




Mui Ne sits on a sandy cape roughly 200 kilometres northeast of Ho Chi Minh City, where the coastline of south-central Vietnam curves into the South China Sea. The resort strip — technically Rang Beach in Ham Tien ward, though universally called Mui Ne — stretches for kilometres past low-rise guesthouses, kite schools, and seafood shacks. Behind the beach, vast red and white sand dunes roll inland, lending the area a surreal, almost desert-like character that sets it apart from every other kiteboarding destination in Southeast Asia.
The northeast monsoon, locally reliable from November through April, sweeps in side-onshore across the long exposed beach, delivering sustained 18–25 knot winds that peak in the core months of January and February. The water is open-ocean choppy on the outside — short, punchy wind chop rather than organised swell — with a manageable shore break. The conditions suit intermediates and above comfortably; beginners benefit from the consistent, predictable direction, though the chop makes early water-starts a genuine workout.
Mui Ne is Vietnam's undisputed kite capital, and the beach reflects it: a dense cluster of IKO-certified schools, rental centres, and repair shops lines the strip, making it easy to arrive, hire gear, and be on the water within hours. The warm 27 °C average air temperature and dry season sunshine keep the vibe relaxed. Nearby Phan Thiet town offers authentic local food and a break from the resort bubble. For those wanting flatter water, sheltered patches closer to the cape headland provide occasional relief from the chop.
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