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thumb|Bắc Sum Pass on National Road 4C

Transportation in Vietnam is improving rapidly in terms of both quantity and quality. Road traffic is growing rapidly but the major roads are dangerous and slow to travel on due to outdated design and an inappropriate traffic mix. In recent years, the construction of expressways has accelerated. Air travel is also important for long-distance travel. The two major metropolises of Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City operate metro networks which are currently being expanded. Like most of the other ASEAN member states, Vietnam has historically under invested in public transit.

thumb|Vietnamese road traffic is dominated by [[motorcycles. Heavy traffic, bad air and loud noises are expected regularly. ]]

Road transport

thumb|right|National Road 4E [[milestone]]

thumb|right|[[Yên Bái province|Yên Bái Provincial Road 163 milestone]]

The total length of the Vietnamese road system is about 222,179&nbsp;km with 19.0% paved, mainly national roads and provincial roads (source: Vietnam Road Administration, 2004). The national road system length is 17,295&nbsp;km with 27.6% of its length paved. The provincial road system comprises 27,762&nbsp;km of roads with 23.6% paved. The road network is relatively well developed, but in poor condition. Due to congestion and lack of safety, the average speed on the national roads is a mere .

Road financing comes from a number of sources including the government, overseas donors such as the Asian Development Bank, World Bank, JBIC and business organizations. Road investment recovery is mainly through tolls collected on bridges and roads, in accordance with laws mentioned above.

Vietnam's road system is classified according to the administrative hierarchy. Each classification is assigned a milestone color and abbreviation.

  • National roads (, abbreviated QL) are administered by the central government. They are marked by white milestones with red tops. On direction signs, they were historically denoted by white on blue markers, but since 2015 are denoted by black on white markers.
  • Expressways or freeways (, CT) are denoted by black on yellow markers on direction signs. Guide signs along expressways are green, in contrast to the blue guide signs along surface roads.
  • Provincial roads ( or , TL or ĐT) are managed by provinces. They are marked by white milestones with blue or green tops. On direction signs, they are denoted by black on white markers.
  • District roads ( or , HL or ĐH) are managed by rural districts. They are marked by white milestones with brown tops.
  • Commune roads (, ĐX) are managed by communes.
  • Urban roads (, ĐĐT) are managed by cities and towns.
  • Certain service roads (, ĐCD) may be marked by white milestones with yellow tops.

{| role="presentation" class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed"

