Last updated: June 2026

🇻🇳 Vietnam Guide

Cost of Living in Vietnam

Vietnam consistently undercuts Thailand by 20–30% for a comparable expat lifestyle. A bowl of pho costs $1.50. Rent outside the expat zones is genuinely low. But the same trap exists here as everywhere in SEA: chase a Western lifestyle and the savings disappear. Here's what Vietnam actually costs in 2026.

📅 Updated June 2026
💱 ~26,300 VND / USD
🏙️ HCMC · Hanoi · Da Nang

Vietnam's Cost Advantage — And Its Limits

Vietnam is one of the most affordable countries in Southeast Asia for foreigners — and it's not close. Food is cheaper than Thailand. Rent outside the expat corridors is substantially lower. A motorbike costs almost nothing to run. But the Western lifestyle trap exists here just as it does in Bangkok: the moment you start living like you never left home, the savings vanish.

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Same Trap, Different Country

Vietnam attracts a particular type of optimistic expat: someone who saw the $700/month budget figures online, sold everything, and moved expecting a life of luxury for almost nothing. What they didn't read is that the $700 budget means a basic local apartment, local food every day, and a motorbike. Add a modern serviced apartment in Thao Dien, Western restaurants four nights a week, imported wine, and regular Grab cars, and you're looking at $2,500–$3,500/month — roughly the same as a comfortable life in many Western cities. Vietnam's prices are low. Western habits in Vietnam are not.

🌏 What Vietnam Genuinely Delivers

At the local level, Vietnam is extraordinary value. A proper bowl of pho costs $1.50–$2.50. A banh mi is $0.75–$1.50. Fresh coffee with condensed milk at a local café is $0.60–$1. A simple Vietnamese meal out runs $2–5. Motorbike fuel is cheap. Local beer (Bia Hoi, Saigon, 333) at a local spot costs $0.50–$1.50 a can.

Vietnam also undercuts Thailand on rent — particularly at the mid and lower tiers. A solid one-bedroom in a non-expat area of HCMC can be had for $300–$500. The same spec in Bangkok would be $400–$650.

🏙️ City by City — the Gap Is Real

Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon) is Vietnam's most expensive city and its commercial heart. Hanoi is the political capital — generally 10–15% cheaper on rent. Da Nang sits in the middle and offers coastal living at significantly lower prices than either major city. Hoi An, Nha Trang, and smaller beach towns are cheaper again — $800–$1,100/month buys a genuinely comfortable life there.

The city you choose matters as much as the lifestyle you live.

🏙️ Ho Chi Minh City (Saigon)

Vietnam's commercial engine — chaotic, energetic, and the most expensive city in the country. The expat areas (Thao Dien in District 2, District 1 near Ben Thanh) command serious premiums. Outside these zones, costs drop substantially. Excellent food scene at every price point.

Comfortable single: $1,200–$2,000/mo

🏛️ Hanoi

More traditional, cooler climate (proper cold winters in the north), generally 10–15% cheaper than HCMC on housing. Strong expat community around Tay Ho (West Lake). Slower pace than Saigon. Traffic is dense but more navigable than HCMC. Cultural richness that Saigon's development has eroded.

Comfortable single: $1,000–$1,700/mo

🏖️ Da Nang / Coastal Cities

Vietnam's sweet spot for value and quality of life. Beaches, mountains, and Hoi An 30 minutes away. Lower rents, less traffic, cleaner air. Strong enough infrastructure for remote workers. Da Nang specifically has grown rapidly but hasn't priced out like HCMC yet.

Comfortable single: $800–$1,300/mo

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Vietnam vs. Thailand: The Real Comparison

Vietnam runs roughly 20–30% cheaper than Thailand for a comparable lifestyle. Annual comfortable expat costs in HCMC run $22,000–$30,000 versus $30,000–$40,000 in Bangkok. That gap is real and meaningful over years. Food is the clearest gap — street pho at $1.50–$2 vs. pad thai at $2.50–$3.50. Rent outside expat zones is also measurably lower in Vietnam at the equivalent tier.

