Last updated: June 2026
Vietnam's rental market is affordable, varied, and navigable — once you know the neighborhoods, the lease norms, and the scams to avoid. Buying is a more complex conversation: a 2024–2025 legal overhaul changed the rules significantly, including a major upgrade for foreigners married to Vietnamese nationals.
Vietnam's rental market is one of the best value propositions in Southeast Asia for expats — good quality, reasonable prices, and a well-established infrastructure of serviced apartments and furnished units in every major city. The process has its friction points but nothing that can't be navigated with basic preparation.
Standard lease terms in Vietnam run 6 or 12 months, with monthly arrangements available in serviced apartments at a significant premium. Upfront costs typically include 2 months' security deposit plus 1 month's rent in advance — making your move-in cost 3 months upfront. Agent fees (half to one month's rent) apply when using a real estate agent, which is common for the better-quality units.
Under Vietnam's 2025 housing regulations, leases for foreigners above a certain value must be bilingual (Vietnamese and English). Always insist on a bilingual contract regardless of the value — it's your primary legal protection. The contract should specify: deposit refund conditions, who is responsible for maintenance, electricity billing arrangement, and notice period.
For leases over 6 months, a registration with the local Ward People's Committee is required by law — a formality costing around ₫100,000–200,000 (~$4–$8) but creating a legal record of your tenancy. Many landlords skip this step; insisting on it is worth the minor friction.
Serviced apartments are the most common first-choice for arriving expats — fully furnished, English-speaking management, utilities often included or metered, flexible terms. They cost more than standard rentals but eliminate the friction of setup. Most major expat areas in HCMC and Hanoi have serviced apartment buildings in every price tier.
Standard furnished apartments are the sweet spot for stays of 6+ months — lower cost than serviced, still furnished, in residential buildings with basic amenities. These are what most long-stay expats end up in once they've settled.
Houses and villas are available in expat-heavy areas like Thao Dien (HCMC) and Tay Ho (Hanoi), popular with families wanting more space. Higher cost, more maintenance responsibility, but significantly more living room than apartment equivalents.
Shared houses are common in expat districts among nomads and younger expats — cheaper per person, more social, but require compatible housemates and clear agreements about shared costs.
Vietnam's foreign property ownership framework was significantly updated by the Housing Law 2023 (effective August 2024) and the Land Law 2024 (effective January 2025). The rules are clearer than before — and more favorable — but the fundamental constraint remains: no foreigner owns Vietnamese land outright. Nobody does. The state owns all land.
| Ownership Type | Legal Status | Duration | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apartment / condo (in approved commercial project) | Legal — up to 30% of units per building | 50 years, renewable once for 50 more | Legitimate path |
| House in approved commercial project | Legal — up to 250 houses per ward-equivalent area | 50 years, renewable | Legitimate path |
| Married to a Vietnamese citizen | Significant upgrade under 2024 Housing Law — see below | Potentially indefinite | Major 2024 upgrade |
| Property in Vietnamese spouse's name | Common — spouse holds the Red Book; foreigner's rights depend on marriage documentation | Per Vietnamese title | Common but nuanced |
| Land (direct freehold) | Prohibited — foreigners cannot hold land use rights directly | N/A | Not permitted |
| Property outside approved commercial projects | Prohibited — foreigners can only buy within designated commercial housing projects | N/A | Not permitted |
Under the Housing Law 2023 (effective August 2024), foreigners can own apartments and houses in approved commercial developments for an initial 50-year term, renewable once for a further 50 years — giving a maximum potential tenure of 100 years. This is meaningfully better than Thailand's 30-year leasehold (which doesn't have statutory renewability) and broadly comparable to what Indonesia offers through Hak Pakai.
The 30% quota per building remains — foreigners cannot own more than 30% of units in any single condominium building. This is slightly tighter than Thailand's 49%, but the longer tenure structure partly compensates. Always verify quota availability before committing to a purchase in any specific building.
A meaningful practical change in the 2024 Housing Law: foreigners can now buy and sell property to other foreigners — not just to Vietnamese citizens. Previously, a foreigner selling their Vietnamese apartment was essentially limited to selling back into the Vietnamese market, which could depress exit prices. The ability to sell to the broader international buyer pool improves the investment case and gives foreign owners a more realistic exit strategy.