| <strong>National roads</strong>

|-

|

  • National Route 1A: Huu Nghi Quan Border Gate (Lạng Sơn) – Cà Mau province
  • National Route 1B: Thái Nguyên – Lạng Sơn province
  • National Route 1C: Khánh Hòa
  • National Route 1D: Qui Nhơn – Sông Cầu
  • National Route 1K: Ho Chi Minh City – Biên Hòa
  • National Route 2A: Hanoi – Hà Giang (border checkpoint Thanh Thuy)
  • National Route 2B: Vĩnh Phúc
  • National Route 2C: Hanoi – Tuyên Quang
  • National Route 2D: Vĩnh Phúc – Tuyên Quang
  • National Route 3A: Hanoi – Cao Bằng (border checkpoint Ta Lung)
  • National Route 3B: Bắc Kạn – Tuyên Quang
  • National Route 3C: Thái Nguyên – Bắc Kạn
  • National Route 3E: Lạng Sơn
  • National Route 4 (Ring road 1): 4A (Lạng Sơn – Cao Bằng), 4B (Quảng Ninh – Lạng Sơn), 4C (Hà Giang), 4D (Lào Cai – Lai Châu), 4H (Điện Biên)
  • National Route 4E: Lào Cai
  • National Route 4G: Sơn La
  • National Route 5A: Hanoi – Haiphong
  • National Route 5C: Haiphong
  • National Route 6A: Hanoi – Điện Biên
  • National Route 6B: Sơn La
  • National Route 7A: Nghệ An
  • National Route 7B: Nghệ An
  • National Route 8A: Hà Tĩnh
  • National Route 8B: Hà Tĩnh
  • National Route 9: Quảng Trị
  • National Route 9A: Quảng Trị
  • National Route 9B: Quảng Bình
  • National Route 9C: Quảng Bình
  • National Route 9D: Quảng Trị
  • National Route 9E: Quảng Bình
  • National Route 9G: Quảng Bình
  • National Route 10: Quảng Ninh – Thanh Hóa
  • National Route 12: Điện Biên – Lai Châu (border checkpoint Ma Lu Thang)
  • National Route 12A: Quảng Bình
  • National Route 12B: Ninh Bình – Hòa Bình
  • National Route 12C: Sơn Dương – Vũng Áng Port – Quảng Bình province
  • National Route 13: Ho Chi Minh City – Bình Phước (border checkpoint Hoa Lư)
  • National Route 14A: Quảng Trị – Bình Phước
  • National Route 14B: Da Nang – Quảng Nam
  • National Route 14C: Gia Lai – Đắk Nông province
  • National Route 14D: Quảng Nam
  • National Route 14E: Quảng Nam
  • National Route 14G: Quảng Nam – Da Nang
  • National Route 15: Đồng Nai
  • National Route 15A: Hòa Bình – Quảng Trị
  • National Route 15B: Hà Tĩnh
  • National Route 15C: Thanh Hóa
  • National Route 15D: Quảng Trị
  • National Route 16: Quảng Bình
  • National Route 17: Hanoi – Thái Nguyên
  • National Route 17B: Quảng Ninh – Haiphong
  • National Route 18: Hanoi – Quảng Ninh (border checkpoint Mong Cai)
  • National Route 18C: Quảng Ninh
  • National Route 19A: Bình Định – Gia Lai
  • National Route 19B: Bình Định
  • National Route 19C: Bình Định – Đắk Lắk
  • National Route 20: Đồng Nai – Lâm Đồng
  • National Route 21A: Hanoi – Nam Định
  • National Route 21B: Hanoi – Ninh Bình
  • National Route 21C: Hanoi – Ninh Bình
  • National Route 22A: Ho Chi Minh City – Tây Ninh (border checkpoint Moc Bai)
  • National Route 22B: Tây Ninh
  • National Route 23: Hanoi – Vĩnh Phúc
  • National Route 24A: Quảng Ngãi – Kon Tum
  • National Route 24B: Quảng Ngãi
  • National Route 24C: Quảng Ngãi
  • National Route 25: Phú Yên – Gia Lai
  • National Route 26A: Khánh Hòa – Đắk Lắk
  • National Route 26B: Khánh Hòa
  • National Route 27A: Ninh Thuận – Đắk Lắk
  • National Route 27B: Ninh Thuận – Khánh Hòa
  • National Route 27C: Khánh Hòa – Lâm Đồng
  • National Route 28A: Bình Thuận – Đắk Nông province
  • National Route 28B: Bình Thuận – Lâm Đồng
  • National Route 29: Phú Yên province – Đắk Lắk province
  • National Route 30: Tiền Giang – Đồng Tháp
  • National Route 31: Bắc Giang – Lạng Sơn
  • National Route 32: Hanoi – Lai Châu
  • National Route 32B: Phú Thọ – Sơn La
  • National Route 32C: Phú Thọ – Yên Bái
  • National Route 34: Cao Bằng – Hà Giang
  • National Route 35: Ninh Bình
  • National Route 36: Nghệ An – Thanh Hóa
  • National Route 37A: Thái Bình – Sơn La
  • National Route 37B: Thái Bình province – Hà Nam
  • National Route 37C: Nam Định province – Hòa Bình
  • National Route 38A: Bắc Ninh – Hà Nam
  • National Route 38B: Hải Dương – Ninh Bình
  • National Route 39A: Hưng Yên province – Thái Bình province
  • National Route 39B: Hưng Yên – Thái Bình province
  • National Route 40A: Kon Tum
  • National Route 40B: Quảng Nam – Kon Tum
  • National Route 43: Sơn La
  • National Route 45: Ninh Bình – Thanh Hóa
  • National Route 46A: Nghệ An
  • National Route 46B: Nghệ An
  • National Route 46C: Nghệ An
  • National Route 47: Thanh Hóa
  • National Route 47B: Thanh Hóa
  • National Route 47C: Thanh Hóa
  • National Route 48A: Nghệ An
  • National Route 48B: Nghệ An
  • National Route 48C: Nghệ An
  • National Route 48D: Nghệ An
  • National Route 48E: Nghệ An
  • National Route 49A: Huế
  • National Route 49B: Quảng Trị – Huế
  • National Route 49C: Quảng Trị
  • National Route 50: Ho Chi Minh City – Tiền Giang
  • National Route 51: Đồng Nai – Bà Rịa–Vũng Tàu
  • National Route 52: Ho Chi Minh City – Đồng Nai
  • National Route 53: Vĩnh Long – Trà Vinh
  • National Route 54: Đồng Tháp – Trà Vinh
  • National Route 55A: Bà Rịa–Vũng Tàu – Lâm Đồng
  • National Route 55B: Bình Thuận
  • National Route 56: Bà Rịa–Vũng Tàu – Đồng Nai
  • National Route 56B: Đồng Nai – Tây Ninh
  • National Route 57A: Bến Tre – Vĩnh Long
  • National Route 57B: Bến Tre
  • National Route 57C: Bến Tre
  • National Route 60: Tiền Giang – Sóc Trăng
  • National Route 61A: Hậu Giang – Kiên Giang
  • National Route 61B: Hậu Giang – Sóc Trăng
  • National Route 61C: Cần Thơ – Hậu Giang
  • National Route 62: Long An
  • National Route 63: Kiên Giang – Cà Mau
  • National Route 70A: Phú Thọ – Lào Cai
  • National Route 70B: Phú Thọ – Hòa Bình
  • National Route 71: Hà Tĩnh
  • National Route 80: Vĩnh Long – Kiên Giang
  • National Route 91A: Cần Thơ – An Giang
  • National Route 91B: Cần Thơ
  • National Route 91C: Cần Thơ – Bạc Liêu
  • National Route 100: Lai Châu
  • National Route 217: Thanh Hóa
  • National Route 217B: Thanh Hóa
  • National Route 279: Quảng Ninh – Điện Biên (border checkpoint Tay Trang)
  • National Route 279D: Lai Châu – Sơn La
  • National Route 280: Tuyên Quang – Hà Giang
  • National Route 281: Hà Tĩnh
  • National Route N1: Long An – Kiên Giang
  • National Route N2: Bình Dương – Kiên Giang
  • Ho Chi Minh Highway: Cao Bằng – Cà Mau
  • Quan Lo – Phung Hiep Highway: Hậu Giang – Cà Mau