Everyday Costs at a Glance

ItemLocal / StreetMid-RangeWestern / Imported
Pho / Banh Mi / local meal$1.50–$2.50$3–6 (small restaurant)$12–25 (Western restaurant)
Vietnamese coffee (cà phê)$0.60–$1 (local café)$1.50–$3 (Highlands Coffee)$4–6 (Western chain)
Local beer (Bia Hoi / can)$0.50–$1.50$2–3 (bar)$4–8 (expat bar)
Monthly groceries (local market)$70–120$150–250 (supermarket mix)$300–500+ (imported)
Gym membership$15–35/mo (local)$35–65/mo$70–150/mo (international)
Grab car (short city trip)$1–3$3–7 (longer)
Domestic flight (HCMC–Hanoi)$25–60 (budget, advance)$60–120

Exchange rate: ~26,300 VND per USD (June 2026). Prices vary by city and neighbourhood.

Housing Costs in Vietnam

Vietnam's rental market has two worlds: the local market and the expat market. The gap between them is significant. The same city has apartments for $300/month and apartments for $1,500/month — and the difference isn't always quality. Sometimes it's just which Facebook group you found the listing on.

Unit TypeHCMC (Expat Zone)HCMC (Local Area)HanoiDa Nang
Studio / 1-Bed (basic)$400–650$200–400$200–380$180–350
1-Bed (modern, pool/gym)$700–1,200$350–600$300–550$280–500
2-Bed (expat standard)$900–1,800$500–900$450–850$400–750
3-Bed / Villa$1,500–3,500+$700–1,400$650–1,300$500–1,200
Serviced / Luxury$1,800–5,000+$1,200–3,000$800–2,000

📍 The Thao Dien Premium

Thao Dien in District 2 (now Thu Duc City) is HCMC's primary expat enclave — international schools, Western restaurants, English everywhere, manicured riverside condos. It's genuinely nice. It's also significantly more expensive than anywhere else in the city. A one-bedroom in Thao Dien runs $700–$1,200. Cross the bridge to Binh Thanh and the same spec is $350–$600. The question is whether the convenience and community is worth the premium — for families with kids in international schools, often yes. For solo expats or couples, often no.

🏠 Foreigners and Property Ownership

Vietnam allows foreigners to own apartments (not land) under the 2015 Housing Law, but with a 50-year renewable leasehold rather than freehold, and subject to a 30% cap on foreign ownership per building. It has gotten somewhat more accessible in recent years but remains complex in practice. For most expats, renting is the only rational choice short-term.

Vietnam's rental market is negotiable — especially on longer leases (12+ months). A quoted price of $800 can often become $700 with a year's commitment. Always get the contract in writing and have it reviewed if you can.

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Photos Are Often Misleading

Vietnam's online rental listings (especially on local platforms) frequently use edited or even entirely different photos from the actual unit. Noise levels, dampness, natural light, building maintenance, and actual room dimensions are not apparent from photos. Always view in person before signing. If you're arriving for the first time, book a short-term rental for your first month while you look for a proper longer-term place. Don't sign a year lease from overseas based on photos.

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Where to Find Local-Rate Apartments

The best deals are not on English-language expat platforms. Chotot.vn (Vietnamese Craigslist equivalent) and local Facebook groups like "Saigon Expats" or "Hanoi Massive" regularly surface apartments at genuinely local prices. You'll likely need some Google Translate help, but the savings are worth it. Having a Vietnamese friend or colleague help you negotiate will lower the price further — foreign faces often get quoted the "foreigner rate" as a first offer.

Food & Drink — Where Vietnam Wins Outright

Vietnamese food is some of the best in the world — and at the street level, it is almost incomprehensibly cheap. A proper bowl of pho with fresh herbs, chili, and lime costs $1.50–$2.50. A banh mi from a good cart: under $1.50. This is not budget food. This is the real thing. The financial case for eating local in Vietnam is stronger than almost anywhere in Southeast Asia.

🍜 Eat Local — The Actual Numbers

A Vietnamese street meal runs 35,000–80,000 VND ($1.40–$3.20). That covers pho, bun bo hue, com tam (broken rice with pork), banh xeo (sizzling crepe), or any number of regional specialties. Vietnamese coffee — cà phê sữa đá (iced coffee with condensed milk) — at a local spot costs 15,000–25,000 VND ($0.60–$1).