Combined with the longer 50-year tenure, this makes Vietnam's foreign ownership framework meaningfully more attractive than it was before 2024 — though it remains more restrictive than Malaysia's outright freehold option for foreigners above the minimum price threshold.
Across most of Southeast Asia, the "spouse's name" property arrangement is an informal workaround that carries relationship risk without specific legal backing. Vietnam is different — and became more different in 2024. Under the Housing Law 2023 (effective August 2024), foreigners married to Vietnamese citizens are now explicitly granted the same housing ownership rights as Vietnamese citizens. That's not a workaround — it's a statutory right.
In practice this means: a foreign national legally married to a Vietnamese citizen can own property in Vietnam without the 50-year tenure limitation, without the 30% building quota restriction, and with the full rights of a Vietnamese property owner — including the right to own outside approved commercial housing projects. This is a significant departure from the rules that applied to most foreigners before 2024.
The property can be held jointly (both names on the Pink Book) or in the Vietnamese spouse's name alone. For joint ownership, both parties' rights are explicitly recognized under Vietnamese law. For spouse-name-only arrangements, the foreign partner's practical protection comes primarily from Vietnamese family law governing marital assets — which recognizes jointly acquired marital property regardless of whose name is on the title, as long as the marriage is legally registered in Vietnam.
The key practical step: register your marriage with Vietnamese authorities (not just in your home country). A marriage legally recognized in Vietnam is the gateway to these expanded rights. A marriage registered only in your home country may not trigger the same protections under Vietnamese property law.
Vietnam's three main expat cities each have distinct character and distinct expat clusters. Choosing the right neighborhood often matters more than choosing the right city.
Da Nang's beachfront areas are the most obvious expat magnet — apartment and villa rentals with sea views at a fraction of what beach living costs in Bali or Phuket. Son Tra peninsula offers a quieter, greener environment with mountain backdrop. My Khe beach strip is more developed with a growing café and restaurant scene. Prices are rising as Da Nang's reputation grows but remain well below HCMC equivalents.
Hai Chau District is Da Nang's commercial center — more affordable than the beachfront, good infrastructure, central location for daily errands. The Han River promenade area offers scenic apartments at competitive prices. The city is compact enough that the trade-off between central and beachfront living is minimal in terms of commute — a 10-minute motorbike ride separates them. For expats who don't prioritize waking up to ocean views, the city center offers better value per square metre.
Vietnam's rental market has specific friction points that catch newcomers off guard. Most are avoidable with basic preparation. Here's the checklist.
Ask to see the Giấy chứng nhận quyền sử dụng đất (Land Use Rights Certificate). Confirm the name on the document matches the person signing the lease. This single step eliminates the ghost landlord scam in almost all cases.
Deposit and advance rent should be transferred to a bank account in the landlord's name, creating a traceable payment record. Cash payments leave you with no proof of payment and no recourse if the landlord later disputes receipt.
Required by law for qualifying leases; smart practice for all of them. If your landlord is resistant, that's information. A landlord who won't put terms in writing in a language you can read is a landlord whose terms you should be suspicious of.
Ask whether electricity is billed at the EVN official rate or at a landlord-set rate. Many Vietnamese landlords add a markup — less regulated than in Thailand. Negotiate this into the contract or build it into your rent comparison.
Run a speed test at the actual unit — not in the lobby. In buildings where internet is shared across units, speeds during peak evening hours can be significantly lower than what the landlord quotes. Check upload as well as download.
Photograph and video every room, every damage point, every appliance condition. WhatsApp or email the photos to the landlord immediately — the timestamp and delivery receipt create an undeniable record that protects your deposit on exit.
For leases over 6 months this is legally required — a small administrative step that creates a public record of your tenancy. Many landlords skip it; insisting creates protection if a dispute arises about your right to occupy the property.
Not every commercial housing project is approved for foreign purchase. Confirm directly with the developer — get it in writing — that the specific building and unit are eligible for foreign ownership under current regulations before paying any deposit.
Confirm the remaining foreign ownership quota for the specific building. This information should be available from the building management or developer. Buildings that hit their 30% cap have no available foreign quota regardless of how many units are for sale.