|}

Expressways

thumb|North–South Expressway near [[Ninh Bình]]

Expressways are a rather new concept for Vietnam. Traffic is growing rapidly but the major roads are dangerous due to inappropriate design and an inappropriate traffic mix. Expressways would solve these problems along the key corridors, by separating high speed traffic from slower, local traffic.

Vietnam currently recognizes two classes of expressway. Both have a minimum of two lanes in each direction, but Class A has grade separated interchanges, while Class B has at-grade intersections. There are 4 design-speed categories: 60, 80, 100 and 120&nbsp;km/h. Generally all cars, buses and trucks are permitted on the expressway but công nông (agricultural vehicles) and all types of motorcycles are not.

Road vehicles

;Motorbikes

Vietnam is renowned for its motorbike culture. In 1995, over 90% of trips in both Hanoi and Saigon were done by motorcycle. In 2017, 79% of Vietnamese reported using a motorbike regularly. With 45 million registered motorbikes on a 92 million population headcount, Vietnam has one of the highest motorbike ownership rates worldwide. Vietnam is the 4th largest market for motorbike sales, after China, India and Indonesia.

One of the reasons for the extensive use of motorbikes is lack of investment in public transportation. In recent years, the government has expressed the desire to reduce the number of motorbikes in an effort to curb congestion.

Car prices are kept high by import taxes and sales tax, which put Vietnam as one of the most expensive countries to buy a car, with up to 2 or 3 times the final price consisting of taxes and fees. In 2016, a Lexus LX was priced at 7.3 billion VND (US$315,000), a Toyota Innova at 800 million VND (US$35,000), Despite this, car sales are growing at double digit rates each year.

Water transport

Ferries

thumb|Ferry over the [[Cầu River]]

Most river crossings have long been replaced by bridges, however ferry crossings still operate for vehicles not allowed on expressways.

  • Cat Lai ferry, between Ho Chi Minh City and Long Thanh, crossing the Đồng Nai River.
  • Between Ho Chi Minh City and Vũng Tàu, a high-speed passenger ferry service is available.

Ports and harbors

  • Cam Ranh – large deep water port used by Marco Polo during his voyages to China; formerly a major military facility for the U.S. Army and US Navy during the 1960s; later used by the Soviet Navy and the Vietnamese Navy
  • Da Nang – Tien Sa seaport is the third largest sea port in Vietnam after Ho Chi Minh City and Hai Phong; handles 3-4 million tons of cargo annually
  • Hai Phong
  • Ho Chi Minh City – Saigon Port
  • Hong Gai
  • Qui Nhơn
  • Nha Trang
  • Nghi Son (Thanh Hóa)
  • Son Duong (Hà Tĩnh)
  • Dung Quất (Quảng Ngãi)
  • Vũng Tàu

Vietnam has 17,702&nbsp;km of waterways; 5,000&nbsp;km of which are navigable by vessels up to 1.8 m draft.

Merchant marine

  • Total: 579 ships (1,000 GT or over)
  • Ships by type: barge 1, bulk 142, cargo 335, chemical tanker 23, container 19, liquified gas 7, passenger/cargo 1, petroleum tanker 48, refrigerated cargo 1, roll on/roll off 1, specialized tanker 1
  • Registered in other countries: 86 (Cambodia 1, Kiribati 2, Mongolia 33, Panama 43, Taiwan 1, Tuvalu 6) (2010)

Air transport

Air travel is rapidly growing in importance. The route between Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City has been world's 7th busiest airline route by seat capacity since 2016.

