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Last reviewed: 5 June 2026, updated for the Law on Investment 2025 (No.143/2025/QH15), Decree No.96/2026/ND‑CP and Circular No.55/2026/TT‑BTC.
Understanding how to set up an industrial park in Vietnam requires navigating a multi-agency approval sequence that spans investment registration, enterprise formation, land allocation and environmental licensing. The process applies to two distinct categories of investor: infrastructure developers who build and operate the park itself, and tenants who establish manufacturing or logistics facilities on leased plots within an existing park. Since 1 March 2026, every new industrial-park FDI project must comply with the Law on Investment 2025 (No. 143/2025/QH15), which introduced revised approval sequencing, an expanded post-inspection (hậu kiểm) regime and new quarterly monitoring obligations implemented through Decree No. 96/2026/ND‑CP.
This guide sets out the complete procedure, eligibility checks, step-by-step filings, required documents, realistic timelines, indicative costs and the critical 2026 regulatory changes, so that general counsel, project teams and fund managers can plan with precision before committing capital.
The journey from concept to operational industrial park in Vietnam follows a broadly linear sequence, although several workstreams can run in parallel once the Investment Registration Certificate (IRC) is secured. The high-level stages are:
The governing legal framework now centres on the Law on Investment 2025 (No.143/2025/QH15), which replaced and amended the former 2020 Investment Law with effect from 1 March 2026. Industrial-park management structures remain governed by Decree No.35/2022/ND‑CP, which defines park categories, Management Board powers and infrastructure-developer obligations. The implementation detail for the new Investment Law sits in Decree No.96/2026/ND‑CP (issued 31 March 2026), while updated application forms and reporting templates are prescribed by Circular No.55/2026/TT‑BTC (effective 15 May 2026).
Foreign investors may establish an industrial-park project through a wholly foreign-owned enterprise, a joint venture with a Vietnamese partner, or a special-purpose vehicle (SPV) incorporated in Vietnam. The choice of structure affects approval routing: projects with foreign ownership above certain thresholds or in conditional sectors require additional scrutiny. Foreign individuals and entities must provide legalised incorporation documents, passports or equivalent identification, and evidence of financial capacity.
Not every industrial-park FDI project proceeds directly to an IRC application. Under the Investment Law 2025, Investment Policy approval from the Provincial People’s Committee (PPC), or from the Prime Minister for major projects, is required where the project exceeds prescribed capital thresholds, involves land-use conversion of rice paddies or protected forest, or falls within sectors subject to special conditions. Projects below these thresholds and located within an already-approved industrial park typically skip this stage and file directly for the IRC with the Management Board.
The Law on Investment 2025 restructured the list of conditional business lines. Certain conditional categories have staggered activation dates, with some provisions taking effect from 1 July 2026. Investors planning industrial-park projects in sectors such as waste treatment, chemicals or hazardous-goods storage must confirm whether their intended business lines appear on the current conditional list and whether transitional provisions apply. Failure to align registered business lines to the updated conditional list can result in loss of eligibility for investment incentives, a risk that Decree No.96/2026/ND‑CP addresses by requiring investors to update their registered lines within a prescribed period of the Decree’s effective date.
Pre-check checklist before filing:
The following numbered steps reflect the FDI project process in Vietnam as it applies from mid-2026, incorporating the sequencing changes introduced by the Investment Law 2025 and Decree No.96/2026/ND‑CP. The summary table below provides a consolidated view before the detailed narrative.
| Step | Who does it (typical agency / party) | Typical duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Site due diligence & master-plan conformity check | Sponsor + technical consultants; IP Management Board / DPI | 2–8 weeks |
| 2. Prepare & submit investment proposal / dossier | Sponsor (with legal & technical team) | 2–4 weeks |
| 3. Investment Policy approval (if required) | Provincial People’s Committee or Prime Minister | 1–6 months |
| 4. Investment Registration Certificate (IRC) issuance | DPI or IP Management Board | 7–30 working days |
| 5. Enterprise registration & tax code | Business Registration Authority / Tax Department | 3–10 working days |
| 6. Land lease / allocation & land-use conversion | Provincial People’s Committee / Land Authority | 1–6 months |
| 7. Construction permits & environmental approvals | Local construction authority / MONRE / DONRE | 4–12 weeks |
| 8. Utilities connection & infrastructure commissioning | Park operator / utility companies | 4–16 weeks |
| 9. Post-licence compliance & quarterly monitoring | Investor → IRC-issuing authority & statistics body | Ongoing (quarterly from Q2 2026) |
The sponsor and its technical consultants verify that the proposed site is included in the provincial master plan for industrial-park development, confirm current land-use classification (industrial, agricultural, forestry) and review cadastral records for encumbrances or competing claims. The IP Management Board or DPI can provide master-plan conformity confirmation. This stage typically takes 2–8 weeks depending on data accessibility and whether a new master-plan amendment is needed.
