Da Lat
Vietnam
El Nido
Philippines
Da Lat
El Nido
π° Budget
π‘οΈ Safety
Da Lat
Da Lat is one of the safer destinations in Vietnam β violent crime against tourists is extremely rare, locals are used to visitors, and the city has a calm atmosphere compared to coastal resorts. The main safety concerns are specific and manageable: mountain road motorbike accidents, adventure activity risks (canyoning in particular), and altitude-related cold exposure that surprises travellers arriving from the coast. Petty theft is uncommon but not unheard of at the night market.
El Nido
El Nido is a relatively safe destination by Southeast Asian standards for typical tourist activities. The biggest genuine risks are environmental rather than criminal: typhoons during the wet season, boat safety on the bay, and the physical hazards of snorkeling over sharp limestone in remote locations. Petty theft exists in the town center but is uncommon on the islands. The remote location means any serious medical emergency requires evacuation to Puerto Princesa or Manila, so travel insurance is not optional here β it is genuinely necessary.
β Ratings
π€οΈ Weather
Da Lat
Da Lat's highland location at 1,500 meters gives it the most temperate climate in Vietnam. While the coast swelters and Hanoi freezes, Da Lat sits in a permanent mild band of 15β24Β°C. Locals wear light jackets most of the year and genuine sweaters from November to February. There is a distinct dry season and rainy season, but even in the wet months temperatures remain pleasant.
El Nido
El Nido has a tropical climate with two distinct seasons rather than four: a dry season from November to May and a wet season from June to October. The Philippines' Pacific typhoon belt makes July through October genuinely hazardous β not just uncomfortable. Water temperature stays warm year-round at 26-29Β°C, and diving is possible in any month for those who plan around weather windows. The dry season is overwhelmingly the better time to visit, with the shoulder months of November and May offering excellent conditions with lower crowds.
π Getting Around
Da Lat
Da Lat's city centre β the market, Xuan Huong Lake, and the main hotel strip β is walkable for fit travellers, though the terrain is hilly and distances add up quickly. Getting to the waterfalls, Langbiang, and Truc Lam requires transport. Grab works reliably. Motorbike rental gives the most freedom. The Easy Rider tour system is separate from ordinary transport and is covered in local picks.
Walkability: The city centre around Xuan Huong Lake and Hoa Binh Square is walkable but hilly β expect some steep climbs between the market district and the lake. The outer sights (waterfalls, Langbiang, Truc Lam) require transport. There is a city bus network but routes are limited and infrequent.
El Nido
El Nido town is small enough to walk end-to-end in 15 minutes, but the surrounding area β from Nacpan Beach in the north to Las Cabanas and Corong-Corong in the south β requires transport. There are no taxis in the conventional sense and no Grab (Southeast Asia's Uber) coverage. Tricycles and motorbike rentals cover local needs; bangka boats are the only way to reach any island. The town's single main road is paved; roads north to Nacpan are rough in sections.
Walkability: The town center is walkable and compact. The main beach strip, restaurants, tour booking offices, and accommodation are concentrated within a 10-minute walk. The walk south to Marimegmeg/Las Cabanas (30 min on a coastal path) is scenic but rough in sections. Beyond town, all distances require transport β Nacpan is 15 km of rough road and impractical to walk.
The Verdict
Choose Da Lat if...
you want Vietnam's cool French colonial hill station β 1,500m mountain air, Easy Rider motorbike tours, and coffee-country strawberries
Choose El Nido if...
you want Palawan's limestone-karst Bacuit Bay β Tours A-D island-hopping to lagoons, hidden beaches, and coral reefs
El Nido