Chùa Cầu
Description
The Japanese Covered Bridge is the most photographed thing in Hoi An, and for good reason – it’s a 400-year-old covered bridge with a small temple built into it, which is not something you see every day. The architecture is a genuine hybrid of Japanese construction and Vietnamese ornamentation, and it holds up well to close inspection.
This is a quick stop, not a half-day activity. You walk across it, look at the details, maybe get a novelty stamp made (people are enthusiastic about the stamp vendors here), and move on. Expect maybe 20-30 minutes total unless you’re waiting for a crowd to thin.
The bridge is part of the Old Town ticket system, so you’re not paying separately for it. It sits right in the middle of the tourist drag, which means it’s convenient and also crowded during the afternoon.
Highlights
- Quick and easy to visit with no logistical planning required
- Novelty stamp vendors on-site are a legitimate highlight (dog portraits apparently a specialty)
- Centrally located, easy to fold into a walking loop of the Old Town
- Not enough here to justify treating it as a destination on its own - it's a bridge, not a museum






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