Last reviewed: 21 May 2026
Understanding what is the merger threshold in Vietnam is the first compliance question every deal team must answer before signing. Vietnam’s merger control regime, anchored in the Competition Law 2018 and its implementing Decree 35/2020/ND-CP, imposes mandatory pre-merger notification when any one of several quantitative tests is met, meaning a single misstep in calculation can stall closing or trigger penalties. As of 21 May 2026, the Vietnam Competition and Consumer Authority (VCC) continues to intensify its screening of economic concentration transactions, making accurate threshold analysis more consequential than ever.
This guide provides the numeric tests, step-by-step worked calculations, a complete filing checklist and realistic VCC timeline expectations that in-house counsel and transaction teams need to navigate Vietnam merger control with confidence.
If the proposed transaction qualifies as an “economic concentration” under the Competition Law 2018, which covers mergers, consolidations, acquisitions, and joint ventures, you must file a pre-merger notification with the VCC when any one of the following tests is triggered:
If none of these tests is met, notification is not required. If any single test is met, the parties must pause the transaction and file. The sections below explain how to calculate each test, what documents to prepare, and how long VCC review typically takes. For a downloadable one-page decision-tree checklist, see the filing pack section at the end of this article.
As applied in practice and reflected in VCC guidance and the ASEAN Competition MISP country page for Vietnam, the notification thresholds as of 21 May 2026 are set out in the following table.
| Threshold test | Trigger level | Measurement basis |
|---|---|---|
| Combined total assets in Vietnam | ≥ VND 3,000 billion (~USD 120 million) | Audited financial statements for the financial year immediately preceding the transaction; includes assets of affiliates in Vietnam |
| Combined total turnover in Vietnam | ≥ VND 3,000 billion (~USD 120 million) | Revenue generated in Vietnam; same audited-year basis; includes affiliate turnover where control or affiliation exists |
| Transaction value | ≥ VND 1,000 billion (~USD 40 million) | Total consideration (cash, shares, debt assumed); assessed at signing or most recent binding offer |
| Combined market share on the relevant market | ≥ 20% | Parties’ combined share on the relevant product and geographic market in Vietnam |
Key caveats:
The asset and turnover tests are objective: they rely on audited financial data from the most recent completed financial year. The transaction-value test captures deals where the parties themselves may be small but the deal consideration is significant, a scenario common in technology and start-up acquisitions. The market-share test is the most complex, requiring the parties to define the relevant product and geographic market and then estimate their combined share. In practice, the VCC frequently challenges market definitions proposed by the parties, particularly in sectors such as retail, logistics and digital platforms. Deal teams should prepare a reasoned market-definition analysis as part of the filing pack even where the numeric VND thresholds are the primary trigger.
The most common compliance errors arise not from misunderstanding the tests but from miscalculating the inputs. The following three worked examples walk through the mechanics step by step.
Scenario: Company A (a foreign-invested company) proposes to acquire 100% of Company B (a domestic LLC). Both operate in food processing in Vietnam.
FX note: USD equivalents in this article use a reference rate of approximately VND 25,000/USD as of May 2026. Actual rates should be confirmed at the time of filing.
Scenario: Investor X already holds 51% of Company C (a JSC). Investor X now proposes to acquire an additional 20% from a minority shareholder, bringing its total stake to 71%.
Scenario: Developer D acquires 100% of a special-purpose vehicle (SPV) whose primary asset is land-use rights valued at VND 2,500 billion, with other assets of VND 600 billion.
Pre-merger notification in Vietnam is mandatory, and the transaction cannot close until the VCC has issued a clearance decision (or the statutory review period has expired without a prohibition). Below is the step-by-step sequence that meets the merger filing requirements Vietnam imposes under the Competition Law 2018 and Decree 35/2020/ND-CP.
The filing pack submitted to the VCC typically consists of the following items:
The VCC’s review process has two phases:
In practice, the completeness-check stage, before the 30-day clock starts, can itself take several weeks if the VCC issues supplementary data requests. Common requests include additional market data, competitor lists, customer concentration analyses, and explanations of post-merger integration plans. Early engagement with the VCC (including informal pre-filing consultations where available) can significantly reduce delays. Foreign investors unfamiliar with the Vietnamese regulatory landscape may also benefit from understanding Vietnam business visa requirements if in-person meetings with the VCC are required.
The Vietnam Competition and Consumer Authority has materially increased its merger-screening activity over the 2024–2026 period. Several trends are worth noting for deal teams:
The likely practical effect of these trends is that deal timelines in Vietnam should build in at least 60 to 90 days for the merger-clearance workstream, with an additional buffer of 30 days for document preparation and legalisation.
The merger threshold in Vietnam applies uniformly regardless of entity type, but practical application differs. The comparison table below summarises key distinctions.
| Entity / Transaction Type | How Thresholds Apply | Practical Note |
|---|---|---|
| LLC (limited liability company) | Thresholds measured using company-level assets and turnover in Vietnam; affiliates aggregated where control or affiliation exists under the Competition Law 2018 | Ensure consolidation of group accounts and include branch revenue; LLCs are not required to publish financial statements, so obtaining audited data from a target LLC may require specific due-diligence requests |
| JSC (joint stock company / public company) | Same numeric tests apply; public listing does not alter the filing threshold but may simplify data gathering | Pay close attention to disclosed shareholder registers when calculating market share; listed JSCs must file audited financials publicly, which aids threshold calculation |
| Top-up acquisition (incremental share increase) | Transaction-value and change-of-control tests may trigger filing even if the buyer already holds a majority, analyse the statutory definition of “acquisition” under Article 29 | Model cumulative acquisitions carefully; a conservative reading favours filing where any numeric test is met, regardless of existing control |
| Asset deal (purchase of business line or assets rather than shares) | Asset purchases constituting an “acquisition” of an enterprise’s business operations may qualify as an economic concentration; threshold tests apply to the combined entities | Distinguish between a purchase of discrete assets (unlikely to trigger) and a purchase of a going concern or business division (likely to trigger) |
| Real-estate SPV acquisition | Land-use rights included as intangible assets in the total-asset test; SPV-level assets may alone exceed the VND 3,000 billion threshold | Ensure valuations reflect audited balance-sheet figures; the VCC may challenge under-valued land-use rights in the filing |
Failure to notify a qualifying economic concentration before closing is a breach of the Competition Law 2018. The potential consequences include:
In practice, where parties discover a non-notification issue after closing, the recommended approach is to engage counsel immediately, prepare a voluntary post-closing filing and enter into dialogue with the VCC. Early self-reporting and cooperation have, in early indications, been treated as mitigating factors.
The following checklist can be copied directly into a transaction data room to track VCC filing readiness:
Knowing what is the merger threshold in Vietnam is only the starting point. The compliance obligation extends through calculation, document preparation, filing, and active engagement with the VCC through its review process. If your proposed transaction meets any of the four threshold tests, VND 3,000 billion in combined assets, VND 3,000 billion in combined turnover, VND 1,000 billion in transaction value, or 20% combined market share, you must pause integration and file before closing. Early preparation, conservative threshold analysis and proactive pre-filing engagement with the VCC are the most effective ways to avoid delays and penalties.
For further guidance on entering the Vietnamese market, see our complete guide to Vietnamese visa types and our overview of legal structuring for foreigners in Vietnam.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Hien Truc Nguyen at VILAF, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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