REVIEW · HOI AN
Hoi An Memories Show & Hoi An Impression Theme Park Ticket
Book on Viator →Operated by Cong Ty TNHH MTV Kien Phat Nguyen · Bookable on Viator
One big reason Hoi An works so well at night. This double ticket blends a massive outdoor performance with a themed walk through old Hoi An. You’ll get a story of how a small rural village grew into a major trading port, plus time in the Impressionist Park before and after the show.
I especially like how the show tells its story with light, movement, and changing scenes, not spoken language. The park part is also a win: you start at Thanh Chiem Palace gates and then follow an artisan-style route built around the five elements. One drawback to keep in mind is that the experience can be tiring, and some sections involve harder walking that may not suit everyone.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Actually Care About
- A Night Plan That Feels Like Two Experiences in One
- Memories of Hoi An: An Outdoor Spectacle That Doesn’t Need Translation
- Seating Tiers: How to Choose Without Overthinking
- Hoi An Impressionist Park: Thanh Chiem Palace to a Five-Element Artisan Walk
- Architecture Mix and Theme Areas
- Timing Tip: Don’t Arrive Too Early to Wander
- Tickets, Mobile Entry, and QR Code Stress (and How to Avoid It)
- Comfort and Logistics: Walking, Stairs, and the Ride Home
- Meals and Drinks: Eat Before You Go
- Who This Is Best For (and Who Might Prefer Something Else)
- Guide English: Why It Matters Less Than You Think
- Price and Value: Why $24 Can Make Sense in Hoi An
- My Quick Take: Should You Book This Evening?
- FAQ
- Is the Memories show included in the ticket?
- What time does the Hoi An Memories show start?
- What days are the show and theme park operating?
- Do I need hotel pickup or drop-off?
- Is this a mobile ticket?
- What if the weather is bad, or I need to cancel?
Key Highlights You’ll Actually Care About

- 500+ performers and stage-size drama in an outdoor setting
- No dialogue story makes it easier to enjoy even if you don’t speak Vietnamese
- Hoi An Impressionist Park at night runs from early evening into late time
- Thanh Chiem Palace gate entry sets the historical tone before you even walk in
- Choose seat tiers so you can match the view to your budget
- Plan your timing to avoid stress with QR access and long waits
A Night Plan That Feels Like Two Experiences in One

This ticket is built for evenings in Hoi An. You’re getting a full show slot, plus entrance to Hoi An Impression Theme Park during its evening hours, all bundled into a single package.
The schedule is straightforward. The Memories show runs 20:00 to 21:00 from Wednesday to Monday, while the theme park is open from 16:00 to 22:00 on the same days. That overlap is useful: you can arrive with daylight still in the sky, explore as it cools down, then settle in for the show.
The big idea here is pacing. You’ll have time to wander first, then the night shifts into full theater mode.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Hoi An
Memories of Hoi An: An Outdoor Spectacle That Doesn’t Need Translation
The Hoi An Memories Show is an outdoor performance designed like a moving timeline. It recreates Hoi An in the 16th century, starting with a rural village feel—think one farmer’s home and family life—before the city grows into a powerful trading hub in Southeast Asia.
The part I’d bet you’ll notice fastest is the way it handles storytelling. There’s narration, but there are no dialogues or scripted lines. Instead, the city is treated like the main character, and the show uses visual composition—lighting shifts and scene changes—to move you through major moments and daily life details.
What also impressed me is the scale. The show uses more than 500 artists, with choreography that’s built to stay synchronized while sets and props move in and out of view. Several people highlight the production value: lighting effects, water in the stage business, and big set pieces like building-scale facades and even a ship-like element.
One more practical win: you’re not relying on language. If you’ve struggled with shows where you only get the story if you understand every line, this one is easier to enjoy. The emphasis is on what you can see—optics, costumes, formation, and timing—so your eyes do the work even when your ears can’t.
Seating Tiers: How to Choose Without Overthinking
You can pick different seat tiers. That matters because outdoor viewing can be a mix of comfort and sightline quality, depending on where you land.
If you care most about the broad stage view, pick a tier that puts you closer to the center sightlines. If you’re sensitive to crowd noise and want less pushing, you might prioritize the comfort tier even if it’s not the absolute closest.
Hoi An Impressionist Park: Thanh Chiem Palace to a Five-Element Artisan Walk

Before the show, you’ll enter Hoi An Impression Theme Park through the gates of Thanh Chiem Palace. That entry point is a clever mood setter because it frames what you’re about to see as a recreated historical environment tied to the Nguyen Dynasty era.
From there, you’ll pass through a citadel-gate style entry and into a themed route featuring facsimiles of five traditional artisan villages. The park uses a symbolic approach: each village connects to one of the five elements that are described as keeping the universe in balance.
Here’s the set of elements as the park presents it:
- Copper for metal
- Carpentry for wood
- Pottery for earth
- Lantern-making for fire
- Fishing for water
Even if you don’t go into museum mode, that structure helps you walk with purpose. You’re not just wandering; you’re moving through a story about how daily crafts and trade shaped the look and feel of Hoi An.
Architecture Mix and Theme Areas
As you continue deeper, you’ll see how the park handles cultural fusion. There are spaces that reference Vietnamese, Japanese, and European architectural styles, grouped in different areas. That’s useful because Hoi An isn’t one-note historically. The city grew through trade links, and this design gives you a nighttime version of that “blended influences” idea.
You can also read our reviews of more tours and experiences in Hoi An
Timing Tip: Don’t Arrive Too Early to Wander
A common mistake is arriving hours before you need to. One review notes that walking too long before the show was tiring, and that arriving around half an hour earlier would have been plenty.
You might not find the exact same pacing, but the logic holds. The park is open well before the show, yet you don’t want to exhaust yourself on a long walk before sitting through a full hour of performance.
Tickets, Mobile Entry, and QR Code Stress (and How to Avoid It)

