I researched Con Dao Islands extensively while evaluating Vietnam’s remote beach destinations and comparing it to mainstream alternatives like Phu Quoc, Nha Trang, and Da Nang. Moreover, I assessed the effort-versus-reward equation, seasonal conditions, and positioning as luxury escape versus backpacker destination. Consequently, I found it delivers unmatched pristine beauty and exclusivity but requires accepting limited dining options, seasonal challenges, and premium pricing.
Con Dao Islands is Vietnam’s most beautiful undeveloped beach destination pristine turquoise water, virtually empty beaches, world-class coral reefs. Therefore, visit if prioritizing natural beauty and seclusion over convenience and nightlife. Skip if seeking resort infrastructure, diverse dining, or can’t handle 45-minute flight access requirement.
Quick Facts: Con Dao Islands

Location: 230km off southern Vietnam coast
Archipelago: 16 islands total
Main island: Con Son Island (where tourists stay)
Population: ~7,000 (tiny!)
Access: 45-min flight from HCMC or Can Tho, 12-14h ferry from Vung Tau
Best season: March-May (calm water, no wind)
Avoid: November-January (strong winds 25-35mph)
Main draws: Pristine beaches, world-class diving, dark prison history, Six Senses luxury
Limitations: Limited dining, expensive, remote, seasonal wind challenges
Why Con Dao Islands Remains Vietnam’s Best-Kept Secret
The Numbers Tell the Story
Phu Quoc annual tourists: 5+ million
Nha Trang annual tourists: 7+ million
Con Dao annual tourists: ~150,000
Why so few visitors?
- Remote location (flight required, no land access)
- Limited accommodation (vs Phu Quoc’s hundreds of resorts)
- Higher costs (island premium, limited competition)
- Seasonal wind challenges (November-January rough)
- Dark history (prison island reputation deters some)
For detailed comparison of Con Dao versus Phu Quoc covering resort options, beaches, and activities, see our Phu Quoc travel guide.
Con Dao’s Dual Identity: Paradise + Dark History
The beautiful paradox:
- Vietnam’s most pristine beaches + notorious prison island history
- Luxury Six Senses resort + grim Tiger Cages torture sites
- Romantic honeymoon destination + 20,000 political prisoner deaths
Con Dao’s dark history (French colonial prison 1862-1954, American-backed detention 1954-1975) is integral to understanding modern Vietnam. The prison sites provide essential historical context that beach resorts cannot.
For comprehensive Con Dao Prison historical details including Tiger Cages and visiting information, see our Con Dao Prison guide.
Con Dao Islands Best Beaches
Dam Trau Beach – Best All-Around: Protected from winter winds, consistently swimmable, golden sand, turquoise water, 2 seafood restaurants. Near airport. Best single beach choice.
Nhat Beach: Less developed, local atmosphere, good swimming.
Ong Dung Beach: Remote, requires hiking (slippery trail, register with ranger, sometimes closed). Pristine snorkeling.