Airports

Vietnam operates 37 civilian airports, including three international gateways: Noi Bai serving Hanoi, Da Nang serving Da Nang City, and Tan Son Nhat serving Ho Chi Minh City. Tan Son Nhat is the largest, handling 75 percent of international passenger traffic. A new airport is currently being built, Long Thanh International Airport, also serving Ho Chi Minh City. Vietnam Airlines, the national airline, has a fleet of 82 aircraft that link Vietnam with 49 foreign cities. The second largest domestic carrier is VietJet Air, serving 16 domestic destinations and 31 international destinations, and the third largest is Bamboo Airways (with eight and six destinations respectively).

Airports with civil service

  • Total : 37
  • Airports with runways over 3,047 m : 9
  • Airports with runways from 2,438 to 3,047 m :6
  • Airports with runways from 1,524 to 2,437 m :13
  • Airports with runways from 914 to 1,523 m :9

Heliports

  • Total: 1

Railways

thumb|220px|The [[North–South railway (Vietnam)|Vietnamese railway network.]]

The Vietnamese railway network has a total length of , dominated by the single track North–South Railway running between Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City. The national railway network uses mainly , although there are several and mixed gauge lines in the North of the country. There were 278 stations on the Vietnamese railway network as of 2005, most of which are located along the North–South line. The Vietnamese railway network is owned and operated by the state-owned enterprise Vietnam Railways (VNR), which operates a number of different subsidiaries involved in construction, communications, training, and other activities connected to railway maintenance.

The overall condition of railway infrastructure in Vietnam varies from poor to fair; most of the network remains in need of rehabilitation and upgrading, having received only temporary repair from damages suffered during decades of war. A joint Japanese-Vietnamese evaluation team found that the poor state of railway infrastructure was the fundamental cause for most railway crashes and derailments, of which the most common types are train collisions involving vehicles and pedestrians, especially at illegal level crossings; derailments caused by failure to decrease speed was also noted as a common cause of collisions. caused serious damage to the tracks on the Chinese side. Hanoi–Đồng Đăng Railway access to Nanning is done through the border at Đồng Đăng, in Lạng Sơn province. Regular service generally entails stopping at the border, changing from a Vietnamese metre-gauge train to a Chinese standard-gauge train, and continuing on to Nanning. Vientiane – Vũng Áng Railway would run between Vung Ang, a port in Hà Tĩnh province, to connect with the North–South Railway at Tân Ấp railway station in Quảng Bình province, then crossing through the Mụ Giạ Pass towards Thakhek. According to plans established by ASEAN, the line may then be extended via Thakhek all the way to the Laotian capital Vientiane. Both Laos and Thailand have expressed interest in the project as a shorter export gateway to the Pacific Ocean.

High-speed rail

;North–South Express Railway

National railway company Vietnam Railways has proposed a high-speed rail link between Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City, capable of running at speeds of . Once completed, the high-speed rail line—using Japanese Shinkansen technology—would allow trains to complete the Hanoi–Ho Chi Minh City journey in less than six hours, compared to around 30 hours taken on the existing railway.

In 2018 a new feasibility study was submitted and based on that the government wants to reconsider the cost-benefit of the project. Plans show the first phase of construction to build sections between Hanoi and Vinh, and simultaneously between Ho Chi Minh City and Nha Trang both to be finished by 2032 with the entire north–south link to be finished by 2045.

;Ho Chi Minh City–Cần Thơ Express Railway

Another high-speed rail has been proposed to connect Ho Chi Minh City to Southeast Vietnam and Cần Thơ.

Metro

thumb|218x218px|A view of [[Hanoi Metro Line 3, which will eventually be extended underground]]

The two biggest cities in Vietnam have operating metro systems. After years of delays, the Hanoi Metro system began operations on November 6, 2021, with Line 2A. This was followed by the partial opening of Hanoi Metro Line 3 on August 8, 2024. On December 22, 2024, Line 1 of the Ho Chi Minh City Metro opened to service, which also saw the opening of the country's first underground stations.

Pipelines

In April 1995, a 125-kilometer natural gas pipeline connecting Bach Ho with a power plant near Vũng Tàu went into operation. With the subsequent addition of compressors, the volume pumped rose to more than 1 billion cubic meters per year. In 2005 a 399-kilometer underwater pipeline, the world's longest, began to carry natural gas onshore from the Nam Côn Sơn basin. The pipeline's anticipated capacity is 2 billion cubic meters per year, while the basin has an estimated 59 billion cubic meters of natural gas reserves.