REVIEW · DA LAT
Full-Day Discovering the new tourist attraction in Dalat 2025
Book on Viator →Operated by Happy Day Travel · Bookable on Viator
A Dalat day with farms and gardens. You’ll bounce through multiple themed stops in about six hours, from strawberry picking and giant pumpkin vibes to a Mongolian-style green steppe zoo. I especially love how Mongo Land gives you something different from the usual Dalat photo spots, and I also like the mix of playful and peaceful scenes, from slides to calm koi ponds. One thing to consider: this is a tight schedule, so if you hate moving every hour, you’ll want to slow down on your own time later.
This tour works best when you treat it like a curated highlights circuit. You get an air-conditioned ride, a professional guide, entrance tickets, and even drinking water, so you spend less time managing logistics. If you’re trying to do Dalat at a relaxed pace, you might find the stops a bit “hit-and-go,” especially during peak season.
In This Review
- Key Highlights You’ll Actually Feel in Your Day
- Value Check: What $24 Really Buys in Dalat
- The Big Picture Itinerary: A Day of Themed Stops, Not Just One Attraction
- Langbiang Land Khu du lịch vui chơi giải trí: K’Ho Culture, Zoo Fun, and Strawberry Picking
- Fresh Garden Dalat and Mongo Land: The Mongolian Steppe Zoo You’ll Remember
- Que Garden: Japanese-Style Virtual Living Paradise for Calm Photos
- Quiet Art Cafe and Cafe Lang Art: When Your Brain Wants a Break
- Bonus Stops You’ll See Along the Circuit: Heaven Gate, Torii Gate, Infinity Pool, and Cherry Blossoms
- Pickup, Timing, and How the 6 Hours Play Out in Real Life
- What’s Missing: Lunch and Slow Travel Time
- Who This Tour Is Best For
- Should You Book This Full-Day Dalat Highlights Tour?
- FAQ
- How long is the full-day tour?
- What does the $24 price include?
- Is lunch included?
- What are the main stops during the day?
- Does the tour offer pickup and use mobile tickets?
- What happens if weather is bad?
Key Highlights You’ll Actually Feel in Your Day

- Strawberry farm time at Langbiang Land: high-tech strawberry picking as part of the fun
- Slides and cultural stops in one hour: K’Ho cultural space plus inflatable and rainbow slides
- Mongo Land’s Mongolian green steppe zoo: lawn games and zoo time in a very different setting
- Que Garden’s Japanese-style quiet: koi fish pond and bonsai garden details for photos and a breather
- Cafe Lang Art as the emotional reset: a calmer last stop after the more playful attractions
Value Check: What $24 Really Buys in Dalat

At $24 for about six hours, this tour is priced like you’re paying for a guided “see a lot” day, not just transport. What makes it feel like value is what’s bundled: air-conditioned vehicle, professional guide, entrance tickets for all attractions, and 500ml drinking water per person, plus travel insurance. Lunch is not included, so you’ll want to plan on grabbing something before/after the tour depending on your appetite and timing.
The group size is capped at 15. That matters more than you’d think in Dalat, where traffic can be slow and roads can feel twisty. With a small group, you usually spend less time waiting for people and more time enjoying the stops.
Also note the tour uses mobile tickets and includes pickup. If you’re staying near the meeting point at Happy Day Travel (127 Phan Bội Châu, Ward 2), getting on and off the schedule tends to be smooth.
A few more Da Lat tours and experiences worth a look
The Big Picture Itinerary: A Day of Themed Stops, Not Just One Attraction

This is the kind of tour that helps first-time visitors get their bearings fast. You’re not stuck at one place. Instead, you’ll rotate through farms, animal-focused fun, flower-like visual stops, and quiet corners—basically a “Dalat highlights sampler” built for people who want momentum.
During the day, you’ll also hit classic themed-photo highlights that Dalat is known for, including Heaven Gate, Japanese Torii Gate, an infinity pool, Little House on the Meadow, Snow Field, and Mong Dao Nguyen, a hill covered with cherry blossoms. Those fit into the overall flow around the main stops, so you get more variety without adding extra tickets.
