Last updated: 9 May 2026
M&A lawyers Vietnam deal teams rely upon are navigating the most consequential regulatory shift in a decade: the Investment Law 2026, which took effect on 1 March 2026, has redrawn conditional‑sector rules for foreign buyers, while Decree 102/2026/ND‑CP, effective 20 May 2026, sharply raises sanctions for competition‑law violations, including gun‑jumping. Together, these instruments demand that every acquirer, PE sponsor and in‑house counsel reassess merger‑control filing triggers, pre‑closing conduct and deal structuring before the next signing. This practitioner guide provides an annotated compliance checklist, realistic timelines from filing to clearance, sample contractual protections and a quick‑reference table by entity type, everything a deal team needs to close with confidence under the new regime.
The National Assembly passed the amended Investment Law in late 2025, with its core provisions entering into force on 1 March 2026. The revised law updates the list of conditional business sectors for foreign investors, tightens approval requirements for acquisitions that shift control in sensitive industries and introduces new licensing obligations that interact directly with merger‑control filings. Decree 96/2026/ND‑CP, the implementing decree, provides detailed guidance on the new conditional‑sector list and the procedural steps foreign buyers must follow when seeking investment registration certificates (IRCs) and approvals from provincial authorities. For deal teams, the practical effect is that structuring choices, particularly whether to proceed via share purchase or asset acquisition, now carry different regulatory consequences depending on the target sector.
Decree 102/2026/ND‑CP amends Decree 75/2019/ND‑CP on sanctions for competition‑law violations and represents a step‑change in enforcement risk. The decree introduces significantly higher monetary fines for breaches of economic‑concentration (merger‑control) rules, with penalties that can reach up to five per cent of the violating enterprise’s total turnover in the financial year preceding the infringement. Beyond fines, the decree grants the competition authority Vietnam relies on, the Vietnam Competition Commission (VCC) operating under the Ministry of Industry and Trade (MOIT), expanded remedial powers, including the ability to order forced divestment of acquired assets or shares, impose behavioural conditions and, in the most serious cases, require the unwinding of a completed transaction.
Industry observers expect these tougher tools to materially change how deal teams assess filing risk and pre‑closing conduct from 20 May 2026 onward.
Vietnam’s Competition Law 2018, read together with Decree 35/2020/ND‑CP, defines four categories of “economic concentration”: mergers, consolidations, acquisitions and joint ventures. A merger‑control notification must be filed with the VCC before closing whenever a proposed transaction meets any of the following numerical thresholds applicable to the participating enterprises:
The notification obligation applies regardless of where the acquirer is incorporated, the competition authority Vietnam vests in the VCC exercises extraterritorial reach over any transaction that could restrict competition within Vietnamese territory. This means a foreign PE fund acquiring a Vietnamese target, or two offshore holding companies whose subsidiaries operate in Vietnam, must assess notification triggers just as a domestic acquirer would.
One of the most common questions M&A lawyers Vietnam practitioners receive is: how long from filing to clearance? The statutory framework sets out two review phases, but market practice introduces additional lead time that every deal timetable must account for.
| Step | Statutory Period | Practical Range |
|---|---|---|
| Pre‑filing preparation (dossier assembly, market‑share analysis, internal review) | No statutory limit | 3–6 weeks |
| Formal filing accepted by VCC | Day 0 | Day 0 |
| Preliminary review (VCC assesses whether formal appraisal is needed) | 30 days from acceptance | 30–45 days (information requests can extend) |
| Formal appraisal (if required, in‑depth competition assessment) | Up to 90 days (extendable by up to 60 days) | 90–150 days |
| Decision issued (clearance, clearance with conditions, or prohibition) | Within formal appraisal period | Same day as appraisal conclusion or shortly after |
The VCC has signalled its intention to strengthen enforcement and processing capacity for the 2026 period. In practice, the most common source of delay is an incomplete dossier: missing audited financials, inadequate market‑share calculations or poorly defined relevant markets will trigger information requests that stop the statutory clock. Filing parties can shave weeks off the timeline by engaging early with the VCC through pre‑notification consultations, an informal but widely used step that helps align expectations on market definition and documentation.
