Dane Cobain
By Dane Cobain

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Work Visa in Vietnam 2026: Work Permit, LD Visa & Decree 219

Vietnam does not let you show up and start working. Every foreign national employed in Vietnam for more than 90 cumulative days in a calendar year needs a work permit issued by DOLISA (Department of Labor, Invalids and Social Affairs) and an LD work visa issued by immigration authorities. The employer, not the employee, must initiate the process. And before the employer can even apply, they must prove to the Vietnamese government that no local candidate could fill the role.

The system was reformed in August 2025 under Decree 219/2025, which consolidated several previously separate application steps. The reform streamlined paperwork but did not reduce the timeline: document preparation still takes 2 to 3 months, and the formal processing adds another 3 to 4 weeks. Working without a valid permit carries fines of VND 15 to 25 million (~USD 625 to 1,040) for the employee and VND 30 to 75 million for the employer, plus deportation and potential blacklisting.

This guide covers the full work visa process in Vietnam for 2026, including the labour market test, the four worker categories, LD1 vs LD2 visas, required documents, realistic timelines, costs, exemptions, and how an Employer of Record handles the entire process.

Vietnamโ€™s labour market test, four-category classification, and strict document legalisation make the work permit process one of Southeast Asiaโ€™s most demanding. Compare the best EOR providers on Employsome. We score providers on DOLISA compliance, work permit handling, and payroll accuracy.

How the Vietnam Work Visa System Works

How the Vietnam Work Visa System Works

Like China, Vietnam uses a layered system where multiple documents must be obtained sequentially:

Layer 1: Labour demand approval. The employer submits a registration form to DOLISA explaining why a foreign worker is needed. Before applying, the employer must have advertised the position to Vietnamese workers for at least 15 days and demonstrated that no local candidate could fill the role. This is a genuine labour market test, not a formality.

Layer 2: Work permit. Once labour demand is approved, the employer submits the work permit application to DOLISA. The permit classifies the foreign worker into one of four categories: manager, executive director, expert, or technical worker. The work permit is valid for up to 2 years and can be extended once for another 2 years.

Layer 3: Work visa (LD1 or LD2). With the work permit in hand, the employer requests a visa approval letter from the Immigration Department. The employee then applies for the LD visa at a Vietnamese embassy or consulate abroad, or converts an existing visa inside Vietnam.

Layer 4: Temporary Residence Card (TRC). For stays of one year or more, the employee applies for a TRC through the Immigration Department. Valid for up to the duration of the work permit, allowing multiple entries. Processing takes about 5 working days.

Step

Document

Authority

Timeline

Pre-application

Labour demand approval

DOLISA

15 working days

Application

Work permit

DOLISA

5 to 10 working days

Post-approval

Visa approval letter

Immigration Dept

5 working days

Entry

LD work visa (stamp)

Embassy/consulate

3 to 5 working days

Post-arrival

Temporary Residence Card

Immigration Dept

5 working days

Total formal processing time is approximately 30 to 40 working days. But document preparation (degree authentication, criminal background check, health certificate, translations) typically adds 2 to 3 months. Realistic end-to-end timeline: 3 to 4 months.

The Four Worker Categories

The Four Worker Categories

Vietnam classifies foreign workers into four categories. Your category determines the qualification requirements:

Category

Definition

Requirements

Manager

Head of department or higher within the organisation

Appointment decision + 3 years experience in equivalent position

Executive Director

Legal representative or person managing day-to-day operations

Appointment decision from the organisation

Expert

Person with specialised knowledge in their field

Bachelor’s degree + 3 years relevant experience, OR 5 years experience + practice certificate

Technical Worker

Person trained in a technical field

1 year technical training + 3 years experience, OR 5 years experience in the field

The expert category is where most foreign professionals (developers, engineers, consultants, finance professionals) land. The standard path is a bachelorโ€™s degree in a relevant field plus at least 3 years of post-graduation experience. Without a degree, you need 5 years of experience plus a practice certificate. DOLISA checks the degree, the field of study, and whether the work experience matches the job description.

๐Ÿ’ก Employsome Insight: The Labour Market Test Is Real

Unlike some countries where the labour market test is a rubber stamp, Vietnam enforces it. The employer must advertise the position to Vietnamese candidates for at least 15 days and wait 30 days for responses before applying for the work permit. If DOLISA determines that a Vietnamese candidate could fill the role, the application is rejected. For tech roles this is rarely a problem, but for generalist roles (marketing, administration) it can be a genuine hurdle.

LD1 vs LD2 Visa: Which One Does Your Employee Need?

LD1 vs LD2 Visa: Which One Does Your Employee Need?

Feature

LD1 Visa

LD2 Visa

For whom

Workers exempt from work permit

Workers who need a work permit

Work permit needed?

No (exemption certificate required)

Yes

Maximum validity

Up to 2 years

Up to 2 years (tied to work permit)

Typical use case

Intra-company transfers, investors with VND 3B+ capital, priority sectors

All other foreign employees under labour contract

Extension

Yes, based on exemption renewal

Yes, one extension of up to 2 years

Most foreign employees working under a standard labour contract in Vietnam need the LD2 visa. The LD1 is reserved for specific exemption categories.

Who Is Exempt from a Work Permit?

Who Is Exempt from a Work Permit?

