Countries
Vietnam: visas, tax & cost of living
Vietnam for nomads: no dedicated nomad visa, so most run on the 90-day e-visa. 183-day tax residency rule and very low cost of living. Estimates only.
United KingdomVietnam
Your move to Vietnam on a United Kingdom passport
- VisitEasyVisa-free entry
- NomadHardDifficult, indirect route
- RelocateHardLimited residence routes
Visiting
Visa-free for up to 45 days. Travel on a passport valid for your whole stay, with a return or onward ticket and proof you can support yourself.
Passport validity:Passport valid at least 6 months beyond arrival, with at least two blank pages.
Heads-up:From 15 April 2026 a digital arrival card is encouraged for arrivals at Ho Chi Minh City Tan Son Nhat airport and may become mandatory or spread to other airports.
At the border:Carry a printed e-visa or visa-free entry proof, an onward or return ticket, and evidence of funds or insurance since hospitals expect upfront payment.
Working remotely
No dedicated nomad visa; the usual route is a standard residence permit.
Tax and residency
Tax resident at 183+ days/year (or rolling 12 months) or permanent home; residents taxed on worldwide income up to ~35%, non-residents flat 20% on VN-source.(estimate)
The UK decides residence with its Statutory Residence Test (days in the UK plus your ties). As a non-resident you are usually taxed only on UK income; where one exists, a double-tax treaty with the destination decides who taxes what.
Double-tax treaty:yes, in force since 1994
Practical
Currency:VND. Cost of living:low.
Healthcare:There is no reciprocal healthcare agreement, so foreigners pay for care and private hospitals typically expect upfront payment.
Driving:Vietnam recognises International Driving Permits issued under the 1968 Vienna Convention only, not the 1949 Geneva Convention.
Sources: Vietnam, tax residence (PwC summary) · GOV.UK: tax on foreign income · HMRC: double-taxation treaties
Estimates, not advice. Confirm with the official sources before you act.
United StatesVietnam
Your move to Vietnam on a United States passport
- VisitMediumVisa required in advance
- NomadHardDifficult, indirect route
- RelocateHardLimited residence routes
Visiting
You need an e-visa. Apply online before you travel and carry the approval. It is usually quick, but leave a few days of buffer.
Passport validity:Passport valid at least 6 months beyond arrival, with at least two blank pages.
Heads-up:From 15 April 2026 a digital arrival card is encouraged for arrivals at Ho Chi Minh City Tan Son Nhat airport and may become mandatory or spread to other airports.
At the border:Carry a printed e-visa or visa-free entry proof, an onward or return ticket, and evidence of funds or insurance since hospitals expect upfront payment.
Working remotely
No dedicated nomad visa; the usual route is a standard residence permit.
Tax and residency
Tax resident at 183+ days/year (or rolling 12 months) or permanent home; residents taxed on worldwide income up to ~35%, non-residents flat 20% on VN-source.(estimate)
The US taxes its citizens on worldwide income wherever you live, so you keep filing US returns abroad. The Foreign Earned Income Exclusion and the foreign tax credit are what stop you being taxed twice.
Double-tax treaty:none
Practical
Currency:VND. Cost of living:low.
Healthcare:There is no reciprocal healthcare agreement, so foreigners pay for care and private hospitals typically expect upfront payment.
Driving:Vietnam recognises International Driving Permits issued under the 1968 Vienna Convention only, not the 1949 Geneva Convention.
Sources: Vietnam, tax residence (PwC summary) · IRS: Foreign Earned Income Exclusion · IRS: tax treaties
Estimates, not advice. Confirm with the official sources before you act.
IndiaVietnam
Your move to Vietnam on a India passport
- VisitMediumVisa required in advance
- NomadHardDifficult, indirect route
- RelocateVery hardVery restricted
Visiting
You need an e-visa. Apply online before you travel and carry the approval. It is usually quick, but leave a few days of buffer.
Passport validity:Passport valid at least 6 months beyond arrival, with at least two blank pages.
Heads-up:From 15 April 2026 a digital arrival card is encouraged for arrivals at Ho Chi Minh City Tan Son Nhat airport and may become mandatory or spread to other airports.
At the border:Carry a printed e-visa or visa-free entry proof, an onward or return ticket, and evidence of funds or insurance since hospitals expect upfront payment.
Working remotely
No dedicated nomad visa; the usual route is a standard residence permit.
