A Month in Phu Quoc: The Complete Long-Stay Guide (2026)

Here’s a fact that makes Phu Quoc quietly perfect for slow travel: the island’s special visa exemption gives most nationalities 30 days, free, no paperwork — which means “a month in Phu Quoc” isn’t just a daydream, it’s the exact length the immigration stamp hands you. Add $300–600 monthly apartments, $1.50 meals, fast Wi-Fi and a beach for every mood, and you have one of Southeast Asia’s most underrated long-stay bases. This guide covers everything: costs, neighborhoods, rentals, and the honest downsides.

This isn’t an “expat guide” — it’s for travelers doing an extended stay: a month (or two or three) of living slowly, working remotely maybe, and actually getting to know a place instead of sprinting through it.

Balcony breakfast with tropical fruit and Vietnamese coffee overlooking the sea in Phu Quoc
The long-stay morning: fruit, phin coffee, sea view, nowhere to rush to.

Why Phu Quoc for a Month (and Why Maybe Not)

The case for:

  • The 30-day visa-free stamp — arrive on a direct international flight and the month is yours, no e-visa needed (staying longer or touring mainland Vietnam? Get the 90-day e-visa instead — it’s cheap and online).
  • Cost: a comfortable month runs $700–1,200 all-in — less than a week at the island’s fancier resorts.
  • Livability: real supermarkets, hospitals (including an international-standard one), gyms, laundry on every block, Grab everywhere.
  • The seasonal trick: there’s always a good coast — west in dry season, east in rainy season. A month gives you time to use both. (Full logic in our seasons guide.)

The honest case against: Phu Quoc is a beach island, not a culture capital — no old town, limited cafés-with-character compared to Da Nang or Hanoi, and you’ll want a scooter for daily life. If your month needs museums and street energy, this isn’t the pick. If it needs sea, calm and routine, it absolutely is.

Where to Base Yourself

  • Duong Dong town & fringes — the practical pick. Markets, cheap food, gyms, laundry, real life. Apartments and guesthouse monthlies are cheapest here, beach is 10–15 minutes away.
  • Ong Lang — the serenity pick. Garden bungalows and small apartments, quiet beach walking distance, but you’ll scooter into town for errands. Perfect for writers and burnout recovery.
  • Long Beach southern stretch — the balance. Beach access plus enough restaurants, with monthly rates in newer condo buildings.
  • Skip for long stays: the far north (isolated resort bubble) and the deep south (construction, distances). Area details in where to stay.

Finding a Monthly Rental (The Real Methods)

  • Facebook groups (“Phu Quoc expats”, “Phu Quoc housing/rentals”) — where the real listings live. Post what you want; agents and owners reply within hours.
  • Booking apps with weekly/monthly filters — many hosts discount 30–50% for month-long bookings; message and negotiate further. Great for the first month while you look around.
  • The classic move: book one week online, then hunt in person — walk neighborhoods, ask café owners, check building signs (full playbook: monthly rentals guide). In-person prices routinely beat online ones.

What things cost (2026 ballparks): guesthouse room monthly $200–350; studio apartment $250–450; modern 1BR with pool/gym $400–700; villa splits with friends from ~$800. Utilities (aircon-heavy) add $30–60.

The Monthly Budget, Line by Line

  • Rent (nice studio): $350
  • Food: $250–350 — local meals $1.50–3, market cooking, a few Western dinners
  • Scooter rental: $60–80/month + ~$15 fuel
  • Data/SIM: $10–20 — local Viettel SIM for long stays; travel eSIM to land with (our comparison)
  • Coffee & coworking: $40–80 (most people work from cafés; the phin coffee habit is mandatory)
  • Fun (boat day, massages, cable car, nights out): $100–150

Realistic total: $850–1,050/month living well, not backpacker-scraping. Frugal months under $700 are doable; comfort-first months with a pool condo run $1,300+.

Laptop and Vietnamese phin coffee at an open-air tropical cafe workspace in Phu Quoc
The office: open-air café, phin coffee dripping, Wi-Fi faster than your home plan.

Working Remotely: The Wi-Fi Reality

Genuinely good news: fiber is standard, café Wi-Fi routinely tests fast enough for video calls, and 4G/5G blankets the developed coasts as backup. There’s no big coworking scene — the culture is “laptop café,” and a dozen spots in Duong Dong and along Long Beach tolerate hours-long sessions if you keep ordering coffee ($1–2 a glass). Time zone: GMT+7 — brutal for US-East meetings, comfortable for Europe-morning/Asia-anything.

Daily-Life Notes That Matter

  • Scooter: effectively required. $60–80/month, wear the helmet, get an International Driving Permit before you leave home to stay legal and insured.
  • Healthcare: a modern international hospital handles real problems; pharmacies everywhere for small stuff. Travel/nomad insurance strongly recommended.
  • Groceries: morning wet markets for produce and seafood (learn six Vietnamese numbers, save 30%), supermarkets and convenience stores for the rest.
  • Laundry: wash-dry-fold shops ~$1/kg, next-day.
  • Rainy-season stays (May–Oct): embrace the rhythm — bright mornings, an afternoon downpour, golden evenings. Cheapest rents, emptiest beaches, and the east coast is at its best (see Sao & Khem).

FAQ

Can I really stay 30 days without a visa?

Yes — Phu Quoc has a special 30-day visa exemption for direct arrivals, separate from mainland rules. Want mainland travel too, or 60–90 days? Vietnam’s 90-day e-visa is inexpensive and applied for online. Rules evolve: check the current rules before booking.

Is a month in Phu Quoc boring?

Honest answer: if you need urban stimulation, by week three, maybe. If your ideal month is beach mornings, work blocks, market cooking, boat weekends and sunset routines — it’s the opposite of boring. Know your type.

Phu Quoc or Da Nang for a long stay?

Da Nang wins on nomad scene, food variety and city energy; Phu Quoc wins on island calm, the 30-day stamp and having a beach for every season. Many people do both (or route a whole month across Vietnam) — a month each.

Can I do a month with kids?

Yes — the island is safe and calm, and VinWonders/safari/Aquatopia cover the “entertainment” column. Schooling is the limiting factor beyond a month.

How do I get money?

ATMs everywhere (choose bank-owned ones, withdraw large amounts to minimize fees) and cards work at supermarkets and bigger restaurants. Cash still rules markets and street food.

Bottom Line

A month in Phu Quoc costs about $900, needs zero visa paperwork, and hands you a rhythm most vacations never reach: market breakfasts, café work sessions, a different beach every weekend, sunset as a daily appointment. Come in a shoulder month, base near Duong Dong or Ong Lang, rent the scooter, learn the coffee order. The island does the rest.

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