Here’s the trade-off: you’ll likely be ready for a slow evening after. It’s a full day, and the schedule is designed to pack in the must-sees.
Langbiang Land Khu du lịch vui chơi giải trí: K’Ho Culture, Zoo Fun, and Strawberry Picking
Your first hour sets the tone. Langbiang Land is a mix of cultural space, animal viewing, and outdoor fun, all wrapped into a single pickup-and-go block.
You start in the K’Ho traditional cultural area. It’s a nice change from purely “theme park” attractions, because it gives you a sense of how local cultural spaces get presented for visitors. You don’t need a lot of background to appreciate it—you’ll just want to look around and take in the setting instead of rushing straight for photos.
Next comes Zooland, where you can admire wild animals. This is the kind of stop that works even if you’re not an animal-focused traveler. You’ll likely find something interesting to watch without needing hours to absorb it.
Then there’s the fun factor: the hottest inflatable slide and rainbow slide. Even if you don’t ride, it’s enjoyable to watch people go again and again—especially if you’re traveling with someone who’s game. If you plan to slide, wear something you can move in and expect it to be a bit of a hands-on, playful moment.
Finally, you get strawberry picking at a high-tech strawberry farm. This is a strong “hands-on” element in the itinerary, and it’s the kind of activity that makes a tour feel more worth it. Instead of only looking, you get to participate—at least for a portion of the hour.
My practical tip: treat this stop like a sampler. If you want deeper time in strawberry fields or animal areas, do that on a separate half day later. For the tour format, this hour is enough to get the vibe and take photos.
Fresh Garden Dalat and Mongo Land: The Mongolian Steppe Zoo You’ll Remember

Mongo Land is the part of this tour that consistently feels the most memorable. It’s built around a Mongolian green steppe theme in Da Lat, with a zoo and lawn games. If you’re bored of the same-looking garden attractions, this one brings you a different visual world—wide open feel, steppe-style landscaping, and animal moments.
You’ll likely spend about an hour here, which is just right for a zoo-and-photo stop. You get enough time to wander, check out the animal area, and then shift into lawn games. That lawn games element is a smart design choice for a group tour: it gives everyone a break from walking and a low-pressure way to have fun together.
This is also the stop that many people end up ranking as their favorite, and I get why. It’s not only scenic—it’s active. Even if you’re more of a watcher, the steppe theme and the mix of activities make it feel like more than another quick entrance ticket.
Practical consideration: because you’ll move between themed zones in a short time, wear shoes you don’t mind getting a little dirty. Da Lat grounds can be damp, and you’ll walk more than you expect once you start exploring.
Que Garden: Japanese-Style Virtual Living Paradise for Calm Photos
After the steppe energy, Que Garden slows things down. This stop leans into the Japanese-style “living paradise” concept, and it’s the type of place where details matter: a koi fish pond and a bonsai garden are highlighted, along with the overall carefully themed look.
Even if you don’t usually care about gardens, koi ponds and bonsai setups are naturally photogenic because they’re shaped by design. You can take your time with compositions and not feel rushed by a ride schedule.
The benefit of having this stop mid-day is balance. You’ve had culture, animals, and slides. Now you get something quieter—good for a reset before your last café-style hour.
What to watch for: go in ready to slow your pace. You don’t need to race to see everything. Look for the “quiet corners” effect—the calm that comes from still water and compact, controlled plant shapes.
Quiet Art Cafe and Cafe Lang Art: When Your Brain Wants a Break
The last major stop is Quiet Art Cafe, also described as Cafe Lang Art. This part of the day is built around the idea that sound and noise fade, leaving room for emotions and connections. In normal travel terms, that means you’re finally getting somewhere you can sit down.
You get about an hour here with the admission included. It’s a gentle landing after the more active sites, and it’s a good place to regroup with your group, check your photos, and decide what you want to do after the tour ends back at the meeting point.
If you’re the kind of traveler who needs a break from constant motion, this is a valuable stop. If you’re purely chasing adrenaline, the café can feel slower—but it still gives you an atmospheric moment that’s distinctly Da Lat.
