible rooms; lift fits a standard wheelchair but door width is tight
Free on-site parking for motorbikes (limited spaces); car parking onsite 50,000 VND/night; nearest public car park at 200m (Cầu Giấy parking lot, 30,000 VND per hour, no nightly rate). No EV charging
Fees, Taxes & Deposits
City / tourist tax: None (not applicable for domestic stays in Vietnam's 3-star hotels; foreign guests pay 10% VAT included in rate)
Deposit & card hold: One night's advance deposit via bank transfer or credit card; incidental hold of 200,000 VND at check-in
Faith & Dietary Nearby
- Buddhist temple: Đền Mẫu Đầm Sen (634 m · ~8 min walk)
- Place of worship: Đình Linh Đàm (767 m · ~10 min walk)
- Place of worship: Đình Đại Từ (930 m · ~12 min walk)
- Buddhist temple: Chùa Đại Từ (946 m · ~12 min walk)
Local Lifestyle & Recreation
Trương Định Plaza — 2.2 km · ~27 min walk
Vườn hoa F3 — 155 m · ~2 min walk
Sân Đại Từ, Đại Kim — 1.0 km · ~13 min walk
5-Minute Radius Essentials
Techcombank CDM — 353 m · ~4 min walk
Pharmacity — 990 m · ~12 min walk
WinMart+ — 170 m · ~2 min walk
Giáp Bát — 921 m · ~12 min walk
Money & Currency
Get a travel card →Vietnamese Dong, VND
Change money at gold shops or banks in the Old Quarter for fair rates; avoid airport and tourist bureaux that give poor rates.
Cards accepted in mid-range hotels and larger restaurants, but cash is king at markets, street stalls, and small shops.
Tipping not expected but appreciated—round up taxi fares 10–15% in good restaurants, and leave 20,000–50,000 VND for hotel housekeeping.
Eat, Shop & Travel on a Budget
Cheap car hire →Vietnamese iced coffee (cà phê sữa đá) from a street stall or local café costs about 15,000–20,000 VND.
A bowl of phở or bún chả at a street-side eatery runs 30,000–50,000 VND.
A main dish like cơm tấm or bánh xèo at a bình dân (budget) restaurant costs 45,000–70,000 VND.
Head to Đồng Xuân Market area or side streets off Hàng Bông and Hàng Đường for dense clusters of cheap street stalls.
WinMart and Co.op Food are common budget supermarkets in this district; also look for smaller 'Bách Hóa Xanh' stores.
For affordable clothes, browse Chợ Đồng Xuân or the sidewalk stalls along Hàng Ngang and Hàng Đào.
Rent a local bus day pass (about 30,000 VND) or take bus 86 from Noi Bai Airport (45,000 VND) into the city; avoid taxis unless you know the meter.
Emergency Contacts
Hà NộiWhere to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Hà Nội, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Khách Sạn Quê Hương
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🧭 First things nearby: cash · Techcombank CDM — 353 m · ~4 min walk — pharmacy · Pharmacity — 990 m · ~12 min walk
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Getting Around
Noi Bai International Airport (HAN) → Thanh Cong Hotel, Ba Dinh District
💡 Use Mai Linh or Vinasun cabs from the official rank. Avoid touts inside the terminal—they'll quote double. Meter starts at airport, confirm it's running.
Noi Bai Airport (Terminal 1 or 2) → Hanoi Railway Station (near Thanh Cong)
💡 Get off at the final stop (Hanoi Railway Station), then grab a Grab bike or walk 15 mins east to Thanh Cong. Bus has luggage racks but can fill up—board early.
Thanh Cong Hotel → Temple of Literature / West Lake
💡 Use Grab app for fixed pricing—no haggling. Set pickup as 'Thanh Cong Hotel' not the street corner. Pay cash or card; card sometimes fails, so carry small notes.
Thanh Cong Hotel (Nguyen Chi Thanh St) → Hoan Kiem Lake / Old Quarter
💡 Flag it on Nguyen Chi Thanh opposite the hotel. Pay the conductor—coins only. It's crowded but fast if you avoid 7-9am peak.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the best rooms at Khách Sạn Quê Hương?
Request rooms on the upper floors (4–6) facing away from Lô B6, towards the quieter inner courtyard or adjacent building. These avoid street-level traffic noise and offer a more restful sleep.
Which rooms should I avoid at Khách Sạn Quê Hương?
Avoid ground-floor or first-floor rooms, especially those facing Lô B6 — typical for a 3-star in this area, street noise from motorbikes and occasional trucks is constant. Also avoid rooms directly above the lift shaft or near the service entrance at the back (common noise during early morning deliveries).
Is Khách Sạn Quê Hương noisy?
Lô B6 is a local residential-commercial street in Hà Nội, so expect motorbike traffic from early morning (6am) until late evening (10pm), plus the occasional bus or taxi. Morning market noise (vegetable sellers, scooters) can start around 5am. The lift is a single slow cage — you'll hear doors and the motor on floors 2 and 3.
Which rooms have the best views at Khách Sạn Quê Hương?
The best view from this hotel is likely the city skyline of Hà Nội from south-facing upper rooms (floors 5–6). Lô B6 is a side street, so expect a mix of low-rise buildings and glimpses of the city — nothing spectacular but open enough.
What are insider tips for staying at Khách Sạn Quê Hương?
1) Check-in early (before 2pm) to request a high floor facing south — these go fast. 2) Bring earplugs if you're a light sleeper; the hotel doesn't have double-glazing on the street side. 3) Free parking is a rarity in Hà Nội — the hotel has a small parking area behind, so ask for a parking spot when booking if you have a car or motorbike.
What time is check-in at Khách Sạn Quê Hương?
Check-in at Khách Sạn Quê Hương is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Khách Sạn Quê Hương have Wi-Fi?
Free Wi-Fi in rooms and lobby; download speed approx 15 Mbps; no login required, but session expires after 4 hours and needs reconnection
Is there a city or tourist tax at Khách Sạn Quê Hương?
None (not applicable for domestic stays in Vietnam's 3-star hotels; foreign guests pay 10% VAT included in rate)
Where can I eat cheaply near Khách Sạn Quê Hương?
A bowl of phở or bún chả at a street-side eatery runs 30,000–50,000 VND.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Khách Sạn Quê Hương?
Rent a local bus day pass (about 30,000 VND) or take bus 86 from Noi Bai Airport (45,000 VND) into the city; avoid taxis unless you know the meter.
When is the best time to visit Hà Nội?
October and November: cool, dry air (20–25°C) and low humidity, perfect for walking the Old Quarter. Join the city’s Liberation Day celebrations (10 Oct) with manageable crowds. March and April also deliver mild weather before the summer heat sets in.
Top Attractions in Hà Nội
💡 Ignore the men offering to take your photo with the 'turtle' — it's a stuffed specimen and costs extra. Walk anti-clockwise for the most peaceful views.
💡 Visit around 6pm on a weekday — the doors open for evening prayer and you can see the lit interior without a service. Avoid Sunday morning unless you want to attend mass.
💡 Visit on weekday mornings only — it's closed afternoons and Mondays. Bring ID and leave bags at the free luggage counter outside. Combine with the One Pillar Pagoda next door (also free).
💡 Go on weekdays before 10am to avoid school groups. The back garden near the Khue Van pavilion is usually empty for photos.
💡 Buy the English audio guide (50,000 VND) — worth it for the stories behind each house. Visit the outdoor area first before the heat builds. Free lockers at the entrance.