Critical Beach Factors
Tides: Extreme. Many beaches only accessible at low tide. Check schedules at dive shops.
Winds: November-January strong northeastern (25-35mph). March-May calm. Ask locals which beaches best your visit dates.
Sandflies: Some beaches have swarms. Bring repellent.
Strategy: Dam Trau = safe bet year-round. Other beaches depend on season/tide/wind.
Activities Beyond Beaches
Diving/Snorkeling: Protected marine park, 1,300+ species, arguably Vietnam’s best reefs, excellent visibility March-September. Winter often canceled (winds). Dive Con Dao reputable. Book tours: → Klook
Motorbiking: ONE main road, excellent conditions, empty, coastal vistas, access multiple beaches. 100k VND/day. Pack lunch (food scarce), beware wind gusts , taxis/bicycles available. TOP activity – best SE Asia scooter islands.
Hiking: Forest trails, wildlife (squirrels, macaques), FREE (register ranger booth). WARNING: Extremely slippery moss-covered stone serious injury risk even proper boots. Seasonal closures. Skip unless experienced.
Audio guide
Prefer exploring independently? Try this:
→ Get the Con Dao audio travel guide: IZI Travel
Dining & Accommodation
Dining reality: Super small town, limited options. Few seafood places, 2 Western restaurants, small night market. Vegetarian challenge.
Best: Bar 200 (expat-owned pizza/Western breakfasts), Thuba (seafood, vegetarian options, English), Infinity (trendy, pricey).
Strategy: Pack snacks, manage expectations.
Where to stay:
- Budget: Lighthouse Boutique (~$25) – cute, central
- Mid: The Mystery (~$50) – rooftop pool, cool vibe
- Luxury: Poulo Condor – spa, beach location
- Ultra: Six Senses – $800-2,500+/night, private villas, best beach
Book accommodation: → Klook
Getting to Con Dao Islands
By Flight
Airlines: Vietnam Airlines, VASCO Airlines
Route: HCMC or Can Tho → Con Dao
Duration: 45 minutes
Cost: $100-200 USD roundtrip
Why fly: Saves 11+ hours vs ferry, minimal cost difference for time saved.
By Ferry (Budget/Adventure Option)
Route: Vung Tau → Con Dao
Duration: 12-14 hours (overnight)
Cost: ~$30 USD
Conditions: Rough seas (uncomfortable), basic facilities
Getting to Vung Tau: HCMC Bus → Vung Tau (2.5h) → Bookaway
My take: Unless extremely budget-constrained or seeking adventure, fly. Ferry wastes half a day, rough conditions, minimal savings.
When to Visit Con Dao Islands
BEST: March-May (Dry Season, Calm Water)
Terms:
- Calm, placid water (best swimming/diving)
- Winds died down
- Ideal beach weather
- Peak season pricing
My recommendation: Absolute best time. Book 2-3 months in advance.
ACCEPTABLE: June-October (Monsoon Season)
Terms:
- Sporadic heavy rain (not constant)
- Still visitable (rain breaks frequent)
- Fewer tourists
- Lower prices
Strategy: Flexible schedule, rain gear, accept some rainy days.
November-January (Windy Season)
Terms:
- Strong winds (25-35mph gusts reported)
- Some beaches perfect, others unswimmable (depends which side)
- Diving often canceled
- Colder water
Is it worth visiting winter? Depends on expectations. If you understand wind challenges, accept some beaches off-limits, manage expectations. If expecting perfect calm water wait for March-May.
Multi-Day Itineraries
3-Day (Minimum): Arrive, Dam Trau Beach → motorbike exploration → diving/prison → return
5-Day (Ideal): Add full relaxation days, multiple beaches, deeper exploration
7-Day Southern Vietnam: HCMC (Days 1-2) → Con Dao (Days 3-6) → Mekong/return.
Con Dao vs Other Vietnam Beaches
Phu Quoc: Con Dao more pristine, fewer tourists. Phu Quoc more resorts, dining. See Phu Quoc guide.
Nha Trang: Con Dao more exclusive. Nha Trang more activities, cheaper.
Da Nang: Con Dao more remote. Da Nang more accessible. See Da Nang guide.
Final Verdict: Vietnam’s Most Beautiful Remote Escape

Con Dao Islands delivers on promise. Vietnam’s most pristine beaches with minimal tourist development. But “remote paradise” comes with tradeoffs.
Visit Con Dao if:
- Prioritizing natural beauty over convenience
- Seeking escape from tourist crowds
- Comfortable with limited dining/infrastructure
- Can handle flight access requirement
- Visiting March-May (or accept winter wind challenges)
- Budget allows island premium pricing
Skip Con Dao if:
- Need diverse dining options (vegetarians especially)
- Uncomfortable with remote locations
- Seeking nightlife/activities beyond nature
- Can’t handle 45-min flight commitment
- Visiting November-January and expecting perfect calm water
Con Dao Islands is WORTH the effort for travelers seeking Vietnam’s most beautiful undeveloped beaches. The combination of turquoise water, empty golden sand, world-class diving, and dark historical significance creates unique destination.
Visited Con Dao? Worth the journey or overrated? Share honest experience!
FAQ
Most travelers stay 3–5 days.
This allows enough time to relax on beaches like Dam Trau, visit the historical prison sites, explore the island by motorbike, and potentially go diving or snorkeling.
The best months are March to May, when the sea is calm and conditions are ideal for swimming and diving.
June to October can still be good with occasional rain. November to January is the windiest season and some beaches may be difficult to swim.
Yes. Because the islands are remote and have limited accommodation, prices are generally higher than destinations like Phu Quoc or Nha Trang. Flights, hotels, and tours usually cost more due to limited supply.