Eating local most meals: $150–$220/month including drinks for a single person. This is not a sacrifice. Vietnamese cuisine at street level is legitimately excellent.

🍔 Eat Western — The Real Cost

A Western-style restaurant meal in HCMC runs $12–$25 per person. A burger and beer: $15–$25. Imported wine at a Western restaurant: $8–$18 per glass. Craft beer at an expat bar: $4–$8. Starbucks: $4–$6.

Imported groceries at Annam Gourmet or Citymart are priced at import rates — cheese, cold cuts, breakfast cereal, canned Western staples all carry the same markup you'll see across SEA. Budget $300–$500/month if you're primarily buying imported food.

🥖 The One Local Meal Rule — Vietnam Edition

In Vietnam the math on local vs. Western food is even more compelling than in Thailand. A Vietnamese breakfast and lunch costs $3–$5 combined. That's before you've spent anything on the Western dinner you want in the evening. Keep two meals local per day and your food budget drops dramatically — not because you're depriving yourself, but because you're eating one of the world's great food cultures at source prices.

A practical approach: coffee and banh mi for breakfast ($2 total), pho or com tam for lunch ($2–$3), whatever you want for dinner. You've eaten well for $4–$5 before dinner. That evening meal can be Vietnamese, Western, or anything else — you've already banked the savings.

Pro tip: Find the place that locals eat, not the place with the English menu. One block off the tourist street typically cuts the price in half for identical food.

ItemLocal / Market PriceSupermarket PriceNotes
Rice (5kg)60,000–90,000 VND (~$2.50)80,000–120,000 VNDLocal wet market vs. supermarket
Eggs (10)25,000–40,000 VND (~$1–1.60)35,000–50,000 VNDFresh eggs from market
Fresh vegetables (weekly)80,000–150,000 VND (~$3.20–6)150,000–300,000 VNDWet market is the clear winner
Pork / chicken (500g)40,000–70,000 VND (~$1.60–2.80)60,000–90,000 VNDLocal butcher vs. supermarket
Imported cheese (200g)120,000–300,000 VND ($4.80–12)Comparable to or above US prices
Local beer (Saigon/333, 6-pack)60,000–80,000 VND (~$2.40–3.20)70,000–100,000 VNDOne of the cheapest in SEA

Motorbikes, Grab, and Vietnam's Unique Rules

Vietnam runs on motorbikes — literally. An estimated 45–50 million motorbikes are registered in Vietnam. It is the default mode of transport for most of the population. For expats, getting on a bike is one of the most financially smart and culturally connecting decisions you can make. But Vietnam has specific licensing rules that are stricter than most people expect — and enforcement has gotten serious since 2025.

🛵 Motorbike (Own or Rent)

Used Honda Wave / Yamaha Sirius (buy)$200–600
New 110–125cc (Honda/Yamaha dealer)$1,200–2,200
Monthly rental (long-term)$40–90/mo
Fuel (monthly average)$10–20
Basic maintenance$5–15/mo
Insurance$10–25/mo
Total monthly (owned, running costs)~$25–60/mo

🚗 Grab (Car + Bike)

GrabBike (motorbike taxi, short trip)$0.80–$2.50
GrabCar (short city trip)$2–5
GrabCar (longer, cross-city)$5–15
Monthly if used daily (moderate)$80–180
Monthly if used heavily$200–400+
Best forOccasional trips, rainy season, no license
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Vietnam's Motorbike Licensing Rules — Read This Before You Rent

This is more complicated than Thailand and most expats don't know the specifics until they're facing a police checkpoint.

Under 50cc: No motorcycle license required. A car license is sufficient. This is the legal loophole many short-term visitors use.

110cc and above (standard automatic scooter): You need a valid home-country motorcycle license AND a 1968 Vienna Convention International Driving Permit with motorcycle category marked. The 1949 IDP — which is common in the US, UK, and Australia — is completely invalid in Vietnam. This catches a lot of people.