Tax and residency
Tax resident at 183+ days/year (or rolling 12 months) or permanent home; residents taxed on worldwide income up to ~35%, non-residents flat 20% on VN-source.(estimate)
India taxes residents on worldwide income; your status depends on the days you spend in India (broadly 182 or more in the year). As a non-resident (NRI) you are taxed only on Indian-source income, and the relevant double-tax treaty allocates the rest.
Double-tax treaty:yes, in force since 1994
Practical
Currency:VND. Cost of living:low.
Healthcare:There is no reciprocal healthcare agreement, so foreigners pay for care and private hospitals typically expect upfront payment.
Driving:Vietnam recognises International Driving Permits issued under the 1968 Vienna Convention only, not the 1949 Geneva Convention.
Sources: Vietnam, tax residence (PwC summary) · Income Tax Department, India · India: Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements
Estimates, not advice. Confirm with the official sources before you act.
GermanyVietnam
Your move to Vietnam on a Germany passport
- VisitEasyVisa-free entry
- NomadHardDifficult, indirect route
- RelocateHardLimited residence routes
Visiting
Visa-free for up to 45 days. Travel on a passport valid for your whole stay, with a return or onward ticket and proof you can support yourself.
Passport validity:Passport valid at least 6 months beyond arrival, with at least two blank pages.
Heads-up:From 15 April 2026 a digital arrival card is encouraged for arrivals at Ho Chi Minh City Tan Son Nhat airport and may become mandatory or spread to other airports.
At the border:Carry a printed e-visa or visa-free entry proof, an onward or return ticket, and evidence of funds or insurance since hospitals expect upfront payment.
Working remotely
No dedicated nomad visa; the usual route is a standard residence permit.
Tax and residency
Tax resident at 183+ days/year (or rolling 12 months) or permanent home; residents taxed on worldwide income up to ~35%, non-residents flat 20% on VN-source.(estimate)
Germany taxes residents on worldwide income; you become resident through a home available to you (Wohnsitz) or a habitual abode of more than six months. As a non-resident you are usually taxed only on German-source income, and where one exists a double-tax treaty with the destination decides who taxes what.
Practical
Currency:VND. Cost of living:low.
Healthcare:There is no reciprocal healthcare agreement, so foreigners pay for care and private hospitals typically expect upfront payment.
Driving:Vietnam recognises International Driving Permits issued under the 1968 Vienna Convention only, not the 1949 Geneva Convention.
Sources: Vietnam, tax residence (PwC summary) · Bundeszentralamt für Steuern (BZSt) · Germany: double-taxation agreements (BMF)
Estimates, not advice. Confirm with the official sources before you act.
FranceVietnam
Your move to Vietnam on a France passport
- VisitEasyVisa-free entry
- NomadHardDifficult, indirect route
- RelocateHardLimited residence routes
Visiting
Visa-free for up to 45 days. Travel on a passport valid for your whole stay, with a return or onward ticket and proof you can support yourself.
Passport validity:Passport valid at least 6 months beyond arrival, with at least two blank pages.
Heads-up:From 15 April 2026 a digital arrival card is encouraged for arrivals at Ho Chi Minh City Tan Son Nhat airport and may become mandatory or spread to other airports.
At the border:Carry a printed e-visa or visa-free entry proof, an onward or return ticket, and evidence of funds or insurance since hospitals expect upfront payment.
Working remotely
No dedicated nomad visa; the usual route is a standard residence permit.
Tax and residency
Tax resident at 183+ days/year (or rolling 12 months) or permanent home; residents taxed on worldwide income up to ~35%, non-residents flat 20% on VN-source.(estimate)
France taxes you on your worldwide income if your tax home (domicile fiscal) stays there, broadly when your household, main home, main job or main economic interests are in France, so moving abroad alone may not end it. Once you genuinely settle elsewhere you are usually taxed only on French-source income, and tax treaties typically prevent paying twice through an exemption or a foreign tax credit, but treat any figures as estimates and check your situation.
Practical
Currency:VND. Cost of living:low.
Healthcare:There is no reciprocal healthcare agreement, so foreigners pay for care and private hospitals typically expect upfront payment.
Driving:Vietnam recognises International Driving Permits issued under the 1968 Vienna Convention only, not the 1949 Geneva Convention.