Bonus Stops You’ll See Along the Circuit: Heaven Gate, Torii Gate, Infinity Pool, and Cherry Blossoms
Beyond the four main attractions, the tour also includes a set of iconic themed photo areas that Da Lat travelers love. Based on the tour’s highlights, you can expect stops like:
- Heaven Gate
- Japanese Torii Gate
- Infinity pool
- Little House on the Meadow
- Snow Field
- Mong Dao Nguyen, a cherry blossom–covered hill
This matters because these are the kinds of places that make a first trip feel complete. They connect Dalat’s “theme-with-nature” vibe into one day, so you’re not hunting around for each separate location later.
Real-world tip: treat these as photo stops, not long stays. The tour timing is built for variety, and trying to linger too long at each themed spot can throw off your pace for the rest of the day.
Pickup, Timing, and How the 6 Hours Play Out in Real Life
The tour starts at 8:00 am from Happy Day Travel at 127 Phan Bội Châu. It ends back at the meeting point, which is helpful if you want to hop straight into your next plan without trying to find transport after a full day.
Pickup is offered, and the itinerary is designed so you’re continually moving between attractions. With a group limit of 15, things usually flow without feeling like a huge crowd.
Still, you should assume the day will feel full. Think of six hours as enough time to get the highlights and a handful of hands-on moments, not enough time to become an expert in every farm or garden you see.
What’s Missing: Lunch and Slow Travel Time
The biggest practical gap is lunch. It’s not included. That means you should either eat before you go and plan for a snack later, or be ready to grab lunch on your own during the day if timing allows. Since the tour is about six hours, you’ll likely want at least a small bag with water (you do get 500ml included, but it’s still smart to top up later if you’re thirsty).
Also, there’s no promise of long free time at each stop. If you want deep exploration, you’ll need to build extra time on your own after the tour.
Who This Tour Is Best For
This tour is ideal if you want a “day snapshot” of Da Lat and you like variety. It suits:
- First-time visitors who want multiple highlights in one go
- People who enjoy themed photo stops plus at least one hands-on activity
- Travelers who like animal viewing and playful attractions
- Couples or small groups who want a packed, guided route without thinking too hard about tickets
It might not be your best match if you prefer quiet, slow wandering all day, or if you’re the type who wants to spend two or three hours at one garden. For that style of travel, you’d get more enjoyment by mixing a couple of independent visits with less transportation hopping.
Should You Book This Full-Day Dalat Highlights Tour?
If you’re excited by farms, themed photo areas, animal moments, and at least one calmer stop, I think this is an easy yes. The biggest reason: you’re not paying separately for the entrance tickets across several very different attractions, and the included guide keeps the day organized. At $24, the bundle pricing is the key value driver, especially if you’d otherwise be buying multiple tickets and figuring out timing on your own.
I’d especially lean toward booking if Mongo Land is your kind of attraction—steppe-style scenery plus a zoo and lawn games sounds like a great break from the usual garden-only itinerary. And if you want balance, Que Garden and Cafe Lang Art help make the day feel less like constant running.
Only skip it if you know you hate fast pacing. This is a “see a lot” itinerary, and it’s built to fit a full circuit into about six hours.
FAQ
How long is the full-day tour?
It runs for about 6 hours.
What does the $24 price include?
You get an air-conditioned vehicle, a professional tour guide, 500ml drinking water per person per day, entrance tickets for all included attractions, and travel insurance.
Is lunch included?
No. Lunch is not included.
What are the main stops during the day?
You’ll visit Langbiang Land, Mongo Land (at Fresh Garden Dalat), Que Garden, and Cafe Lang Art (Quiet Art Cafe), plus other themed highlights during the route.
Does the tour offer pickup and use mobile tickets?
Yes, pickup is offered and you’ll receive mobile ticket access.
What happens if weather is bad?
This tour requires good weather. If it’s canceled due to poor weather, you’ll be offered a different date or a full refund.
