Long-term expats (3+ months): The IDP is technically only valid for your first 3 months. After that you need a Vietnamese motorcycle license. Conversion from a foreign license is possible with residency documentation. This is the realistic legal path for people living in Vietnam.

Fines since January 2025: Vietnam tightened enforcement significantly. Riding without the correct license: 2–4 million VND ($80–160) plus up to 7-day bike impoundment. Insurance void. Full financial liability for any accident. Police checkpoints actively target foreigners, especially in Da Nang, Ha Giang, and Mui Ne.

✅ Legal Options

Ride a genuine 50cc or under with a car license. Ride 110cc+ with home-country motorcycle license + 1968 Vienna Convention IDP. After 3 months residency, convert to a Vietnamese license. Use GrabBike as passenger (always legal — you're not driving).

🚫 What Gets You in Trouble

Riding 110cc+ without a motorcycle license. Using a 1949 IDP (US, UK, Australian standard). Buying a "grey market" bike without a matching blue card (registration). Assuming the rental shop's "it's fine" assurance means anything legally. No insurance + no license = total financial exposure in an accident.

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The Financial Case Is Still Strong — With the Right Paperwork

Get the licensing sorted and a motorbike in Vietnam changes your financial life. Running costs of $25–60/month versus $80–200/month on Grab for daily use. It also connects you to Vietnam in a way that riding in the back of a car never does — navigating the alley markets, finding the local places, moving through the city at street level. The savings are real. Do the paperwork first.

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The Blue Card (Giấy Đăng Ký Xe) — Don't Buy Without It

Every legally registered motorbike in Vietnam has a blue card — the vehicle registration certificate. Many bikes in the expat/backpacker resale market are sold without a matching blue card, or with one that doesn't match the seller's name. These are called grey market bikes. They're cheaper upfront but come with real problems: you can't re-register it in your name, can't sell it cleanly to a Vietnamese buyer later, and face real risk at checkpoints. Always verify the blue card matches the seller's ID before handing over cash.

What Vietnam Actually Costs Per Month

Three honest budget tiers for a single person in Ho Chi Minh City. Hanoi runs 10–15% less. Da Nang and coastal cities run 25–35% less. These are realistic numbers — not minimums, not aspirations.

🌿 Local Blend

Eating mostly Vietnamese, motorbike transport, local markets, non-expat neighbourhood

$700–$1,100

HCMC / per month

Housing (non-expat area, 1-bed)$250–450
Food (Vietnamese-heavy)$130–220
Transport (motorbike running costs)$30–60
Utilities (incl. AC)$40–80
Phone / Internet$20–35
Entertainment / Social$80–180
Health insurance / misc$80–150

⚖️ Comfortable Expat

Modern apartment, mix of local and Western food, motorbike + occasional Grab, some travel

$1,200–$1,900

HCMC / per month

Housing (modern 1-bed, pool/gym)$500–900
Food (mixed local/Western)$250–400
Transport (bike + Grab mix)$60–120
Utilities$60–100
Phone / Internet / Streaming$35–55
Entertainment / Social / Travel$150–300
Health insurance / misc$120–250

🍔 Western Lifestyle

Expat-zone apartment, Western restaurants regularly, imported groceries, Grab cars primary

$2,200–$3,800+

HCMC / per month

Housing (Thao Dien / premium)$900–1,800
Food (mostly Western / imported)$450–800
Transport (heavy Grab car use)$200–400
Utilities (premium building)$80–150
Phone / Subscriptions$50–80
Entertainment / Dining / Travel$300–600
Health insurance / misc$150–350
🏖️

Da Nang Changes the Math Significantly

The comfortable expat budget in Da Nang or Hoi An runs $800–$1,300/month for a genuinely good life — beach access, good restaurants, modern apartment, motorbike transport. For retirees or remote workers without a reason to be in HCMC or Hanoi specifically, the coastal cities offer significantly more value per dollar. Quality of life metrics — air quality, beach proximity, traffic stress — also skew strongly in their favour.

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The Western Lifestyle Tier Costs the Same as Home

$2,200–$3,800/month for a single person in HCMC is a US or Australian budget. Thao Dien apartments are priced for corporate expat packages. Western restaurants are priced for people earning Western salaries. Imported groceries carry full import markup. The advantage of living in Vietnam doesn't lie in this tier — it lies in what's available at the tiers below it. If this is the lifestyle you need, plan accordingly and don't expect Vietnam to feel like a financial win.