Sources: Vietnam, tax residence (PwC summary) · impots.gouv.fr - Residents de France · impots.gouv.fr - Les conventions internationales
Estimates, not advice. Confirm with the official sources before you act.
SpainVietnam
Your move to Vietnam on a Spain passport
- VisitEasyVisa-free entry
- NomadHardDifficult, indirect route
- RelocateHardLimited residence routes
Visiting
Visa-free for up to 45 days. Travel on a passport valid for your whole stay, with a return or onward ticket and proof you can support yourself.
Passport validity:Passport valid at least 6 months beyond arrival, with at least two blank pages.
Heads-up:From 15 April 2026 a digital arrival card is encouraged for arrivals at Ho Chi Minh City Tan Son Nhat airport and may become mandatory or spread to other airports.
At the border:Carry a printed e-visa or visa-free entry proof, an onward or return ticket, and evidence of funds or insurance since hospitals expect upfront payment.
Working remotely
No dedicated nomad visa; the usual route is a standard residence permit.
Tax and residency
Tax resident at 183+ days/year (or rolling 12 months) or permanent home; residents taxed on worldwide income up to ~35%, non-residents flat 20% on VN-source.(estimate)
If Spain still counts as your tax home (roughly 183+ days in the country in a year, or your main base of life and income sits there), Spain taxes your worldwide income at IRPF rates, so what you earn abroad usually counts too. The sting is softened by double-tax treaties and a foreign-tax credit, plus the Article 7.p exemption that can shelter work done abroad up to around 60,100 euros a year, but treat every figure as an estimate and check your own case before you file.
Practical
Currency:VND. Cost of living:low.
Healthcare:There is no reciprocal healthcare agreement, so foreigners pay for care and private hospitals typically expect upfront payment.
Driving:Vietnam recognises International Driving Permits issued under the 1968 Vienna Convention only, not the 1949 Geneva Convention.
Sources: Vietnam, tax residence (PwC summary) · Agencia Tributaria: persona fisica residente en Espana · Agencia Tributaria: obtencion de rentas extranjeras, reglas generales
Estimates, not advice. Confirm with the official sources before you act.
ItalyVietnam
Your move to Vietnam on a Italy passport
- VisitEasyVisa-free entry
- NomadHardDifficult, indirect route
- RelocateHardLimited residence routes
Visiting
Visa-free for up to 45 days. Travel on a passport valid for your whole stay, with a return or onward ticket and proof you can support yourself.
Passport validity:Passport valid at least 6 months beyond arrival, with at least two blank pages.
Heads-up:From 15 April 2026 a digital arrival card is encouraged for arrivals at Ho Chi Minh City Tan Son Nhat airport and may become mandatory or spread to other airports.
At the border:Carry a printed e-visa or visa-free entry proof, an onward or return ticket, and evidence of funds or insurance since hospitals expect upfront payment.
Working remotely
No dedicated nomad visa; the usual route is a standard residence permit.
Tax and residency
Tax resident at 183+ days/year (or rolling 12 months) or permanent home; residents taxed on worldwide income up to ~35%, non-residents flat 20% on VN-source.(estimate)
Italy generally treats you as a tax resident if for most of the year (roughly 183 days or more) your home, family or registration ties are here, and residents are taxed on worldwide income wherever they live. The relief is usually a foreign tax credit for tax already paid abroad, often shaped by Italy's double-taxation treaties, so the same income should not be taxed twice.
Practical
Currency:VND. Cost of living:low.
Healthcare:There is no reciprocal healthcare agreement, so foreigners pay for care and private hospitals typically expect upfront payment.
Driving:Vietnam recognises International Driving Permits issued under the 1968 Vienna Convention only, not the 1949 Geneva Convention.
Sources: Vietnam, tax residence (PwC summary) · Agenzia delle Entrate — Residence for tax purposes · Agenzia delle Entrate — Bilateral agreements to prevent double taxation
Estimates, not advice. Confirm with the official sources before you act.
CanadaVietnam
Your move to Vietnam on a Canada passport
- VisitMediumVisa required in advance
- NomadHardDifficult, indirect route
- RelocateHardLimited residence routes
Visiting
You need an e-visa. Apply online before you travel and carry the approval. It is usually quick, but leave a few days of buffer.
Passport validity:Passport valid at least 6 months beyond arrival, with at least two blank pages.
