Da Nang

Da Nang
Municipality of Danang
Thành phố Đà Nẵng
My Khe Beach
Linh Ung Pagoda
Phuc Kien Assembly Hall
Interactive map of Da Nang
Coordinates: 16°04′10″N 108°12′35″E / 16.06944°N 108.20972°E / 16.06944; 108.20972
Country Vietnam
RegionSouth Central Coast
SeatHải Châu ward
Subdivision23 wards, 70 communes, 1 special zone
Government
 • TypeMunicipality (Class-1)
 • BodyDanang People's Council
 • Secretary of the PartyLê Ngọc Quang
 • Chairman of People's CouncilNguyễn Đức Dũng
 • Chairman of People's CommitteePhạm Đức Ấn
Area
11,859.59 km2 (4,579.01 sq mi)
Highest elevation
(Ngọc Linh Mount)
2,598 m (8,524 ft)
Lowest elevation0 m (0 ft)
Population
 (2025)
3,065,628
 • Density258/km2 (670/sq mi)
 • Urban
1,660,122
 • Rural
1,405,506
 • Dialect
Quảng Nam
DemonymDanangese
GDP
 • Municipality (Class-1)VND 279.926 trillion
US$ 11.4 billion
Time zoneUTC+7 (ICT)
Postal code
50xxx
Area codes236
ISO 3166 codeVN-DN
License plate43
HDI (2022) 0.800
(5th)
Websitewww.danang.gov.vn

Da Nang or Danang is the fourth largest municipality in Vietnam by population and the largest by geographical area. As one of the country's six direct-controlled municipalities, it falls under the administration of the central government. Da Nang's port and its location on National Route 1 and the North–South Railway makes it a transport hub. APEC 2017 was hosted in Da Nang. Da Nang has a Human Development Index of 0.800 (very high), ranking fifth among all municipalities and provinces of Vietnam.

The city was known as Cửa Hàn (Hàn River Estuary) during Đại Việt settlement, and as Tourane (or Turon) during French colonial rule. Before 1997, the city was part of Quang Nam–Da Nang province. On 1 January 1997, Da Nang was separated from Quảng Nam province to become one of the centrally controlled municipalities. Da Nang is designated as a first class city. In a proposal announced in April 2025, which came into force starting 1 July that year, the new Da Nang City was formed by incorporating the neighbouring Quảng Nam province whilst maintaining its political and administrative centres.