The investor assembles a complete investment dossier, project scope, objectives, capital commitment, proposed timeline and evidence of financial capacity, and submits it to the competent authority. For projects located within an existing industrial park or economic zone, the receiving body is the Management Board. For greenfield park-development projects outside an existing zone, the dossier is filed with the provincial DPI. The Management Board or DPI conducts an initial completeness review, which typically takes 2–4 weeks.
Where the project triggers Investment Policy approval, due to capital scale, land-use conversion involving rice paddies or protected land, or sensitive sectors, the dossier is elevated to the Provincial People’s Committee or, for major projects, the Prime Minister. This appraisal stage involves inter-agency consultation (land, environment, defence, sector ministries) and can take 1–6 months. Under Decree No.35/2022/ND‑CP, industrial-park infrastructure projects that create a new park or expand an existing one typically require this approval. Projects that do not trigger these thresholds proceed directly to the IRC application.
The IRC is the core investment licence for an FDI project. For projects inside an industrial park, the Management Board issues the IRC. For projects outside a designated zone, the provincial DPI is the issuing authority. The Ministry of Planning and Investment (MPI) plays an appraisal role for projects with national-level significance. Statutory processing time is 15 working days for standard applications, but practical timelines range from 7 to 30 working days depending on provincial workload and dossier complexity. All IRC applications filed after 15 May 2026 must use the updated forms prescribed by Circular No.55/2026/TT‑BTC.
Once the IRC is issued, the investor registers the project enterprise with the Business Registration Authority under the DPI. This yields the Enterprise Registration Certificate (ERC) and a unique enterprise code that doubles as the tax identification number. Processing typically takes 3–10 working days. The investor must also register with the local Tax Department for VAT, CIT and other applicable tax obligations.
Land-use rights are the single most time-consuming element of the industrial park setup in Vietnam. The pathway depends on whether the investor is developing a new park on state land (requiring a formal allocation or lease decision from the PPC) or leasing plots within an existing park from the park operator. State-land projects may require public auction procedures and land-use conversion approvals where agricultural or forestry land is being repurposed for industrial use. The PPC issues the land-lease or allocation decision, and the process can take 1–6 months. Investors leasing from a private park operator negotiate commercial lease terms directly and receive sub-lease contracts with site plans and phased handover schedules.
Construction permits are issued by the local construction authority based on approved architectural designs and master-plan conformity. Environmental approvals run in parallel: projects on the prescribed list must complete a full Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) reviewed by MONRE or the provincial DONRE, while smaller projects may qualify for simplified environmental registration. The EIA process, including public consultation and expert appraisal, typically takes 4–12 weeks but can extend for complex projects involving hazardous materials or large land areas.
The park operator (for tenants) or the investor itself (for park developers) arranges connections for electricity, water supply, wastewater treatment, telecommunications and internal road access. Utility-connection timelines depend heavily on existing infrastructure capacity and can range from 4 to 16 weeks. For new park developments, this stage includes construction of shared infrastructure, roads, drainage, green buffers, before individual plot handover.
Post-licence obligations include labour registration with the provincial Department of Labour, customs registration for export-processing enterprises, and, critically from Q2 2026, quarterly investment-monitoring reports filed with the IRC-issuing authority and the General Statistics Office. Decree No.96/2026/ND‑CP introduced this quarterly reporting cadence, replacing the previous annual cycle, and expanded the scope of post-inspection (hậu kiểm) checks that authorities may conduct without prior notice. Investors must maintain audit-ready records of capital disbursement, employment, environmental compliance and production output from the date of IRC issuance.
