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Retirement visas

Retiring to Vietnam: the visa routes

Longer-stay options are more limited than elsewhere in Asia — check current routes carefully.

A few things to line up early:

Visa rules change often — treat this as a starting point and confirm the latest official requirements before you plan.

Remember: buying a home and gaining the right to live there are usually separate steps. See how ownership works in Vietnam, and what it costs to live there in our cost-of-retiring guide.

Tax as a resident of Vietnam

Vietnamese tax residents (183+ days or a permanent home) are taxed on worldwide income on a progressive scale up to 35%, with relief under the UK-Vietnam double-tax treaty; there is no dedicated retirement visa, so residency and pension taxation both need professional advice.

Healthcare and everyday life in Vietnam

Major cities have good international hospitals (FV Hospital in Ho Chi Minh City, the Vinmec network) with English-speaking, often Western-trained staff at a fraction of Western prices; many expats keep international insurance (roughly £70-450 a month by age and cover) and may travel abroad for complex care. Vietnam is very safe with low crime and welcoming to foreigners, though English is less widely spoken outside cities; traffic is intense and driving is on the right, so many retirees avoid driving themselves.

Where retirees settle

Da Nang for an affordable, laid-back beach city popular with retirees, Ho Chi Minh City (Districts 2/Thu Duc and 7) for the best hospitals and amenities, historic Hoi An nearby, and Hanoi for northern culture.

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Everything on Vietnam

Cost of retiring in VietnamCan a foreigner buy property in Vietnam?

Retirement visas in other countries