Wooden tour boats on the Thu Bồn River at Cẩm Nam, Hội An, Vietnam — the small residential island south of the Ancient Town with yellow merchant houses visible across the water

The quiet side of the river

Cẩm Nam, Hội An

The small residential island across the Thu Bồn River from the Ancient Town — five minutes by bicycle from the lanterns, a world from the noise.

Cẩm Nam — quick facts

Type
Phường (urban ward) of Hội An city
Geography
Small alluvial island in the Thu Bồn River
Area
≈ 2.5 km²
Population
≈ 5,500 residents
Distance to Ancient Town
1.0 km (5 min by bicycle)
Distance to An Bàng Beach
5.5 km (20 min by bicycle)
Distance to Da Nang Airport (DAD)
28 km (35 min by car)
Main access
Cẩm Nam Bridge (north), Nguyễn Tri Phương Road
Coordinates
15.8714° N, 108.3372° E

Where Cẩm Nam sits in Hội An

Stand on Bạch Đằng quay in the Ancient Town and look south across the river. The narrow strip of land in front of you, with rooftops just visible through the palms, is Cẩm Nam. The Thu Bồn bends here — slowing as it widens toward the estuary — and Cẩm Nam sits inside the bend. To its north, across the main channel, is the Old Town. To its south, across a narrower branch channel, is Cẩm Châu and the mainland of Hội An. To its west, across another bend, is Cẩm Kim Island and beyond that the rice paddies of Quảng Nam. The island itself is small: roughly 2.5 square kilometres, home to about 5,500 people, accessed by a single bridge.

That bridge — the Cẩm Nam bridge — is the reason the neighbourhood works the way it does. It is short enough to walk in fifteen minutes and quick enough to cycle in five, but it is the only road into the island. There are no tour buses on Cẩm Nam. There is no through traffic. Anyone who arrives has a reason to be there.

Wooden tour boats on the Thu Bồn River at Cẩm Nam, Hội An, Vietnam — the small residential island south of the Ancient Town with yellow merchant houses visible across the water
Boats moored on the Thu Bồn at the Cẩm Nam side of the river — the Ancient Town's yellow merchant houses across the water.

The character of the neighbourhood

Cẩm Nam is residential first and a destination second. The southern half of the island is single-family Vietnamese homes on small plots, with vegetable gardens, lemongrass hedges, and lemon trees in the courtyards. The northern half — the stretch nearest the bridge — has a small cluster of Vietnamese-style restaurants serving the dishes the neighbourhood is locally famous for: bánh đập (a cracker-and- rice-paper fold eaten with shrimp paste), hến trộn (baby clam salad), and grilled river-fish. Locals drive over the bridge to eat there on weekends; tourists discover it on cycling routes.

Along the eastern edge — the long bend that faces back toward the Old Town — there is a thin ribbon of small riverside hotels, family-run homestays, and a handful of villas. Each has direct river frontage. The buildings are two or three storeys, set back from the water, separated by gardens. This is the riverside accommodation strip of Cẩm Nam, and it is one of the quietest places to sleep in Hội An.

History: from Cẩm Phố village to its own ward

Cẩm Nam was historically not a separate place. Before the twentieth century, the south bank of the Thu Bồn opposite Hội An's port was a single Vietnamese settlement known as Cẩm Phố village. The communal house of Cẩm Phố (đình Cẩm Phố) — the building that anchors any traditional Vietnamese village — was first built on Cẩm Nam Island. Repeated flooding of the island forced the villagers to relocate the communal house across the river, to its present location near the Japanese Covered Bridge. The original site on Cẩm Nam remained inhabited, but its civic centre had moved.

As the modern Vietnamese state reorganised Hội An into urban wards in the late twentieth century, the old Cẩm Phố village was broken into several phường: Cẩm Phố proper (on the north bank, including the Japanese Covered Bridge area), Cẩm Nam (the south-bank island), Cẩm Châu (the inland south-east neighbourhood), and Tân An. Cẩm Nam became its own ward — a small one by area, but with its own People's Committee, its own school, its own identity. The fact that it had once been the original site of the Cẩm Phố communal house is still mentioned by older residents.

What's there now

A short list of what you actually find on Cẩm Nam today:

  • Homes. Most of the island is residential. Walking the inner lanes you pass family altars in open-front living rooms, drying fish on bamboo trays, children doing homework on tile floors.
  • The bánh đập restaurant strip. Just south of the bridge, a row of family-run restaurants serves the Cẩm Nam specialties — bánh đập, hến xào, river fish grilled in banana leaf. Open lunch and dinner. Cash only. Excellent.
  • Riverside hotels and homestays. A thin strip of small properties along the east-facing riverbank, each with river views. No chains. Family-run. Five to fifteen rooms per property is typical.
  • A small market. Morning market near the school, mostly fresh fish, river herbs, and vegetables from the south-bank gardens.
  • Cycling routes. The southern lanes of Cẩm Nam thread through rice paddies and connect via a small ferry to Cẩm Kim Island — a favourite half-day loop for visitors staying on the south bank.

Where to stay on Cẩm Nam

The accommodation on Cẩm Nam is, by character, small. The island's land area and its single-bridge access limit how large any property can grow, and the riverside strip is zoned for low-density use. What this means in practice is that every Cẩm Nam place to stay is somewhere between five and twenty rooms — boutique riverside hotels, family homestays, a few private villas. There is no resort on the island. There likely never will be.

