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Vietnam’s 2024 Land Law: What Viet Kieu Can Now Own (2026)

Posted by Khoi Pham on July 3, 2026
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For years, buying land in Vietnam as an overseas Vietnamese meant one frustrating workaround: putting the property in a relative’s name and hoping nothing went wrong. The 2024 Land Law — in force since 1 January 2025 — changes that completely. If you hold Vietnamese nationality, you now have the same land rights as a citizen living in Vietnam. This guide breaks down exactly what changed, which of the two Viet Kieu categories you fall into, and what you can own in 2026 — with the specific legal articles, not vague promises.

Table of Contents

What Actually Changed in the 2024 Land Law?

The previous 2013 Land Law treated overseas Vietnamese as a restricted category — most could only own apartments in commercial projects, and buying a landed house or a plot of land usually required a Vietnamese relative to hold the title on paper. That “borrowed name” (nho nguoi dung ten) arrangement created real legal risk: disputes, unclear inheritance, and no direct control. Many diaspora families quietly lost money or access this way, with no clean legal remedy when relationships broke down.

The 2024 Land Law (Articles 41, 43 and 44) removes that barrier for one specific group and clarifies the rights of another. The core principle is simple: your land rights now depend on whether you still hold Vietnamese nationality — not on where you live. That single shift moves millions of overseas Vietnamese from a workaround economy into direct, legally protected ownership.

Why This Change Matters in 2026

The timing is significant. Vietnam’s property market is recovering, remittances from the diaspora run into the billions of dollars each year, and a large generation of Viet Kieu who left in the 1980s and 1990s are now looking to buy homes, retire, or pass assets to children back in Vietnam. Before 2025, much of that demand was throttled by the borrowed-name problem. Now it isn’t.

For buyers, the practical upshot is confidence: you can commit real money to a landed house or plot knowing the pink book will carry your own name, that you can sell or lease it yourself, and that your children can inherit it cleanly. For the market, it widens the pool of genuine, bankable buyers — particularly in the mid-to-high-end landed segment that was previously hardest for diaspora buyers to reach.

Ho Chi Minh City skyline at dusk | Toan canh trung tam TP.HCM luc hoang hon
Ho Chi Minh City — a top focus for overseas Vietnamese property buyers.

The Two Tiers: Which Category Are You In?

This is the single most important thing to get right, because it decides everything else.

Tier 1 — Viet Kieu WITH Vietnamese nationalityTier 2 — Person of Vietnamese origin (no VN nationality)
Legal statusVietnamese citizenForeigner of Vietnamese descent
Own land plots (dat nen)?YesNo (land use rights limited)
Own landed houses?YesLimited: only within the 10% foreign cap, and only in projects licensed to sell to foreigners
Own apartments?YesWithin the foreign quota (up to 30% of a building), in eligible projects
Buy in own name directly?Yes — no relative neededYes, within allowed scope
Inherit land use rights?Full rightsYes — house + land on same plot
Transfer, lease, mortgage, gift?Full rights, like a citizenNarrower scope
Foreign quota / 50-year cap?No — full parityDepends on asset type

Tier 1 (Vietnamese nationality retained): You are a Vietnamese citizen in the eyes of the law. You can convert, transfer, lease, sublease, inherit, gift and mortgage land use rights, contribute capital with them, and participate directly in real estate transactions — exactly like someone who never left. No foreign ownership quota. No 50-year limit. No relative’s name.

Tier 2 (Vietnamese origin, no nationality): You did not retain or reacquire Vietnamese nationality, so you are treated like a foreign buyer. You can own houses and apartments, but only inside projects licensed to sell to foreigners and only within the foreign ownership caps — up to 30% of the units in an apartment building, and up to 10% of the landed houses in a project. You can inherit a house together with the land on the same plot, but you cannot freely acquire bare land plots the way a citizen can.

What Can You Now Own in 2026?

For Tier 1 Viet Kieu, the practical menu is now the full domestic list:

  • Land plots (dat nen) in residential zones — previously off-limits, now allowed
  • Landed houses — townhouses, villas, shophouses with land use rights
  • Apartments in any commercial project, with a pink book in your own name
  • Inherited property — receive land and houses through inheritance and register the title directly

For Tier 2, the menu is houses and apartments — but only inside foreign-eligible projects and within the foreign ownership caps (30% of an apartment building; 10% of the landed houses in a project) — plus inheritance of a house-and-land plot. Standalone land acquisition is not available.

The Biggest Win: No More Borrowed Names

Under the old system, the most common Viet Kieu arrangement was asking a sibling or parent to stand as the legal owner. It worked until it didn’t — family disputes, the nominal owner’s divorce or debts, or that person passing away could all put the property at risk, and the real buyer had little legal standing.

The 2024 Land Law ends this for Tier 1 buyers. You transact and register in your own name, which means the pink book, the tax record, and any future sale or inheritance all sit with you directly. This is not a minor convenience — it is the difference between owning an asset and merely hoping to. If you already hold property under a relative’s name, it is worth taking legal advice on moving it into your own name now that the law allows it.

Hand holding house keys | Cam chia khoa nha - so huu dung ten chinh minh
Under the 2024 Land Law, Tier 1 Viet Kieu hold the title in their own name.