What Nobody Tells You Before You Move to Vietnam

The things Vietnam expat blogs skip over, Facebook groups get wrong, and the move-abroad YouTube channels never cover in enough depth.

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The Visa Cost Nobody Factors In

Vietnam's e-visa ($25, 90 days) is one of the most accessible in SEA — but it's not a permanent solution for long-term stays. Depending on your situation, you'll be doing visa runs, extending, or applying for longer-stay options. The cost of each renewal or run adds up over a year: flights, accommodation, fees. Budget an extra $300–$800/year for visa maintenance depending on your situation. This almost never appears in the "cost of living in Vietnam" articles but it's a real line item.

More importantly: Vietnam has tightened enforcement on long-term visa stayers. Don't assume the flexible approach that worked five years ago still applies. Get current visa advice before you commit.

💳 Cash vs. Card in Vietnam

Use cash at: street food stalls, wet markets, local shops, xe om (motorbike taxi) drivers, smaller guesthouses, most local restaurants. Vietnam remains significantly more cash-driven than Thailand.

Use card at: major supermarkets, large restaurants, hotels, malls, airports. Card acceptance is growing in cities but patchy outside tourist zones and major establishments.

ATM strategy: Most Vietnamese ATMs charge 50,000–85,000 VND (~$2–$3.50) per foreign withdrawal — lower than Thailand but still adds up. Vietcombank ATMs tend to have the lowest fees and the most reliable machines. Withdraw larger amounts less frequently. Wise Debit and Charles Schwab remain the best cards for minimising ATM fees internationally.

⚡ Utilities: The AC Reality

Vietnam is hot and humid for most of the year. Air conditioning is a necessity, not a luxury — and electricity costs reflect that. Unlike Thailand, Vietnam's electricity rates are generally government-set at the building level, so the landlord overcharge issue is less common (though not absent). Expect $30–$70/month in electricity for a one-bedroom with regular AC use.

Internet is genuinely fast and cheap — 200–400Mbps fibre packages run $10–$20/month in major cities. Vietnam has one of the best home internet value propositions in all of SEA. Mobile data is similarly excellent and cheap: unlimited 4G plans for $5–10/month.

🔑 The Adjustments That Actually Move the Needle in Vietnam

1. Eat local at least twice a day. The savings gap between local and Western food in Vietnam is larger than almost anywhere in SEA. Two local meals per day versus two Western meals saves $15–$30/day — $450–$900/month. This is the single highest-impact financial decision you make every day.

2. Sort your motorbike license before you arrive. The paperwork required to ride legally in Vietnam (home license + 1968 IDP for your first 3 months; Vietnamese license after that) is manageable if you plan for it. Don't arrive unlicensed and hope for the best — the enforcement reality in 2025–2026 is materially different from what it was. Get legal, save $25–120/month over Grab use.

3. Live one neighbourhood away from the expat zone. The premium for living in Thao Dien or District 1's tourist core can be $200–$500/month on rent alone. Districts 3, Binh Thanh, Phu Nhuan, and Tan Binh in HCMC — or Tay Ho's less-developed edges in Hanoi — offer genuinely comfortable living at a significant discount. A motorbike makes the distance irrelevant.

4. Learn to use local apps. Vietnamese delivery apps (ShopeeFood, BeFood), local loyalty programmes at coffee chains, and Vietnamese-language platforms often have prices and deals completely unavailable on the tourist-facing English versions of the same services. Five minutes with Google Translate on a Vietnamese app saves money every week.

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Vietnam Rewards the Curious

The expats who do best financially in Vietnam are not the ones who found the cheapest Western life. They're the ones who got genuinely curious about Vietnamese food, Vietnamese neighbourhoods, and how Vietnamese people actually live — and found that life to be better than what they replaced. The food is world-class at street level. The people are warm. The country is staggeringly beautiful. The savings follow from genuine engagement, not from treating Vietnam as a budget backdrop for a Western life.

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