For a while, I spoke about Vietnam as if it were one uniform experience.
That was too generous to Hanoi.
Ho Chi Minh City forced me to correct that.
HCMC feels more modern.
Cleaner.
Less horn dependent.
Less emotionally attached to traffic as a public performance.
Still busy, yes.
Still chaotic in its own way.
But the chaos feels more operational and less exhausted.
Hanoi, by contrast, often feels like a city that mistakes endurance for planning.
Everything is more crowded.
More jammed.
More improvised.
More acoustically aggressive.
More likely to make you feel like you are living inside a permanent logistical misunderstanding.
Even the social behavior feels different.
Hanoi people can be friendly.
That part is true.
But friendly is not the same as considerate.
Friendly is not the same as disciplined.
Friendly is definitely not the same as having standards in shared space.
I saw this clearly in small things.
A tiny parking fee increase and suddenly people start parking around the condo just to make a point.
That is not protest.
That is urban emotional leakage.
If I am annoyed, the area will now participate.
That logic tells you a lot.
The issue is not just traffic.
The issue is civic attitude.
In Hanoi, too many people seem comfortable turning private irritation into public inconvenience.
The roads feel it.
The buildings feel it.
The planning feels it.
Expats definitely feel it.
HCMC has problems too.
I am not writing a tourism brochure for anyone.
But HCMC feels more like a city trying to function.
Hanoi often feels like a city trying to continue.
That difference is huge.
When I first came, I thought I was reading Vietnam.
Now I think I was mostly reading Hanoi's specific flavor of under disciplined chaos and assuming it was the national standard.
That was the mistake.
The country is mixed.
The cities are not interchangeable.
And if you are an expat trying to build a calm life, that difference can decide whether you adapt or just slowly become louder.