The documents needed for an industrial-park FDI project vary depending on whether the applicant is a park infrastructure developer or a tenant establishing a facility inside an existing park. The table below consolidates the core requirements. Since 15 May 2026, all application forms and reporting templates must follow the formats prescribed by Circular No.55/2026/TT‑BTC.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Investment dossier / Project proposal | Prepared by sponsor: project scope, objectives, registered capital, implementation timeline and commitment to bear costs. Filed with the Management Board (in-park projects) or DPI (new parks). |
| Feasibility study / Business plan | Required for large projects and all projects requiring Investment Policy approval. Prepared by sponsor or technical consultants. |
| Land documents / land-use right evidence | Land-lease or land-allocation decision from PPC, or commercial lease contract with park operator. Include cadastral map extracts. |
| Master-plan conformity certificate | Issued by the competent planning authority or IP Management Board. Confirms the project site is zoned for industrial use. |
| Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) or environmental registration | EIA required for projects on the prescribed list (MONRE / DONRE). Smaller projects submit environmental registration. |
| Company incorporation / legal-status documents (investor) | Certificate of incorporation (legalised), passport / ID for individuals, board resolutions authorising the investment for SPVs. |
| Financial statements / proof of capital sources | Audited financial statements, bank balance confirmations or capital-commitment letters from parent entities. |
| Technical and utility-connection plans | Power, water, wastewater, telecom layout and capacity studies. Required for infrastructure-developer (park operator) projects. |
| Lease agreements (for tenants) | Commercial lease contract with the park operator, including site plan and phased handover terms. |
| Investment Policy Decision (if applicable) | Approval decision from PPC or Prime Minister, required before IRC filing for project classes that trigger this stage. |
| Power of attorney / authorised-representative letter | For local legal representatives or filing agents acting on behalf of the foreign investor. |
Form-template note: Investors filing after 15 May 2026 must use the updated templates issued under Circular No.55/2026/TT‑BTC. Submissions on superseded forms risk rejection or processing delays.
Vietnamese investment legislation prescribes statutory processing periods in working days, but practical timelines often exceed these benchmarks due to inter-agency consultation, requests for supplementary information and provincial workload variation. The table below distinguishes statutory deadlines from realistic practical ranges.
| Milestone | Statutory deadline | Practical range |
|---|---|---|
| DPI / Management Board completeness check | 5 working days | 1–3 weeks |
| IRC issuance (standard project) | 15 working days | 7–30 working days |
| Investment Policy approval (PPC-level) | 35 working days (statutory appraisal) | 1–4 months |
| Investment Policy approval (PM-level, major projects) | 60 working days (statutory appraisal) | 3–6 months |
| Enterprise registration & tax code | 3 working days | 3–10 working days |
| Land-lease / allocation decision (PPC) | Varies (no single statutory cap) | 1–6 months |
| EIA approval (MONRE / DONRE) | Varies by project scale | 4–12 weeks |
| Construction permit | 20 working days (standard) | 3–8 weeks |
| First quarterly monitoring report (Decree 96) | Due within 15 days after quarter-end | Ongoing from Q2 2026 |
Overall project timeline: A straightforward tenant project inside an existing industrial park, where no Investment Policy approval is needed and land is leased from the park operator, can move from IRC application to operational readiness in approximately 3–6 months. A greenfield park-development project requiring Investment Policy approval, land-use conversion and full EIA will typically take 9–18 months. Industry observers expect that the new quarterly reporting cadence under Decree No.96/2026/ND‑CP will add an ongoing administrative burden that investors should factor into post-licence resource planning.
| Item | Typical amount | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| IRC application processing fee | Varies by province (nominal administrative fee) | Check the DPI or Management Board fee schedule, provincial variation applies. |
| Investment Policy appraisal costs (major projects) | Administrative + appraisal council costs (varies) | Central-level review for PM-approved projects incurs state appraisal council costs. |
| Land lease / land-use charges | USD 80–250 per m² per lease term (ready-built parks, indicative) | Varies significantly by park, province, infrastructure included and remaining lease term. |
| Infrastructure contribution / connection charges | USD tens of thousands to several million | Paid to the park operator or local utility providers; scope-dependent. |
| Consultancy & technical reports (EIA, feasibility study) | USD 10,000–200,000+ | Large master-plan feasibility studies and complex EIAs sit at the upper end. |
| Corporate income tax (CIT) | Standard rate: 20% | Preferential CIT rates or tax holidays available for qualifying projects under the Investment Law 2025 incentive framework. |
Tax incentives and BOI considerations: The Law on Investment 2025 revised how investment incentives are granted and registered. Incentive eligibility now depends on the project’s location (which may qualify under commune-level incentive-area lists published by provincial authorities under Decree No.96/2026/ND‑CP), the sector, and the investor’s compliance with conditional business-line requirements. Typical BOI-style incentives for qualifying industrial-park projects include CIT exemptions for the first two to four years of profit generation, followed by a 50% CIT reduction for subsequent years, plus land-rent exemptions or reductions. Investors must ensure that their registered business lines align with the current conditional list to preserve eligibility, misalignment is one of the most common reasons incentive claims are rejected during post-inspection audits.
Three instruments define the 2026 regulatory landscape for anyone learning how to set up an industrial park in Vietnam:
Transition checklist for existing and new projects:
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Than Trong Ly at DIMAC Law Firm, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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