Not the developer's recommended notary. Your lawyer should verify the Pink Book title, the project's legal status, outstanding encumbrances, and the developer's completion track record. Budget $500–$1,500 for a thorough legal review — cheap insurance on a significant investment.
Rental income from Vietnamese property is subject to 5% VAT plus 5% personal income tax on gross rental income. Net yield after tax and management fees is materially lower than gross figures. Run your investment numbers on net, not gross, yield.
Vietnam rewards people who move beyond the obvious expat corridors — cheaper rents, more authentic neighborhoods, and a significantly different daily experience. Here's what that looks like in practice.
Most of HCMC and Hanoi are not Thao Dien or Tay Ho. The city's residential fabric is mostly Vietnamese neighborhoods with local markets, pho shops, and alley communities where expats are notable but not unwelcome. Renting in a local neighborhood — a converted ground-floor shophouse room, a small apartment in a residential tower without a pool and gym — costs a fraction of expat-marketed equivalents.
The trade-off is real: less English, less Western food infrastructure, more adjustment required. For expats who've been in Vietnam a year or more and have functional Vietnamese, local-neighborhood living is often described as the most rewarding version of the experience. For fresh arrivals, it's a significant challenge better taken on after settling in first.
Housing choice in Vietnam is inseparable from transport choice. Living locally means living like a local — which means riding a motorbike. A motorbike extends your livable radius dramatically, makes the gap between local and expat neighborhoods practically irrelevant, and is the difference between being limited to walking distance and having the entire city accessible in 20 minutes.
If you don't ride when you arrive, learning should be an early priority — not just for transport freedom but for neighborhood freedom. Expats who remain Grab-dependent are effectively limited to areas with good Grab coverage and predictable traffic, which means staying in the tourist-heavy zones where prices are highest.
For foreigners in long-term relationships with Vietnamese nationals, the 2024 Housing Law changes are directly relevant to housing decisions. The explicit grant of Vietnamese-equivalent property rights to foreign spouses means that a foreign-Vietnamese couple is legally in a significantly stronger position than foreigners buying alone.
In practice, many long-term foreign-Vietnamese couples in Vietnam do what couples do everywhere — buy or rent the home that makes sense for their life, put it in whatever name is most practical, and rely on the legal framework of their marriage to protect both parties' interests. Vietnamese family law recognizes jointly acquired marital assets regardless of whose name appears on the title, provided the marriage is registered in Vietnam.
The important practical steps: register your marriage with Vietnamese civil authorities (a Sở Tư pháp — Department of Justice), not just in your home country. Keep records of financial contributions to any property purchase — bank transfer evidence of who paid what. If purchasing jointly, get both names on the Pink Book. If purchasing in one name only, document the joint nature of the acquisition through a notarized agreement.
Vietnam's property market is evolving rapidly and the law is newer than in Thailand. The protections are real but the implementation experience is shorter. Use a qualified lawyer even for seemingly straightforward joint purchases.
Real monthly rent figures across Vietnam's main expat cities. All figures are rent only — utilities not included. Note that Hanoi's premium expat areas have seen 20–30% price increases since 2023 due to corporate demand outpacing supply.
| Housing Type | 🏙️ Ho Chi Minh City | 🏛️ Hanoi |
|---|---|---|
| Studio / small 1-bed (local area) | $200 – $400 | $200 – $380 |
| 1-bed apartment (mid-range, expat area) | $450 – $800 | $400 – $750 |
| 1-bed serviced apartment | $650 – $1,200 | $600 – $1,100 |
| 2-bed apartment (mid-range) | $700 – $1,400 | $600 – $1,200 |
| House / villa (Thao Dien / Tay Ho) | $1,200 – $3,500+ | $1,000 – $3,000+ |
| Shared house (per person) | $150 – $350 | $130 – $300 |
| Housing Type | 🏖️ Da Nang | 🏡 Provincial / Local |
|---|---|---|
| Studio / 1-bed (standard) | $200 – $450 | $80 – $200 |
| 1-bed apartment (mid-range) | $350 – $700 | $150 – $350 |
| 2-bed beachfront / view | $500 – $1,200 | $200 – $500 |
| House / villa | $600 – $2,000 | $250 – $600 |
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