Heads-up:From 15 April 2026 a digital arrival card is encouraged for arrivals at Ho Chi Minh City Tan Son Nhat airport and may become mandatory or spread to other airports.
At the border:Carry a printed e-visa or visa-free entry proof, an onward or return ticket, and evidence of funds or insurance since hospitals expect upfront payment.
Working remotely
No dedicated nomad visa; the usual route is a standard residence permit.
Tax and residency
Tax resident at 183+ days/year (or rolling 12 months) or permanent home; residents taxed on worldwide income up to ~35%, non-residents flat 20% on VN-source.(estimate)
Canada taxes you on residency, not on holding the passport, so as long as the CRA still treats you as a resident (kept home, family or strong ties) you generally owe Canadian tax on your worldwide income. The relief is usually a foreign tax credit for tax you already paid abroad, often topped up by a tax treaty, though the exact amounts are only estimates until you check your own case.
Practical
Currency:VND. Cost of living:low.
Healthcare:There is no reciprocal healthcare agreement, so foreigners pay for care and private hospitals typically expect upfront payment.
Driving:Vietnam recognises International Driving Permits issued under the 1968 Vienna Convention only, not the 1949 Geneva Convention.
Sources: Vietnam, tax residence (PwC summary) · Canada Revenue Agency, Determining your residency status · Department of Finance Canada, Tax treaties in force
Estimates, not advice. Confirm with the official sources before you act.
AustraliaVietnam
Your move to Vietnam on a Australia passport
- VisitMediumVisa required in advance
- NomadHardDifficult, indirect route
- RelocateHardLimited residence routes
Visiting
You need an e-visa. Apply online before you travel and carry the approval. It is usually quick, but leave a few days of buffer.
Passport validity:Passport valid at least 6 months beyond arrival, with at least two blank pages.
Heads-up:From 15 April 2026 a digital arrival card is encouraged for arrivals at Ho Chi Minh City Tan Son Nhat airport and may become mandatory or spread to other airports.
At the border:Carry a printed e-visa or visa-free entry proof, an onward or return ticket, and evidence of funds or insurance since hospitals expect upfront payment.
Working remotely
No dedicated nomad visa; the usual route is a standard residence permit.
Tax and residency
Tax resident at 183+ days/year (or rolling 12 months) or permanent home; residents taxed on worldwide income up to ~35%, non-residents flat 20% on VN-source.(estimate)
If you stay an Australian resident for tax purposes, Australia generally taxes your worldwide income wherever you live, with residency turned on the moment your real home and ties are here (a continuous stay of roughly 6 months can be enough). To soften double tax, you can usually claim a Foreign Income Tax Offset for tax already paid abroad, capped at the Australian tax on that income, and treaties may help too, so treat these figures as estimates and check your own case.
Practical
Currency:VND. Cost of living:low.
Healthcare:There is no reciprocal healthcare agreement, so foreigners pay for care and private hospitals typically expect upfront payment.
Driving:Vietnam recognises International Driving Permits issued under the 1968 Vienna Convention only, not the 1949 Geneva Convention.
Sources: Vietnam, tax residence (PwC summary) · Australian Taxation Office — Australian resident for tax purposes · Australian Taxation Office — International tax agreements (tax treaties)
Estimates, not advice. Confirm with the official sources before you act.
BrazilVietnam
Your move to Vietnam on a Brazil passport
- VisitMediumVisa required in advance
- NomadHardDifficult, indirect route
- RelocateHardLimited residence routes
Visiting
You need an e-visa. Apply online before you travel and carry the approval. It is usually quick, but leave a few days of buffer.
Passport validity:Passport valid at least 6 months beyond arrival, with at least two blank pages.
Heads-up:From 15 April 2026 a digital arrival card is encouraged for arrivals at Ho Chi Minh City Tan Son Nhat airport and may become mandatory or spread to other airports.
At the border:Carry a printed e-visa or visa-free entry proof, an onward or return ticket, and evidence of funds or insurance since hospitals expect upfront payment.
Working remotely
No dedicated nomad visa; the usual route is a standard residence permit.
Tax and residency
Tax resident at 183+ days/year (or rolling 12 months) or permanent home; residents taxed on worldwide income up to ~35%, non-residents flat 20% on VN-source.(estimate)
If Brazil still counts you as tax-resident, usually triggered by a permanent visa, a temporary visa plus a job, or roughly 183 days in the country within any 12 months, the Receita Federal taxes your worldwide income, so you keep filing the annual return wherever you live. The relief is real but partial: tax paid abroad can normally be credited against what you owe in Brazil under a treaty or recognised reciprocity, so most people are not taxed twice on the same income.