Key actions to preserve deal certainty during the merger‑control timeline:
Gun‑jumping occurs when parties to a notifiable transaction exercise control over the target, or integrate operations, before receiving merger‑control clearance from the VCC. Under Decree 102/2026, the gun‑jumping penalties are severe: monetary fines can reach up to five per cent of the enterprise’s total turnover in the preceding financial year, and the VCC may order forced divestment, impose behavioural remedies or require the transaction to be unwound entirely. Early indications suggest the VCC intends to use these expanded powers actively, marking a departure from the previously under‑enforced sanctions regime.
The practical risks extend beyond the fine itself. A gun‑jumping finding can trigger contractual indemnity claims between the parties, delay or derail subsequent regulatory approvals and cause significant reputational harm in a market where repeat deal flow depends on regulatory goodwill.
Pre‑closing do/don’t checklist:
| Factor | Share Purchase | Asset Purchase |
|---|---|---|
| Merger‑control trigger | Triggered when acquisition results in “control” and thresholds met | Triggered when transferred business line meets market‑share or asset thresholds |
| Investment Law 2026 approvals | IRC amendment required if foreign ownership changes; conditional‑sector licensing may apply | New IRC may be needed for the acquiring entity; separate licensing for regulated activities |
| Foreign ownership limits | Subject to sector caps, buyer inherits existing licence conditions | Buyer applies for fresh licences; may face updated foreign ownership limits under the 2026 law |
| Successor liability | Buyer assumes all liabilities of the target entity | Liability limited to transferred assets (subject to contractual warranties) |
| Speed and simplicity | Generally faster, single entity, fewer consents | More complex, requires asset‑by‑asset transfer, employee consent, contract novation |
The Investment Law 2026 and its implementing Decree 96/2026/ND‑CP have refined the conditional business‑sector list. Sectors such as banking, telecommunications, real estate, education, logistics and certain technology sub‑sectors retain specific foreign ownership caps or require additional governmental approvals for foreign‑invested acquisitions. The practical impact for deal teams is that a merger‑control filing alone is insufficient, a parallel Investment Law approval track must be factored into the transaction timetable and condition‑precedent framework. Failure to obtain the necessary IRC amendment or conditional‑sector licence before closing can void the transaction and expose both parties to administrative penalties, independent of any competition‑law sanctions.
A complete and well‑prepared notification dossier is the single most effective way to accelerate the merger‑control timeline. The following ordered checklist covers the core requirements for a filing with the VCC:
Well‑drafted transactional documents are the deal team’s primary defence against merger‑control risk. The following sample clauses, adapted for the Vietnamese regulatory environment, should be considered for inclusion in every SPA or SHA involving a notifiable transaction:
The table below summarises merger‑control notifications and documentation expectations for the three most common transaction types that M&A lawyers Vietnam deal teams encounter:
| Entity / Transaction Type | When Notification Required | Practical Notes / Typical Documentation |
|---|---|---|
| Domestic merger or consolidation | When combined thresholds (assets, turnover, or market share) are met or control is gained | Provide audited financials and market‑share calculations; if the sector is regulated, attach licensing approvals |
| Foreign acquirer buying shares (cross‑border) | Notification required if the transaction results in “control” and thresholds are met, extraterritorial reach applies | Need seller and buyer global turnover data; include purchase agreements and evidence of integration plans |
| Asset purchase or carve‑out | Notification required where the asset purchase transfers a business line meeting market thresholds | Market definition and carve‑out valuation are critical; include contracts, customer lists and transitional arrangements |
The convergence of the Investment Law 2026 and Decree 102/2026 means that every M&A transaction touching Vietnam, whether inbound, domestic or involving an offshore restructuring of Vietnamese assets, now requires a disciplined, pre‑signing regulatory work‑stream. Waiting until after execution to assess merger‑control filing obligations or gun‑jumping exposure is no longer a commercially acceptable approach for M&A lawyers Vietnam deal teams work alongside.
Immediate actions:
This article provides general guidance on Vietnam’s merger‑control and investment‑law framework as of 9 May 2026. It does not constitute legal advice. Regulatory guidance from the VCC and MOIT continues to evolve, and deal teams should obtain bespoke counsel before acting on any information contained in this guide.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Ngan Nguyen at VILAF, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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