Nghê Prana is on the east-facing stretch of Cẩm Nam at Hẻm 384 Nguyễn Tri Phương — the alley turns off the main road toward the river and ends at our gate. The property faces east onto a bend of the Thu Bồn where the current slows and the fishing boats moor at dusk. Five rooms, all river or garden facing. Two private villas (the Nghê Villa sister property) for groups up to eight. Family-run. The riverside hotel description is here.

How to get to and from the Ancient Town

  • Bicycle: 5 minutes via the Cẩm Nam bridge. This is what most guests use. Bicycles are included with every Nghê Prana room.
  • On foot: 15 minutes. The bridge has a pedestrian lane; the Old Town opens onto Bạch Đằng quay at the north end.
  • Motorbike or scooter: 4 minutes. Parking is at any of the Ancient Town's perimeter lots — the Old Town's inner streets are pedestrian-only after 17:00.
  • Taxi or Grab: 7 minutes, 30,000 đồng one way. Useful at the end of a long day.
  • By river: Some Cẩm Nam riverside hotels arrange direct boat transfer across the Thu Bồn to the Ancient Town quay. 5 minutes by sampan, 150,000 đồng for a private crossing.

Who Cẩm Nam suits

  • Light sleepers who want the Old Town within reach but cannot tolerate the Old Town's noise floor.
  • Couples and honeymooners who want the lantern festival, the cooking class, the tailor — and a quiet, river-facing room to return to.
  • Wellness and recovery travellers who came to Hội An specifically for sleep, spa, and structured rest rather than sightseeing.
  • Cyclists who want to ride directly from the room into the rice paddies and the Cẩm Kim ferry without crossing traffic.
  • Returning visitors who have stayed in the Old Town before and want a quieter side of Hội An.

Related reading

Frequently asked

Cẩm Nam — common questions

Where is Cẩm Nam in Hội An?

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Cẩm Nam is a small alluvial island in the Thu Bồn River, immediately south of Hội An's Ancient Town. It is connected to the Old Town by the Cẩm Nam bridge, a short pedestrian and motorbike crossing. Coordinates: 15.8714° N, 108.3372° E. From the north end of the island you can see the Ancient Town's quay across the river; from the south end you look onto rice paddies and the wider Cẩm Kim estuary.

What kind of neighbourhood is Cẩm Nam?

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Cẩm Nam is residential and quiet — a working ward of Hội An rather than a tourist quarter. Most of the island is single-family homes, small gardens, family-run cafes, and a handful of small riverside hotels and homestays. The famous Cẩm Nam corn-pancake (bánh đập, hến trộn) restaurants sit at the south end of the bridge. Beyond that, the rhythm is slow: children cycling to school, fishermen mending nets at dawn, neighbours sweeping their courtyards.

Is Cẩm Nam an island?

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Yes. Cẩm Nam is a small alluvial island formed by the Thu Bồn River as it bends south of the Ancient Town. It is bordered by the main channel of the river to the north (separating it from the Old Town) and a branch channel to the south (separating it from Cẩm Châu and the mainland). The Cẩm Nam bridge is its only road connection.

How do I get from Cẩm Nam to Hội An Ancient Town?

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The fastest route is the Cẩm Nam bridge. By bicycle the ride takes five minutes; on foot it is fifteen. The bridge handles bicycles, motorbikes, and small cars, but most guests cycle — the bridge has a dedicated pedestrian lane and the south end of the bridge drops you directly onto Bạch Đằng quay, the Ancient Town's riverside promenade.

What's the history of Cẩm Nam?

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Cẩm Nam was historically part of the larger Cẩm Phố village, the Vietnamese settlement on the south bank of the Thu Bồn that pre-dated the international trading port. The communal house of Cẩm Phố village (đình Cẩm Phố) was originally built on Cẩm Nam Island and later moved across the river — near the Japanese Covered Bridge — because of repeated flooding. As Hội An reorganised under modern Vietnamese administration, Cẩm Nam was promoted to its own ward (phường), separate from Cẩm Phố, Cẩm Châu, and Tân An.

Where should I stay in Cẩm Nam?

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Cẩm Nam suits travellers who want the Ancient Town within a 5-10 minute bicycle ride but quiet residential nights. The island has a handful of small boutique riverside hotels, family-run homestays, and a few villas — no large resorts. Nghê Prana is on the south-bank stretch of Cẩm Nam at Hẻm 384 Nguyễn Tri Phương, facing east onto a bend of the Thu Bồn. Five rooms plus two private villas, family-run, built around sleep and Ayurvedic spa.

Is Cẩm Nam quieter than the Ancient Town?

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Materially yes. The Ancient Town carries motorbike, cyclo, and night-market noise from 06:00 to 23:00 daily — the price of being inside a UNESCO-listed living town. Cẩm Nam is residential: scooters move slowly, no tour buses cross the bridge, and the river itself absorbs sound. Nightly noise readings on the south-bank stretch of Cẩm Nam are typically under 35 dB — quieter than a library.

Does Cẩm Nam flood?

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Like all of Hội An's lower wards, Cẩm Nam can flood between October and November during the northeast monsoon. The island sits a metre or two above mean river level; in a typical wet year the lowest lanes see brief shin-deep water, and in a major flood year (1999, 2007, 2017, 2020) the south end of the bridge becomes impassable for a day or two. Most Cẩm Nam riverside hotels are built on raised platforms; we recommend booking the higher-floor rooms for October/November stays.

Stay on Cẩm Nam

The closest riverside hotel to the Ancient Town — on the quiet side

Nghê Prana sits on Cẩm Nam at Hẻm 384 Nguyễn Tri Phương. Five rooms and two private villas on the Thu Bồn River, five minutes by bicycle from the Old Town.