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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.

Vietnam: visas, tax & cost of living
Your passport

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.

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

Put it to work

Last verified: 2026-06-24

Sources: Vietnam — tax residence (PwC summary)

Voymo gives general information to help you organise your move. It is not legal, tax, or immigration advice, always confirm with an official source or a qualified professional before you act.

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