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Vietnam’s National Assembly passed the Law on Investment No. 143/2025/QH15 in December 2025, and the statute took effect on 1 March 2026, reshaping how foreign investors obtain an Investment Registration Certificate (IRC) before, or, in some cases, after, incorporating a local entity. Understanding how to apply for IRC in Vietnam is now more nuanced than ever, because the 2026 changes introduce a flexible sequencing rule that lets certain investors secure an Enterprise Registration Certificate (ERC) first and register the investment project afterward.
This guide walks through every stage of the current procedure: eligibility triggers, the complete document checklist, submission channels, realistic processing times, the new ERC-first option, and sector-specific considerations that foreign investors and their counsel need to navigate in 2026.
What you will learn in this article:
Legal basis: Law on Investment No. 143/2025/QH15, consisting of 7 Chapters and 52 Articles, effective 1 March 2026. The law aims to “create an open investment environment, attract large-scale and high-tech projects.”
Before diving into the procedure, foreign investors should be clear on the IRC Vietnam meaning and how it relates to the Enterprise Registration Certificate. The two documents serve different legal functions and are issued by different arms of the same authority, the Department of Planning and Investment (DPI) at the provincial level.
An Investment Registration Certificate (IRC) is the official document confirming that Vietnam’s competent state authority has registered a foreign investor’s investment project. It records the project’s objectives, capital scale, duration, location, and applicable incentives. The IRC is the first approval document specifically required for projects with foreign elements.
An Enterprise Registration Certificate (ERC) is the binding legal document issued by the Business Registration Office under the DPI. It serves as official recognition by the State of Vietnam that a business entity has been legally established and is authorised to operate. The ERC records the company name, legal representative, charter capital, and registered business lines.
| Feature | Investment Registration Certificate (IRC) | Enterprise Registration Certificate (ERC) |
|---|---|---|
| Issuing authority | Investment Registration Division, DPI (or MPI for certain projects) | Business Registration Office, DPI |
| What it authorises | Registration of the investment project (scope, capital, duration, location) | Establishment of a legal entity (company name, charter capital, business lines) |
| Required for | All investment projects with foreign investor participation (subject to exceptions under the 2026 law) | All enterprises operating in Vietnam |
| Typical processing time | 15 working days (statutory) | 3–5 working days |
| Key legal basis | Law on Investment No. 143/2025/QH15 | Law on Enterprises No. 59/2020/QH14 (as amended) |
In practice, both certificates are needed for a fully operational foreign-invested entity. The critical question under the 2026 framework is which one comes first, a topic addressed in detail below.
Short answer: For projects with foreign elements, the IRC remains a mandatory condition and the first official approval document from the competent state authority in most circumstances. The 2026 law, however, introduces a pathway allowing certain foreign investors to obtain the ERC before the IRC in defined scenarios.
Legal basis: Law on Investment No. 143/2025/QH15, Chapter IV (Investment Registration). Under this chapter, foreign investors must obtain an IRC for the investment project first and then set up the project company, unless the project falls within an exemption category allowing ERC-first registration.
The following triggers mean an IRC is always required before the ERC:
The table below maps three common entity types against the IRC requirement:
| Entity / project type | IRC required before ERC? | ERC-first allowed? |
|---|---|---|
| 100 % foreign-owned LLC in a restricted sector (e.g., real estate, telecoms) | Yes, IRC must be obtained first | No |
| Foreign-invested project in a non-restricted service or trading sector | Yes, but sequencing is flexible under 2026 law | Yes, ERC may be obtained first, IRC registered afterward |
| Joint venture with domestic partner, no conditional business lines | Yes, but sequencing is flexible | Yes, ERC-first is available |
Industry observers expect provincial DPIs to gradually clarify their local interpretation of the flexible sequencing rule through administrative guidance. Investors should confirm the applicable approach with the specific DPI in the province where they plan to locate the project.
This section provides the core procedure to obtain an investment registration certificate in Vietnam for foreigners. The steps below reflect the requirements under the Law on Investment No. 143/2025/QH15 and the supporting decrees and circulars that detail the documentary standards.
Before assembling the application dossier, investors must determine whether the proposed project requires investment policy approval. Projects that exceed certain capital thresholds, involve land allocation by the State, or fall within strategic sectors require a separate investment policy decision from the National Assembly, the Prime Minister, or the Provincial People’s Committee before the IRC application can be submitted.
Practical steps at this stage include:
Investors must follow a standardised document checklist to streamline the IRC application process. The investment registration certificate requirements for Vietnam in 2026 are as follows:
Investor identification documents:
Financial capability evidence:
Investment project proposal:
Land and premises documents:
Sector-specific compliance documents:
Document formatting requirements: All foreign-language documents must be translated into Vietnamese by a certified translator. Notarised, consularised or apostilled copies are required for key corporate documents (certificate of incorporation, financial statements, passport copies). Translations should be notarised separately. Files submitted via the online portal must be in PDF format.