How to Prove Your Status: Document Checklist

Your rights are only as good as your paperwork. Before any transaction, confirm which tier you’re in and gather proof:

SituationKey documents to prepare
Tier 1 — still hold VN nationalityValid Vietnamese passport OR nationality certificate; Vietnamese ID/CCCD if held; proof you never renounced nationality
Tier 1 — reacquired VN nationalityDecision on restoration of Vietnamese nationality; updated passport
Tier 2 — Vietnamese origin onlyDocument confirming Vietnamese origin (birth certificate, old ID, family records, or authority confirmation)
All buyersPassport of current country; entry visa/exemption where relevant; marriage/inheritance documents if applicable

Tip: If you’re unsure whether you legally still hold Vietnamese nationality, resolve that before signing anything — it determines your entire rights tier.

How to Restore Full Citizen Rights: The Nationality Path

If you want the full Tier 1 rights above, the goal is to hold a valid Vietnamese passport and CCCD (citizen ID). For many overseas Vietnamese who never formally gave up their nationality — or whose new country allows dual nationality — this is a matter of restoring documents rather than naturalising from scratch. The usual path:

  1. Vietnamese birth certificate first. This is the foundation document proving your Vietnamese origin.
  2. Apply for a Vietnamese passport. If the country you naturalised in did not require you to renounce Vietnamese nationality, you remain eligible for a Vietnamese passport.
  3. Obtain your Vietnamese CCCD (citizen ID). With the passport and birth certificate, you can be issued a CCCD — and from that point you hold the same rights as any Vietnamese citizen, including full land rights under the 2024 Land Law.

On paper it is a clear sequence. In practice it means international travel, submitting and legalising documents, and dealing directly with several specialised government agencies — slow, and easy to get wrong. Most people underestimate the back-and-forth.

Realtique handles this end-to-end. We manage the birth-certificate, passport and CCCD process on your behalf so you arrive ready to buy in your own name. The service typically costs USD 4,000–5,000 depending on your case, with a processing time of around 1–2 months.

Want Realtique to Handle Your Nationality Restoration?

We manage the birth certificate, Vietnamese passport and CCCD process end-to-end — typically USD 4,000–5,000 and about 1–2 months. Leave your details and our team will contact you.

Three Mistakes Viet Kieu Buyers Still Make

Even with the new law, three avoidable errors still cost Viet Kieu buyers time and money:

  • Assuming residence matters. It does not — nationality is the legal test. Living abroad does not reduce a Tier 1 buyer’s rights in any way.
  • Leaving old borrowed-name titles unfixed. If a property still sits in a relative’s name, the risk stays with you until it is formally transferred back into your own name.
  • Signing before confirming your tier. Your nationality status decides what you can legally buy. Verify it first — never after you have paid a deposit or signed a purchase agreement.

A Viet Kieu Perspective: In Practice

Consider a common case we see at Realtique. A Vietnamese-American who left in the 1990s but never formally renounced Vietnamese nationality wants to buy a townhouse in Ho Chi Minh City. Under the 2013 law, he’d have put it in his brother’s name. Under the 2024 law, once he presents proof of retained nationality, he buys the townhouse — land and house — with the pink book issued directly to him. If he later wants to lease it out or pass it to his children, he does so as any citizen would, with no intermediary and no exposure to someone else’s financial problems.

The lesson from the cases we handle: the law is now genuinely open for Tier 1, but the nationality proof step is where people get stuck. Sort that first, and the rest is ordinary.

Frequently Asked Questions

1. Can Viet Kieu buy land plots in Vietnam in 2026?
If you hold Vietnamese nationality (Tier 1), yes — in your own name. If you are of Vietnamese origin without nationality (Tier 2), you generally cannot acquire standalone land. You can own houses and apartments, but only in projects licensed for foreign sale and within the foreign ownership caps (30% of an apartment building; 10% of the landed houses in a project).

2. Do I need to live in Vietnam to own land?
No. Rights depend on nationality, not residence.

3. Is the “borrowed name” arrangement still necessary?
Not for Tier 1 buyers. You can now hold the title directly, and existing arrangements are worth reviewing.

4. When did the 2024 Land Law take effect?
It has been in force since 1 January 2025.

5. I gave up Vietnamese nationality years ago — what are my options?
You fall into Tier 2 (Vietnamese origin). You can own houses and apartments within the foreign ownership caps (and only in foreign-eligible projects) and inherit a house-and-land plot. For full land rights you would need to reacquire Vietnamese nationality.

6. Can I inherit land from my parents in Vietnam?
Yes. Both tiers can inherit; Tier 1 with full citizen rights, Tier 2 a house together with the land on the same plot.

7. Do I pay tax when I sell as a Viet Kieu?
Yes — the standard personal income tax on property transfers applies (generally 2% of the transfer value), the same as for domestic sellers.

8. Can Tier 1 Viet Kieu buy agricultural land?
These reforms focus on residential land and housing. Agricultural land carries additional conditions — confirm your specific case before committing.

9. Can Realtique help me restore my Vietnamese nationality?
Yes. Realtique manages the full birth-certificate, Vietnamese passport and CCCD process end-to-end. It typically costs USD 4,000–5,000 and takes about 1–2 months, depending on your case.

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KC Pham - Realtique
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KC Pham
CEO, Realtique

KC and the Realtique team help overseas Vietnamese buy, inherit, rent out and manage property in Vietnam — safely, and in their own name.

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