Buying property in Vietnam as a foreigner
Clear, sourced answers to the questions foreign investors ask most — ownership rules, the buying process and what to verify before you reserve. Written natively for English, Traditional Chinese, Simplified Chinese and Korean readers.
How can a foreigner buy property in Vietnam? (2026)
Yes — foreigners can legally buy and own apartments in Vietnam. Under the Housing Law 2023 you sign a Sale & Purchase Agreement directly with a licensed developer, hold a renewable 50-year leasehold within a per-building foreign quota, and may freely resell or lease the home.
Legal frameworkThe 30% quota and 50-year leasehold, explained
Vietnam lets foreigners own up to 30% of the apartments in any one building, on a 50-year leasehold that is renewable. The home can be resold or leased, and a sale to a Vietnamese citizen converts the title to permanent freehold.
Due diligenceWill I Actually Get the Pink Book (So Hong)? The Pre-Deposit Title & Quota Verification Checklist
The Sale and Purchase Agreement (SPA) and your deposit receipt prove a contract, not ownership. Only the Pink Book (So Hong / Land Use Rights and Property Ownership Certificate) proves title. Before you pay a single dong, get WRITTEN confirmation that the building's 30% foreign quota is still open and the project sits outside any defense or security zone.
Legal frameworkThe 50-Year Clock: What Happens at Expiry, Whether Renewal Is Guaranteed, and How the Term Transfers on Resale
Your apartment reverts to the State at year 50 only if you do nothing. Before expiry you can extend once (+50 yrs, discretionary), sell, or gift. A foreign buyer on resale inherits only your remaining years; a Vietnamese buyer converts it to perpetual (stable, long-term) ownership. This is general information, not legal advice.
InvestmentYour Exit Before You Enter: Who Can Legally Buy Your Vietnam Apartment, and How the Quota and Clock Shape Resale
Your legal buyer pool is narrow: another foreigner (only if the building's 30% foreign quota has room) or any Vietnamese citizen (who then converts the unit to permanent freehold). You cannot sell to a foreigner once the quota is full, and you cannot buy resale from a Vietnamese owner. Plan the exit before you sign.
Money & taxTotal Cost of Ownership in Vietnam: Every Tax and Fee From Purchase to Sale (the All-In Number Agents Don't Quote)
Above a new-build's headline price, budget roughly 12-13% extra: ~10% VAT (often excluded), a 2% sinking fund at handover, and ~0.5% registration plus notary. Holding costs are a near-zero annual land tax but a real management fee (USD 80-320+/month). On sale you pay 2% transfer tax on the GROSS price, not profit, so you owe it even at a loss.
InvestmentRenting Out Your Vietnam Apartment From Abroad: Airbnb Legality, Tax You Owe, and Getting Rent Out
Short-term (under 30 days) Airbnb-style letting is now banned in ordinary residential buildings in Ho Chi Minh City; only long-term leases are clearly legal unless your unit is a licensed condotel. Rent above the VND 200m/year threshold owes about 10% (5% VAT + 5% PIT). You need a tax code, a dedicated rental account, and a notarized power of attorney to collect and remit rent legally.
Money & taxCan a Foreigner Get a Mortgage in Vietnam? The Honest Answer and How Buyers Actually Pay
Usually no. Most Vietnamese banks won't lend to non-citizens. A few will if you hold a TRC plus work permit and local income, but expect 30-50% down, 8-9% promo rates jumping to 9-13% floating, and a term capped to your residence card. So most foreign buyers pay cash via developer staged installments instead.
Buying processBuying From Abroad: How Far a Power of Attorney Gets You and the One Step You Can't Skip
Yes, a properly notarized Power of Attorney (POA) lets a lawyer or relative sign, pay and notarize your Vietnam purchase remotely. But opening and funding the Vietnamese bank account that pays for the home is a KYC/AML step that almost always forces one in-person trip. Plan for that single visit.
Legal frameworkInheritance and Estate Planning: Can Your Foreign Children Inherit the Apartment, or Only Its Cash Value?
Your foreign children ARE legal first-order heirs (Civil Code Art. 651). But inheriting the right to the asset is not the same as keeping the apartment. If an heir does not personally qualify to own housing in Vietnam, they inherit only its cash VALUE and must sell or transfer it; they cannot hold a So hong (Pink Book).
Money & taxGetting Your Money Out of Vietnam: The Repatriation Paper Trail Every Foreign Buyer Must Keep From Day One
Yes, foreigners can wire sale proceeds home, but the right to do so is decided at purchase, not at sale. Vietnamese banks repatriate only against a documented chain proving your money entered from abroad: the original inbound remittance slip, notarized sale contract, ownership certificate, and 2% PIT receipt. Pay in cash and that chain breaks.
Money & taxMoving Money INTO Vietnam Legally: Which Account, the Own-Name Rule, and the Proof That Unlocks Your Exit
As a private foreign homebuyer you do NOT need an investor capital account (DICA). You wire funds from abroad into a foreign-currency account opened in YOUR OWN name at a licensed Vietnamese bank, convert to dong, and pay the seller bank-to-bank. That inbound record is what later unlocks your money-out.
Due diligenceDue Diligence on the Developer, Project & Agent: The Buyer-Protection Checklist Before You Wire a Dong
Before paying anything, confirm three things in writing: the project sits on the provincial Department of Construction's "eligible-for-sale" list and is open to foreigners, the person selling holds written authority, and the developer has a bank guarantee (bao lanh) plus a clean build record. No documents, no transfer.
InvestmentReal Rental Yields in Vietnam: Gross vs Net After Tax & Fees (HCMC, Hanoi, Da Nang, 2026)
Forget the agent-quoted 6-8%. In H1 2025, gross apartment yields ran roughly 3.4-3.7% in Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi (Da Nang higher, ~4.5-5.7%). After management fees, vacancy and the 10% rental tax, you realistically keep ~2.6-3.1% net — below the ~5% bank deposit rate. Run the worksheet below.
Visa & residencyDoes Buying Property Get Me a Visa or Residency in Vietnam? The Honest Answer (Spoiler: No)
No. Owning a condo or villa in Vietnam grants zero immigration status. There is no enacted Golden Visa, no property-based residency, and no retirement visa. Your visa or residence card depends entirely on work, investment in a company, marriage, or study, never on the title deed. Status enables buying, not the reverse.
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Talk to an advisorGeneral information based on Vietnam’s Housing Law 2023 and Land Law 2024 — not legal advice. Confirm project-specific terms with the developer and your own lawyer before any reservation.