This booking includes a mobile ticket. In practice, that usually means a QR code is involved, and access may require you to have the code ready at check-in.
Some people report stress when the QR code wasn’t available immediately. The fix was contacting the supplier for help, but you don’t want to be solving problems while you’re already standing in line.
So here’s the practical move: test your ticket on your phone before you leave your hotel, and bring a screenshot if that’s allowed on the platform you’re using. Then plan to arrive with enough buffer time to handle check-in, seating, and crowd flow.
If you want the smoothest experience, don’t leave ticket access to the last minute. Book in advance when possible, and double-check your show day.
Comfort and Logistics: Walking, Stairs, and the Ride Home

This experience is mostly evening walking plus an outdoor show. That sounds easy on paper. In reality, it can be tiring—one review specifically mentions difficulty for health issues and points to a cave section that can be challenging.
If you’re traveling with mobility concerns, think about your energy budget. The park route is part of the package, so you can’t treat it as a quick glance-and-go.
Also plan your transport back. Several people emphasize that you should make sure you have a way back at the end, since there’s no hotel pickup or drop-off included. If you’re relying on ride-hailing or taxis, line up your pick-up plan before the show ends so you’re not bargaining with crowds when it’s late.
Finally, plan for weather. The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund. That’s important because it’s an outdoor performance, so your best strategy is to keep one flexible night in your schedule.
Meals and Drinks: Eat Before You Go
Meals and beverage aren’t included. That means you should eat earlier and then treat the park and show as your entertainment portion of the evening.
If you need water for comfort, bring it if allowed where you’re going. Even if you don’t, at least plan how you’ll hydrate during the hour in the park and the hour-long show.
Who This Is Best For (and Who Might Prefer Something Else)

This is a strong choice if you want a night activity that feels like theater, not just sightseeing. You’ll also like it if you want the story explained through visuals. Since the show uses minimal language-based storytelling, it’s friendly for visitors who don’t speak Vietnamese.
It’s especially good for:
- Couples who want a planned evening with a clear payoff
- People who like large-scale choreography and stagecraft
- Anyone who prefers shows where you can follow without reading subtitles all night
It may be less ideal if:
- You have mobility limits or fatigue concerns (the park includes tougher walking areas)
- You’re sensitive to crowds or noise levels in an outdoor venue
- You’re looking for a calm, quiet cultural stroll instead of a full production
Guide English: Why It Matters Less Than You Think
There are guides, and English quality can vary. One person specifically calls out a guide named Victor for having wonderful English, while another notes that a second guide’s English wasn’t as strong.
The good news is that the show itself doesn’t rely on dialogue to deliver the core experience. Still, for the park walk-through and on-site explanations, a strong guide can make the details easier to catch.
Price and Value: Why $24 Can Make Sense in Hoi An

At $24 per person, this ticket is selling you something specific: both the Hoi An Impression Theme Park entry and the Hoi An Memories show. That matters because a lot of Hoi An nightlife options are either show-only or park-only.
Here, the value comes from stacking two parts:
1) an hour (roughly) to walk a designed history-and-craft environment
2) an hour of a major-scale outdoor production
If you’re trying to build one “big evening” during your visit, this package can be a clean way to do it without paying separately for entry and then another separate show booking later.
The real comparison isn’t the price by itself—it’s whether you’d enjoy both parts. If you only want one of them, the bundle may feel like a waste. If you’re open to a themed park walk before a big show, it’s a solid deal for the time you spend.
My Quick Take: Should You Book This Evening?

If you want a memorable night in Hoi An with high production energy, I’d lean yes. The Memories show is the headline, and it’s built to work even without language—big movements, sharp lighting, and a story told through daily life details and historical transformation.
Book it if:
- you’re staying during Wednesday to Monday
- you want one planned evening that feels like a “main event”
- you’re okay with some walking and an outdoor setting
Think twice if:
- you have mobility concerns related to tougher sections in the park
- you need a very quiet, low-effort evening
- you don’t have a reliable way back after the show
FAQ
Is the Memories show included in the ticket?
Yes. Your ticket includes admission to both the Hoi An Impression Theme Park and the Hoi An Memories show.
What time does the Hoi An Memories show start?
The show runs from 20:00 to 21:00.
What days are the show and theme park operating?
Both run Wednesday to Monday.
Do I need hotel pickup or drop-off?
No. Hotel pick-up and drop-off are not included, so you’ll need your own transport plan.
Is this a mobile ticket?
Yes. The booking is listed as a mobile ticket.
What if the weather is bad, or I need to cancel?
The experience requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
If you cancel, the policy allows free cancellation up to 24 hours in advance for a full refund.