Foreign investors can submit the IRC application dossier through the National Enterprise Registration Portal (dangkykinhdoanh.gov.vn). The online submission process involves creating an investor account, completing the prescribed digital declaration forms, uploading scanned copies of the required documents, and receiving a digital receipt. A hard-copy dossier must also be submitted directly to the Investment Registration Division of the provincial DPI where the project will be located.
For projects that require investment policy approval at the central level (Prime Minister or National Assembly), the application is submitted to the Ministry of Planning and Investment (MPI), which coordinates the approval process with the relevant authorities before the DPI issues the IRC.
Key portal tips:
Vietnam does not charge a government fee for the issuance of an IRC. The primary costs investors should budget for are:
The statutory timeline for IRC issuance is 15 working days from the date the DPI receives a complete and valid application dossier. In practice, however, timelines vary depending on the province, the complexity of the project, and whether the authority requests supplementary information.
| Step | Authority | Statutory timeline | Realistic timeline (observed) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Investment policy approval (if required) | People’s Committee / Prime Minister / National Assembly | 25–60 working days (varies by tier) | 30–90+ working days |
| IRC application review and issuance | Provincial DPI | 15 working days | 15–25 working days |
| ERC issuance (after IRC) | Business Registration Office, DPI | 3 working days | 3–5 working days |
| Supplementary information request | DPI | Resets review clock upon resubmission | Adds 5–15 working days depending on complexity |
Common causes of delays include incomplete or incorrectly notarised documents, inconsistencies between the project proposal and the investor’s financial evidence, missing environmental assessments, and ambiguity in the business line descriptions against Vietnam’s CPC classification codes. Investors should engage qualified legal counsel to pre-review the dossier against DPI requirements before submission.
One of the most significant changes under the Vietnam Investment Law 2026 is the introduction of a flexible registration sequence. Since 1 March 2026, foreign investors can, in certain circumstances, set up a company in Vietnam first by obtaining the ERC and then handle investment registration afterward. This reversal of the traditional IRC-first sequence is designed to reduce market-entry timelines and align Vietnam’s procedures more closely with regional competitors.
When ERC-first is available:
Advantages of the ERC-first approach:
Risks and caveats to consider:
Early indications suggest that the ERC-first pathway is most practical for investors in non-restricted services, trading, consulting, and technology sectors where foreign ownership is unrestricted and no land allocation is involved.
Certain sectors in Vietnam require additional central-government approvals or line-ministry clearances beyond the standard IRC application. Investors in these sectors should anticipate longer timelines and additional documentary requirements.
In all cases, investors should confirm the latest sector-specific requirements with the provincial DPI or the relevant line ministry, as implementing decrees and circulars are periodically updated.
Receiving the IRC is a milestone, but it does not mean the investor can immediately commence operations. The following steps must be completed after the IRC is issued:
If the investment project undergoes material changes, such as adjustments to the capital scale, project objectives, duration, or investor structure, the IRC must be formally amended. The processing time for an IRC amendment is typically 10–15 working days from submission of a complete amendment dossier.
The table below summarises which licensing sequence is recommended for common foreign investment scenarios in Vietnam under the 2026 framework.
| Scenario | Recommended order | Key risk |
|---|---|---|
| Foreign-invested greenfield project in a restricted sector (e.g., real estate, telecoms) | Obtain IRC first → then ERC | Delayed operations or penalties if the investor proceeds without the IRC |
| Non-restricted service or trading project with no sectoral restrictions | ERC-first (set up company) → then register the investment project (IRC) | Potential rework if investment conditions change; ensure foreign ownership limits and capital contribution deadlines are observed |
| Acquisition of an existing Vietnamese company with foreign elements | Detailed due diligence; IRC may be required depending on the asset or project scope | Retroactive approvals may be necessary; risk of fines or forced restructuring if the IRC requirement is overlooked |
| Joint venture with domestic partner in a non-conditional sector | ERC-first is available → IRC registered subsequently | Ensure the joint venture agreement aligns with both the ERC-registered structure and the IRC project terms |
| Large-scale project requiring investment policy approval | Investment policy approval → IRC → ERC (strict sequence) | Extended timelines; skipping the approval stage can result in the IRC application being rejected outright |
Knowing how to apply for IRC in Vietnam under the 2026 regulatory framework is essential for any foreign investor planning market entry or project expansion. The Law on Investment No. 143/2025/QH15 has introduced meaningful flexibility, particularly the option to secure an ERC before the IRC in non-restricted sectors, but it has also preserved strict sequencing requirements for conditional industries and large-scale projects. Investors who assemble a complete, correctly formatted dossier, engage early with the provincial DPI, and choose the right IRC-versus-ERC sequence for their specific sector and project type will be best positioned to secure their investment registration certificate efficiently and avoid costly delays.
Last reviewed: 21 May 2026. This article reflects the law as in force on the date of review. Investors should verify current requirements with qualified Vietnamese legal counsel before submission.
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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