Sign in
Edition of 16:00 CETTuesday, July 14, 2026
311 outlets · 17 languages972 briefings today
Society & CultureThursday, July 9, 2026

A Bowl of Pho for 200 Roubles: Why Vietnam Is Winning Over Russian Travellers

A surge in Russian visitors, drawn by cheap direct flights and a weaker rouble, has reshaped Southeast Asia’s tourism map, while Myanmar struggles to revive its own industry.

“Cheaper than Turkey, more colourful than Thailand,” a Russian travel blogger wrote on the Zen platform, describing the calculus that is redrawing holiday maps from Moscow to the South China Sea. He itemised the arithmetic: a bowl of pho bo for 150 to 200 roubles, a round-trip flight from the capital to Nha Trang for as little as 8,000 roubles, and hotels with rooftop pools and sea views at prices that, against the inflation gnawing at European and even Turkish resorts, felt like an island of stability. The post was not an outlier; it was a dispatch from a migration already under way.

By the end of June, Vietnam had received 742,679 Russian visitors, a figure 2.8 times higher than the same period a year earlier, according to data from the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism cited by the Russian Association of Tour Operators (ATOR). That placed Russia third among source markets, behind only China and South Korea, and ahead of Taiwan, the United States, and India. The surge was fuelled by a rapid expansion of direct flights—not just from Moscow but from regional cities—and by new entry rules that took effect in late June, extending e-visa validity to 60 days and simplifying insurance requirements. Tour operators in Russia reported that package-tour sales to Vietnam in July accounted for 7.8% of all foreign bookings, a larger share than Thailand or China, and that demand had jumped 777% in May alone as flight programmes grew.

While Vietnam’s beaches filled, Myanmar’s remained largely empty. The country logged just 973,000 foreign arrivals last year, a fraction of the 4.5 million it welcomed at its 2015 peak, and officials told Bloomberg they hoped to reach 1.8 million this year—a target one tourism executive described as “a mountain to climb.” The military coup of 2021 and the civil war that followed have killed more than 100,000 people and displaced millions, according to the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data project. Chinese and Thai travellers still dominate the diminished visitor rolls, but the broader picture is one of isolation. In a sign of shifting diplomatic currents, ASEAN foreign ministers were due to hold a meeting with Myanmar’s new army-backed government in Bangkok at the weekend, Vietnam’s foreign ministry confirmed, as the bloc tested ways to re-engage a member state it had sidelined from summits.

For Russian holidaymakers, the appeal of Vietnam is not merely transactional. The same blogger noted a sense of safety and the warmth of local hospitality, qualities that, alongside the weak rouble, have redirected outbound flows away from Europe and toward Asian beach destinations. Vietnam’s overall foreign arrivals reached 12.25 million in the first half of the year, up 14.9% on 2025, and ATOR analysts said the country could approach 1.5 million Russian tourists by year’s end if the pace held. As new direct services to Danang and Phu Quoc are added for the autumn, the image that lingers is not of a geopolitical pivot but of a steaming bowl of noodle soup, priced in roubles, on a plastic table by the sea.

Broaden your view

Read more
Breaking
A presidential call, a lifted ban, and a 4-1 exit: the US World Cup unravelling·The Quiet Countdown: Europe’s Population Peaks and Begins Its Slow Retreat·Fatal Road Incidents Across Four Nations Leave Multiple Dead, Investigations Underway·Condolences for Qatar’s Former Emir Reflect His Enduring Regional Mediation Legacy·When the mind crosses a threshold: what ancient proverbs and modern science reveal about memory’s quirks·The Earth as Kitchen: How a Swedish Chef’s Quest for a Softer Ice Pop Revealed a Quiet Global Shift·EU and UK Sign Treaty Dismantling Gibraltar-Spain Border Controls·Yamal Declares Spain Fearless and Eyes World Cup Glory Ahead of France Semi-Final·A presidential call, a lifted ban, and a 4-1 exit: the US World Cup unravelling·The Quiet Countdown: Europe’s Population Peaks and Begins Its Slow Retreat·Fatal Road Incidents Across Four Nations Leave Multiple Dead, Investigations Underway·Condolences for Qatar’s Former Emir Reflect His Enduring Regional Mediation Legacy·When the mind crosses a threshold: what ancient proverbs and modern science reveal about memory’s quirks·The Earth as Kitchen: How a Swedish Chef’s Quest for a Softer Ice Pop Revealed a Quiet Global Shift·EU and UK Sign Treaty Dismantling Gibraltar-Spain Border Controls·Yamal Declares Spain Fearless and Eyes World Cup Glory Ahead of France Semi-Final·
Upd. 12:19 PM2 languages · 6 outlets
PreviousSociety & CultureNext
6 outlets|2 languages|3 min read
Thursday, July 9, 2026

