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Phu My Hung, District 7: A Foreign Buyer’s Guide to the Master-Planned Township (2026)

Posted by Khoi Pham on July 9, 2026
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Phu My Hung is what happens when a single developer plans an entire township from scratch and sticks to it for thirty years. This District 7 community, laid out by a Taiwanese joint venture, is widely regarded as the best master-planned urban area in Vietnam — wide boulevards, parks, lakes, and a full complement of international schools, universities and hospitals. For a foreign buyer, it offers a mature, family-friendly market with one of the deepest rental pools in the city.

This guide covers the township’s design, its schools and amenities, the property mix, transport, the rental economics, and how foreign ownership works there.

Table of Contents

District 7 skyline
District 7’s modern skyline. (Photo: Karel Bilek, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons)

A township built to a plan

Unlike districts that grew organically, Phu My Hung was master-planned as a complete urban centre: zoned boulevards, generous green space, underground utilities, lakes and pedestrian-friendly streets. That discipline shows in the living experience — low density, clean, orderly and green in a way little else in Ho Chi Minh City matches. For residents it delivers a suburban calm with urban amenity; for owners it delivers a neighbourhood whose quality has been protected by design for three decades.

Schools, universities and healthcare

Phu My Hung’s amenity base is a big part of its rental strength. RMIT University’s Vietnam campus, the Saigon South International School, the Canadian International School and several others sit within or beside the township, alongside international-standard hospitals such as FV and Tam Duc. That concentration of education and healthcare pulls in expat families, particularly from Korea, Japan and Taiwan, and anchors long, stable tenancies.

The property mix

The township offers everything from the high-rise Sky Garden, Riverpark and Midtown apartments to the Crescent’s waterfront residences and low-rise townhouse enclaves. Sunrise City on the township’s edge added large modern towers. This range lets buyers target compact investor units or spacious family homes, though as in Thao Dien, the family-sized apartments tend to let most reliably given the tenant profile.

The Korean, Japanese and Taiwanese community

Phu My Hung has a distinct international character, with a large East Asian community and the shops, restaurants and services that follow it. For an owner, that is a rental advantage: it is a known, trusted address among corporate relocation agents and international employers placing staff in the city’s south, which keeps quality tenants flowing.

Transport and the southern position

Phu My Hung sits south of the centre, roughly twenty to thirty minutes from District 1 by road depending on traffic. It is not on Metro Line 1, which serves the east, so it relies on road access and its own self-contained completeness — residents can work, study, shop and see a doctor without leaving the township. Future southern transport plans could improve links further, but the area’s appeal has always been that you rarely need to leave it.

The investment case

Phu My Hung is a maturity-and-stability play. You are buying into a finished, proven township with deep, resilient rental demand rather than a speculative growth story. Yields on family apartments are solid and vacancy is low because the tenant base is real and recurring. Capital growth is steadier than in the fast-developing east, but the trade-off is dependability — this is a district that rents in good times and bad.

Price and rental snapshot

Pricing sits in the mid-to-upper tier — comparable to Thao Dien for prime stock and reflecting the township’s premium quality of life. Rental yields on family-sized apartments are among the more dependable in the city thanks to the schools, universities and international community. As a self-contained, finished environment, it offers lower vacancy risk than newer districts still waiting for their amenities to arrive.

How Phu My Hung compares

The Crescent, Phu My Hung
The Crescent waterfront in Phu My Hung. (Photo: trungydang, CC BY 3.0, via Wikimedia Commons)
Its natural rival is Thao Dien: both are expat family favourites with deep rental demand. Thao Dien is more central and on the metro; Phu My Hung is more comprehensively master-planned, greener and more self-contained, with a stronger East Asian community. Against the eastern townships, Phu My Hung offers a finished, premium environment rather than a growth-from-a-lower-base story. Buyers often choose between the two based on which international-school catchment and community they prefer.

Who it suits

Phu My Hung suits the buy-to-let investor who prizes low vacancy and a proven tenant pool, and the family that wants a green, planned, self-contained community with top schools on the doorstep. It is a dependable core holding rather than a speculative bet, ideal for buyers who value stability over maximum upside.

Green space and daily life

Phu My Hung’s masterplan reserved an unusual amount of land for parks, lakes and landscaped boulevards, and that green infrastructure defines daily life: morning walks around Crescent Lake, children cycling on wide pavements, weekend markets in the open squares. In a city where public green space is scarce, this is a genuine differentiator, and it is a big reason families who move to Phu My Hung tend to stay for years rather than months. For an owner, longevity of tenancy is exactly what protects income and reduces the churn costs that eat into net yield.

The retail and dining scene

The township has grown its own commercial heart: the Crescent Mall, SC VivoCity, street-level restaurants spanning Korean, Japanese, Taiwanese and Western cuisines, cafes, clinics and services all within walking distance of the residential clusters. This self-sufficiency is central to the area’s appeal — residents can meet almost every daily need without joining the commute into the centre, which both improves quality of life and insulates the district’s demand from traffic and transport constraints elsewhere in the city.

A typical Phu My Hung buyer

The typical buyer here is investing in stability. Often a family relocating for work in the city’s south, or an investor who has learned that low vacancy beats a slightly higher headline yield, they choose Phu My Hung for the schools, the green space and the proven, recurring tenant demand. They are less interested in speculative growth than in a dependable, well-managed asset that rents through every part of the cycle — a core holding rather than a bet.

Can foreigners buy in Phu My Hung?

Yes — the township’s many apartment buildings fall under the standard rule permitting foreign ownership of apartments within a 30% per-building cap on a 50-year renewable title. The landed townhouses and villas are not available to foreigners for outright purchase. We confirm the remaining foreign quota and the developer’s legal paperwork on the specific building before you commit.

Frequently asked questions

Why do expats like Phu My Hung?
It is a green, master-planned township with international schools, RMIT University, international hospitals and a large East Asian community — a complete, self-contained environment where families can live, study and work without leaving the area.

Is Phu My Hung on the metro?
No — Metro Line 1 serves the eastern corridor, not the south. Phu My Hung relies on road access and its own self-contained amenities; part of its appeal is that residents rarely need to leave the township.

Can foreigners buy a house in Phu My Hung?
Foreigners can own apartments within the 30% per-building cap but not landed townhouses, villas or land. The apartment towers are the ownership route; landed homes are generally a long-lease option.

How far is Phu My Hung from District 1?
Roughly twenty to thirty minutes by road depending on traffic. Phu My Hung is not on Metro Line 1, but its self-contained amenities mean residents rarely need to commute into the centre for daily needs.

KC Pham - Realtique
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KC Pham
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