Practical
Currency:VND. Cost of living:low.
Healthcare:There is no reciprocal healthcare agreement, so foreigners pay for care and private hospitals typically expect upfront payment.
Driving:Vietnam recognises International Driving Permits issued under the 1968 Vienna Convention only, not the 1949 Geneva Convention.
Sources: Vietnam, tax residence (PwC summary) · Receita Federal — Acordos para evitar a dupla tributação · Receita Federal — Imposto sobre a Renda da Pessoa Física (IRPF)
Estimates, not advice. Confirm with the official sources before you act.
MexicoVietnam
Your move to Vietnam on a Mexico passport
- VisitMediumVisa required in advance
- NomadHardDifficult, indirect route
- RelocateHardLimited residence routes
Visiting
You need an e-visa. Apply online before you travel and carry the approval. It is usually quick, but leave a few days of buffer.
Passport validity:Passport valid at least 6 months beyond arrival, with at least two blank pages.
Heads-up:From 15 April 2026 a digital arrival card is encouraged for arrivals at Ho Chi Minh City Tan Son Nhat airport and may become mandatory or spread to other airports.
At the border:Carry a printed e-visa or visa-free entry proof, an onward or return ticket, and evidence of funds or insurance since hospitals expect upfront payment.
Working remotely
No dedicated nomad visa; the usual route is a standard residence permit.
Tax and residency
Tax resident at 183+ days/year (or rolling 12 months) or permanent home; residents taxed on worldwide income up to ~35%, non-residents flat 20% on VN-source.(estimate)
Mexico taxes you on your worldwide income once you count as a tax resident, which usually means your main home or your center of life is here (very roughly, spending more than about 183 days a year can tip the balance). The good news is the SAT lets you credit foreign income tax you already paid, and Mexico's double-taxation treaties mean the same money should not normally be taxed twice.
Practical
Currency:VND. Cost of living:low.
Healthcare:There is no reciprocal healthcare agreement, so foreigners pay for care and private hospitals typically expect upfront payment.
Driving:Vietnam recognises International Driving Permits issued under the 1968 Vienna Convention only, not the 1949 Geneva Convention.
Sources: Vietnam, tax residence (PwC summary) · SAT - Servicio de Administracion Tributaria · SAT - Tratados en Materia Fiscal (para evitar la doble tributacion)
Estimates, not advice. Confirm with the official sources before you act.
PhilippinesVietnam
Your move to Vietnam on a Philippines passport
- VisitEasyVisa-free entry
- NomadHardDifficult, indirect route
- RelocateVery hardVery restricted
Visiting
Visa-free for up to 21 days. Travel on a passport valid for your whole stay, with a return or onward ticket and proof you can support yourself.
Passport validity:Passport valid at least 6 months beyond arrival, with at least two blank pages.
Heads-up:From 15 April 2026 a digital arrival card is encouraged for arrivals at Ho Chi Minh City Tan Son Nhat airport and may become mandatory or spread to other airports.
At the border:Carry a printed e-visa or visa-free entry proof, an onward or return ticket, and evidence of funds or insurance since hospitals expect upfront payment.
Working remotely
No dedicated nomad visa; the usual route is a standard residence permit.
Tax and residency
Tax resident at 183+ days/year (or rolling 12 months) or permanent home; residents taxed on worldwide income up to ~35%, non-residents flat 20% on VN-source.(estimate)
If you stay a resident citizen, the Philippines taxes your worldwide income, but once you genuinely live and work abroad you usually count as a non-resident citizen and are taxed only on income from Philippine sources. The exact line depends on how long you are out and your ties back home, so treat these as estimates, and a foreign tax credit can offset tax already paid abroad.
Practical
Currency:VND. Cost of living:low.
Healthcare:There is no reciprocal healthcare agreement, so foreigners pay for care and private hospitals typically expect upfront payment.
Driving:Vietnam recognises International Driving Permits issued under the 1968 Vienna Convention only, not the 1949 Geneva Convention.
Sources: Vietnam, tax residence (PwC summary) · BIR - Taxation of Foreign Source Income · BIR - Taxation of Non-Residents
Estimates, not advice. Confirm with the official sources before you act.
