Banking & Money Transfers for Viet Kieu Buying Property (2026)
For overseas Vietnamese, the hardest part of buying property in Vietnam is often not choosing the home — it is moving the money in cleanly and, years later, being able to take your money back out. Get the banking right from day one and everything downstream is simple; get it wrong and you can find your sale proceeds stuck. This 2026 guide covers opening a Vietnamese bank account, remitting funds for a purchase, paying in dong, and — most importantly — documenting everything so you can repatriate your money when you sell.
Table of Contents
Can Viet Kieu Open a Bank Account in Vietnam?
Yes. As a Viet Kieu you can open a bank account at a licensed Vietnamese bank. You will typically need your passport and documents confirming your Vietnamese origin or nationality. Two account types matter:
- Foreign-currency account — to receive funds transferred from abroad (for example US dollars).
- Vietnamese dong (VND) account — because property must be paid for in dong, you convert into VND to complete a purchase.
Holding both accounts at the same bank makes the flow from overseas transfer to property payment much smoother, and keeps the paper trail in one place.
Sending Money In: How to Remit Funds for a Purchase
Move money the official way, every time. Use a SWIFT transfer from a licensed bank in your country to your account at a licensed bank in Vietnam, and state a clear purpose on the transfer — for example, “Personal remittance for house purchase.” Avoid informal money-changers and avoid carrying cash: both create serious problems later, when you need to prove where the money came from.
Is the money taxed when it arrives? No. Personal remittances (kieu hoi) received by individuals are exempt from personal income tax, and there is no cap on how much you can receive. The tax questions come from what you do with the money — buying, renting out, selling — not from receiving it.
What a Transfer Costs and How Long It Takes
International transfers are neither instant nor free. A SWIFT transfer to Vietnam typically takes one to five business days and carries fees at the sending bank, the receiving bank, and sometimes an intermediary bank in between. For a large property payment, ask both banks for the all-in cost and the expected arrival time before you commit to a contractual deadline, and build in a small buffer so a slow transfer never causes you to miss a payment date and lose a deposit.
Paying in Dong: Why Currency Matters
By law, all property transactions in Vietnam are settled in Vietnamese dong — you cannot pay the seller in US dollars. That means the exchange rate at the moment you convert directly affects your real purchase cost, so plan your conversion and confirm the rate with your bank rather than leaving it to chance. Keep every foreign-exchange confirmation slip: it is a key link in the chain that proves your dong came from foreign funds.
The Golden Rule: Document Your Inbound Funds
This is the single most important habit for an overseas buyer: keep documented proof that your purchase money came from abroad. When you eventually sell and try to send the proceeds out of Vietnam, the bank handling the outbound transfer will ask you to prove the original inbound investment. If you cannot, repatriating your own money becomes slow or, in the worst case, blocked. Start the file on day one:
| Keep from day one | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Inbound SWIFT transfer receipts | Proves your funds came from abroad |
| Foreign-exchange conversion slips | Links your foreign funds to the dong you paid |
| Notarised sale & purchase contract | Proves the transaction and price |
| Pink book / ownership certificate | Proves your ownership |
| Tax payment receipts | Required to process an outbound transfer |
Taking Money Out: Repatriating Sale Proceeds
When you sell, you can send the proceeds abroad through official banking channels — but the documentation requirements are strict. Expect to provide the notarised sale contract, the ownership transfer certificate, tax payment receipts, and — critically — proof that the original purchase funds came from abroad. With a complete file, repatriation is routine and predictable. Without the inbound-funds proof, it is exactly where overseas sellers get stuck for months. Everything you kept in the table above is what makes this final step painless.
Three Mistakes That Trap Your Money
Three errors trap overseas buyers’ money:
- Using cash or informal channels to bring money in. It saves a small fee now and costs you the ability to repatriate later.
- Not keeping the inbound-transfer and FX records. No proof of foreign origin means no clean way out.
- Assuming dollars are fine. Property must be paid in dong; plan the conversion and keep the slip.
Can I Bring Cash Instead?
Some buyers ask whether they can simply carry the money in on a flight. Two things make this a poor choice for a property purchase. First, Vietnamese customs rules require you to declare cash above the equivalent of about USD 5,000 on entry — undeclared amounts can be held or confiscated. Second, and more importantly, hand-carried cash has no banking record, so it fails the one test that matters later: proving your purchase funds came from abroad. For anything beyond incidental spending money, a documented bank transfer is the only sensible route for a property buyer who intends to repatriate proceeds one day.
Frequently Asked Questions
1. Can Viet Kieu open a bank account in Vietnam?
Yes — with your passport and proof of Vietnamese origin or nationality. Hold both a foreign-currency and a VND account.
2. Is money I send into Vietnam taxed?
No. Personal remittances received by individuals are exempt from personal income tax, with no cap on the amount.
3. Can I pay for property in US dollars?
No. All property transactions must be settled in Vietnamese dong.
4. Why does documenting my inbound funds matter so much?
Because when you sell, the bank will require proof the original money came from abroad before it will send the proceeds out.
5. Can I take my sale proceeds out of Vietnam?
Yes, through official channels, with the sale contract, ownership certificate, tax receipts and proof of the original inbound funds.
6. Can Realtique help me structure this?
Yes — we guide overseas buyers on transferring funds and keeping the right records so repatriation later is straightforward.
7. Can I bring cash into Vietnam to buy property?
You must declare cash above the equivalent of about USD 5,000 on entry, and hand-carried cash leaves no proof of foreign origin — use a documented bank transfer instead.
8. Which account pays the seller?
Pay in Vietnamese dong from your VND account after converting the foreign funds you remitted, and keep the conversion slip.
Related Viet Kieu Guides
Continue your research with our other guides for overseas Vietnamese buyers:
- The Complete Viet Kieu Guide to Buying Property in Vietnam (2026) — the complete overview of this guide series.
- Vietnam’s 2024 Land Law: What Viet Kieu Can Now Own (2026)
- How Viet Kieu Inherit Property in Vietnam (2026 Guide)
- Renting Out Your Vietnam Property as a Viet Kieu (2026 Tax Guide)
- Step-by-Step Guide: How Viet Kieu Can Buy Property in Vietnam
- Legal Requirements for Viet Kieu Buying Real Estate in Vietnam
- What Is the Pink Book? A Complete Guide for Viet Kieu Buyers
- How to Sell Property in Vietnam as a Viet Kieu: A Comprehensive Guide
- How Viet Kieu Can Apply for Vietnamese Citizenship in 2025
- Key Benefits of Holding Vietnamese Citizenship as a Viet Kieu
- Moving Back to Vietnam: A Practical Guide for Viet Kieu
- How Viet Kieu Can Transfer Money Legally When Selling Property in Vietnam
- Vietnam Property Investment Visa: Can Real Estate Help You Stay Longer?
Moving Money to Buy in Vietnam? Talk to Realtique
Moving Money to Buy in Vietnam? Talk to Realtique
We help overseas buyers structure funds correctly — so you can repatriate cleanly later.
Planning a purchase? Leave your name and email — a Realtique specialist will reach out. Or email [email protected].

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