Certain categories can work without a work permit (LD1 visa + exemption certificate): investors with VND 3 billion+ capital (~USD 130,000), intra-company transferees on specific projects, workers in priority sectors (finance, science, technology, innovation, digital transformation) confirmed by authorities (new under 2025 reforms), heads of representative offices or NGO projects, foreign journalists permitted by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, education professionals confirmed by the Ministry of Education, and spouses of Vietnamese citizens residing in Vietnam.

The 2025 reforms also introduced a short-term work exemption: foreigners working up to 90 cumulative days per calendar year no longer need a work permit. The previous three-trip limit was removed, giving employers more flexibility for project-based assignments.

Required Documents

Required Documents

Employee Documents

Valid passport (6+ months remaining). Criminal background check from home country, notarised and legalised (less than 6 months old). Health certificate from a Vietnamese-approved facility (valid 12 months). Degree certificate, notarised and legalised (field must match job description). Proof of work experience: employment contracts, reference letters, or social insurance records (notarised and legalised). 2 passport-sized photos (4x6cm, white background). Experience documents must demonstrate work in the same field as the job position.

Employer Documents

Business registration certificate. Investment or enterprise registration certificate. Proof of the labour market test (job posting confirmation, evidence of no suitable Vietnamese candidate). Labour demand registration form. Written request for work permit. Appointment decision or employment contract (in Vietnamese). All foreign-language documents must be translated into Vietnamese by a certified translator and legalised.

๐Ÿ’ก Employsome Insight: Start Document Legalisation Immediately

The single biggest delay is document legalisation. A criminal background check from the US, UK, or Australia can take 4 to 8 weeks to obtain, then another 2 to 4 weeks to legalise through the Vietnamese embassy. Degree certificates go through the same process. Start both on the day the hiring decision is made. If your employee is already in Vietnam on a tourist or business visa, they can begin the medical examination locally while foreign documents are being processed, saving 1 to 2 weeks.

Processing Times and Costs

Processing Times and Costs

Stage

Processing Time

Approximate Cost

Labour demand approval (DOLISA)

15 working days

No government fee

Work permit issuance (DOLISA)

5 to 10 working days

VND 600,000 (~USD 25)

Visa approval letter

5 working days

Varies by nationality

LD visa stamp (embassy)

3 to 5 working days

USD 25 to 135

Temporary Residence Card

5 working days

VND 250,000 to 500,000

Document legalisation

4 to 12 weeks

USD 100 to 500+

Health examination (in Vietnam)

1 to 3 days

VND 500,000 to 1,500,000

Certified translations

2 to 5 days

VND 200,000 to 500,000 per doc

Total cost (employer side): USD 800 to 2,500 in government fees, translations, legalisation, and health examination. EOR or agency service fees add USD 500 to 1,500. For employer cost details including social insurance rates, see our guide on hiring developers in Vietnam.

Penalties for Non-Compliance

Penalties for Non-Compliance

Violation

Penalty

Foreign worker without valid work permit

VND 15 to 25M fine (~USD 625 to 1,040) + deportation + blacklisting

Employer hiring without permit

VND 30 to 75M fine (~USD 1,250 to 3,100), doubled for organisations

Using expired work permit

Same penalties as no permit

Permit content does not match actual job

Fine + work permit revocation

Vietnam does not offer warnings or grace periods. Inspections are common, especially in Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi.

Can an EOR Handle This?

Can an EOR Handle This?

Yes. An EOR with a Vietnamese entity handles the entire process: labour demand registration, job posting for the market test, work permit application through DOLISA, visa approval letter request, employment contract under Vietnamese law, payroll and social insurance registration, and TRC processing.

Vietnam is one of the top countries for hiring developers due to its growing tech talent pool and competitive salaries. When evaluating providers, check whether they have their own entity or use a local partner in Vietnam, and whether they have experience navigating DOLISA in HCMC vs. Hanoi.

Frequently Asked Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

You need an LD2 work visa (if a work permit is required) or an LD1 visa (if exempt). Both require employer sponsorship. Working on a tourist or business visa is illegal.

Formal DOLISA processing takes 20 to 25 working days once documents are ready. Document legalisation adds 2 to 3 months. Total: 3 to 4 months.

Yes, but you need 5 years of documented experience plus a practice certificate (expert category), or 1 year technical training plus 3 years experience (technical worker).

Employers must advertise to Vietnamese candidates for 15+ days and wait 30 days before applying for a foreign work permit. DOLISA can reject if a local candidate is suitable.

Yes. Under the 2025 reforms, foreigners working up to 90 cumulative days per calendar year are exempt. The previous three-trip limit was removed.

VND 15 to 25M fine (~USD 625 to 1,040) + deportation + blacklisting for the worker. VND 30 to 75M for the employer, doubled for organisations.

Yes. An EOR with a Vietnamese entity handles labour demand registration, DOLISA work permit application, visa processing, employment contract, payroll, and social insurance.


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Written by

Dane Cobain

Dane Cobain is a Copywriter at Employsome and an accomplished author whose work spans fiction, non-fiction, and professional writing. Over the past decade, he has built a strong track record creating straightforward content for the HR, payroll, and corporate sectors. Dane brings a storytellerโ€™s eye to the evolving world of global employment, with a particular focus on Employer of Record and PEO models. His articles explore industry trends and dedicated Best Of Guides when managing an international workforce.

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