NigeriaVietnam
Your move to Vietnam on a Nigeria passport
- VisitMediumVisa required in advance
- NomadHardDifficult, indirect route
- RelocateVery hardVery restricted
Visiting
You need an e-visa. Apply online before you travel and carry the approval. It is usually quick, but leave a few days of buffer.
Passport validity:Passport valid at least 6 months beyond arrival, with at least two blank pages.
Heads-up:From 15 April 2026 a digital arrival card is encouraged for arrivals at Ho Chi Minh City Tan Son Nhat airport and may become mandatory or spread to other airports.
At the border:Carry a printed e-visa or visa-free entry proof, an onward or return ticket, and evidence of funds or insurance since hospitals expect upfront payment.
Working remotely
No dedicated nomad visa; the usual route is a standard residence permit.
Tax and residency
Tax resident at 183+ days/year (or rolling 12 months) or permanent home; residents taxed on worldwide income up to ~35%, non-residents flat 20% on VN-source.(estimate)
If Nigeria still counts you as resident, roughly 183 or more days in the country in a year, or you keep a home, habitual abode or close family and economic ties there, you are generally taxed on your worldwide income, not just what you earn in Nigeria. There is usually a foreign tax credit, and Nigeria's tax treaties, so tax you already paid abroad can typically be set against your Nigerian bill, but treat these figures as estimates and check the current rules before you file.
Practical
Currency:VND. Cost of living:low.
Healthcare:There is no reciprocal healthcare agreement, so foreigners pay for care and private hospitals typically expect upfront payment.
Driving:Vietnam recognises International Driving Permits issued under the 1968 Vienna Convention only, not the 1949 Geneva Convention.
Sources: Vietnam, tax residence (PwC summary) · Federal Inland Revenue Service (FIRS) · FIRS - Tax Treaties and Related Matters
Estimates, not advice. Confirm with the official sources before you act.
Should you move to Vietnam?
Vietnam is one of the best-value bases in Asia. Da Nang has quietly become the favourite nomad hub, with Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi close behind. Plenty of people live well on roughly $1,000 to $1,500 a month: the food is cheap and genuinely great, city internet is fast, and the coworking is real. It suits remote workers who want a low cost of living and an easy day-to-day, and who do not mind that the visa side is still a workaround.
Vietnam visa and entry
Vietnam does not run a dedicated digital-nomad or remote-work visa. Most nomads run on the 90-day multiple-entry e-visa instead (about $50), and citizens of many countries get visa-free entry for shorter stays. Working remotely for clients abroad while on that e-visa sits in a grey zone: tolerated in practice, not formally permitted. A 5-year Talent Visa launched in 2025, but it needs nomination by a Vietnamese institution and aims at top academics and executives, not nomads. A Golden Visa has been proposed and nothing is settled yet, so confirm the current terms before you book anything.
Tax residency and what to check
You are generally treated as a Vietnam tax resident if you spend 183 days or more in a calendar year or any rolling 12-month window, or if you keep a permanent home there. Residents are taxed on worldwide income on a progressive scale that tops out around 35%. Non-residents pay a flat 20% on Vietnam-sourced income only. These are estimates and the details shift, so check before you plan around them.
Figures are estimates. Always check the official source linked below.
At a glance
- Currency
- VND
- Cost of living
- Low
- Digital-nomad visa
- No
- Tax & residency
- Tax resident at 183+ days/year (or rolling 12 months) or permanent home; residents taxed on worldwide income up to ~35%, non-residents flat 20% on VN-source.
Frequently asked questions
- Vietnam: is there a digital nomad visa?
- No dedicated digital nomad visa; most people use a standard residence permit instead.
- Vietnam: when do you become a tax resident?
- Tax resident at 183+ days/year (or rolling 12 months) or permanent home; residents taxed on worldwide income up to ~35%, non-residents flat 20% on VN-source.
- Vietnam: what is the cost of living?
- The cost of living is low and the local currency is the VND. Treat any figures as estimates.
- Vietnam: do you need health insurance?
- There is no reciprocal healthcare agreement, so foreigners pay for care and private hospitals typically expect upfront payment.
- Vietnam: can you drive on a foreign licence?
- Vietnam recognises International Driving Permits issued under the 1968 Vienna Convention only, not the 1949 Geneva Convention.
Terms worth knowing
Asia: more countries to explore
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