A Bowl of Pho for 200 Roubles: Why Vietnam Is Winning Over Russian Travellers

A surge in Russian visitors, drawn by cheap direct flights and a weaker rouble, has reshaped Southeast Asia’s tourism map, while Myanmar struggles to revive its own industry.

“Cheaper than Turkey, more colourful than Thailand,” a Russian travel blogger wrote on the Zen platform, describing the calculus that is redrawing holiday maps from Moscow to the South China Sea. He itemised the arithmetic: a bowl of pho bo for 150 to 200 roubles, a round-trip flight from the capital to Nha Trang for as little as 8,000 roubles, and hotels with rooftop pools and sea views at prices that, against the inflation gnawing at European and even Turkish resorts, felt like an island of stability. The post was not an outlier; it was a dispatch from a migration already under way.

By the end of June, Vietnam had received 742,679 Russian visitors, a figure 2.8 times higher than the same period a year earlier, according to data from the Vietnam National Administration of Tourism cited by the Russian Association of Tour Operators (ATOR). That placed Russia third among source markets, behind only China and South Korea, and ahead of Taiwan, the United States, and India. The surge was fuelled by a rapid expansion of direct flights—not just from Moscow but from regional cities—and by new entry rules that took effect in late June, extending e-visa validity to 60 days and simplifying insurance requirements. Tour operators in Russia reported that package-tour sales to Vietnam in July accounted for 7.8% of all foreign bookings, a larger share than Thailand or China, and that demand had jumped 777% in May alone as flight programmes grew.

While Vietnam’s beaches filled, Myanmar’s remained largely empty. The country logged just 973,000 foreign arrivals last year, a fraction of the 4.5 million it welcomed at its 2015 peak, and officials told Bloomberg they hoped to reach 1.8 million this year—a target one tourism executive described as “a mountain to climb.” The military coup of 2021 and the civil war that followed have killed more than 100,000 people and displaced millions, according to the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data project. Chinese and Thai travellers still dominate the diminished visitor rolls, but the broader picture is one of isolation. In a sign of shifting diplomatic currents, ASEAN foreign ministers were due to hold a meeting with Myanmar’s new army-backed government in Bangkok at the weekend, Vietnam’s foreign ministry confirmed, as the bloc tested ways to re-engage a member state it had sidelined from summits.

For Russian holidaymakers, the appeal of Vietnam is not merely transactional. The same blogger noted a sense of safety and the warmth of local hospitality, qualities that, alongside the weak rouble, have redirected outbound flows away from Europe and toward Asian beach destinations. Vietnam’s overall foreign arrivals reached 12.25 million in the first half of the year, up 14.9% on 2025, and ATOR analysts said the country could approach 1.5 million Russian tourists by year’s end if the pace held. As new direct services to Danang and Phu Quoc are added for the autumn, the image that lingers is not of a geopolitical pivot but of a steaming bowl of noodle soup, priced in roubles, on a plastic table by the sea.

Source divergence

Society & Culture · 6 outlets · 2 languages

0%Low

How sources tell the same facts differently.

How They Split

Favorable100%

This story appeared in

6 outlets · 2 languages

Broaden your view

From Geopolitics & Politics

Trump Reinstates Iran Blockade, Demands 20% Fee on Hormuz Cargo

7 languages · 33 outlets

From Economy & Markets

Oil surges past $85 as US reinstates Hormuz blockade and imposes transit toll

8 languages · 28 outlets

From Technology

AI’s knowledge loop tilts power from creators to infrastructure owners

4 languages · 7 outlets

Read more