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Foreign investors targeting Vietnamese companies in 2026 face a more demanding regulatory landscape than at any point since the Investment Law 2020 came into force. Understanding the M&A approval requirements in Vietnam is now essential for every deal team, because provincial Departments of Planning and Investment (DPI) have tightened the documentary standards they apply when reviewing dossiers, most notably by requesting actual transfer price disclosures and supporting valuation evidence alongside the standard filing package. At the same time, the Vietnam Competition Commission (VCC) has grown more active in reviewing economic concentrations, meaning that competition filings and investment-approval processes increasingly run in parallel and can create sequencing risks that delay closing.
This guide consolidates the triggers, documents, timelines and common pitfalls into a single compliance playbook for corporate counsel, foreign investors and transaction advisers planning M&A in Vietnam during 2026.
Not every acquisition involving a foreign party demands state approval. The Law on Investment 2020 (Articles 24–26) sets out the circumstances under which a foreign investor must register or obtain approval before completing a transaction. The following decision framework identifies the key triggers.
A foreign investor share purchase in Vietnam, or any other form of M&A, generally requires approval where at least one of these conditions is met:
A crucial distinction exists between primary and secondary share transactions. A foreign investor buying newly issued shares (primary) in a limited liability company or joint-stock company triggers registration. Acquiring existing shares on the secondary market (secondary) also triggers approval when the target operates in conditional business lines for foreign investors or when the transaction takes the combined foreign ownership above the statutory cap.
Vietnam maintains a list of conditional business lines for foreign investment, published by the Ministry of Planning and Investment (MPI) and updated periodically. Sectors that routinely require approval include securities and fund management, banking and insurance, telecommunications, education, logistics, mining and land-sensitive activities such as real estate development. Any M&A transaction involving an enterprise that holds a licence in one of these conditional business lines in Vietnam will require DPI approval, regardless of the percentage being acquired.
One of the most common sources of deal delay is misidentifying the competent approval authority. Vietnam operates a multi-layered system in which different agencies handle different transaction types.
For the majority of M&A transactions, the provincial DPI where the target enterprise is registered acts as the investment registration authority. However, the MPI assumes jurisdiction when the transaction involves an investment project that was originally approved at the national level, typically projects in industrial zones, economic zones or high-technology parks administered by a central management board, or projects requiring an investment policy decision from the Prime Minister or the National Assembly.
Certain acquisitions require prior written consent from a sectoral regulator before the DPI will accept the filing. For example, acquisitions in the securities sector require approval from the State Securities Commission (SSC). Transactions that could affect national defence or security may need clearance from the Ministry of Public Security (MPS). Deals involving banking institutions require prior consent from the State Bank of Vietnam (SBV). In e-commerce or data-intensive sectors, early indications suggest that authorities are paying closer attention to cross-border data implications, and additional clearance requirements may apply on a case-by-case basis.
| Entity Type | Who Must File / Notify | Typical Approval Scope |
|---|---|---|
| Joint-stock company (public or private) | DPI + possible sector ministry; VCC if thresholds met | Capital increase, transfer of controlling stakes, compliance with securities rules |
| Limited liability company (LLC) | DPI (provincial or central depending on investor type) + sectoral bodies if conditional | Capital contribution/transfer registration; business line licensing |
| Securities company / exchange-related | DPI + State Securities Commission (SSC) + possible MOIT/VCC | Secondary share transfers often need DPI consent when market-access conditions apply |
| Foreign-controlled SPV buyer | DPI + VCC if thresholds met; sectoral if acquiring regulated assets | Ownership and control change; licence transfer (e.g., land/PPP/energy) |
Assembling a complete dossier is the single most controllable factor in accelerating approval. An incomplete submission restarts the clock: the DPI has the right to reject the filing and request resubmission, costing the deal team weeks. The following checklist reflects the core documents for M&A approval in Vietnam under Decree 31/2021/ND-CP (guiding the Investment Law 2020), supplemented by recent practice-level requirements that licensing authorities have been enforcing with increasing consistency since 2024.
All foreign-language documents must be accompanied by certified Vietnamese translations. Documents originating outside Vietnam must be notarised in the country of origin, consularised (or apostilled if Vietnam and the issuing country are both parties to the Hague Apostille Convention) and then authenticated by the Vietnamese embassy or consulate. In practice, the consularisation step typically adds five to fifteen working days depending on the jurisdiction, and deal teams should factor this into their pre-signing timeline. Investors planning transactions in Vietnam should also be aware that they may need a Vietnam business visa before attending signing ceremonies or meetings with licensing authorities in person.
The statutory processing times for M&A approval in Vietnam are well defined, but the practical reality is that the clock only starts when the DPI accepts the dossier as complete. Pre-acceptance rejection, where the DPI returns the filing because of missing or non-compliant documents, is the most common cause of timeline slippage.
| Process | Typical Time (Working Days) | Practical Tip |
|---|---|---|
| DPI completeness check (pre-acceptance) | 7 | Submit a pre-filing consultation request to the DPI to identify gaps before the formal filing. |
| DPI substantive review and decision | 30 (from acceptance) | Where sectoral consent is needed, obtain it first, the DPI will not start its review without it. |
| Sectoral authority consent (SSC, SBV, etc.) | 15–60 (varies by regulator) | Run the sectoral application in parallel with dossier preparation to compress overall timelines. |
| VCC pre-acceptance check | 7 | File the VCC notification as early as possible, ideally before or simultaneously with the DPI filing. |
| VCC preliminary assessment | 30 | If the VCC identifies concerns, it may extend review by up to an additional 60 days (in-depth review). |
| VCC in-depth review (if triggered) | Up to 90 (with possible extension) | Begin preparing remedies proposals early if combined market share exceeds 20 %. |
The total timeline for M&A approval in Vietnam can therefore range from approximately 45 working days for a straightforward, non-conditional-sector acquisition with no VCC filing, to 180 working days or more for a complex transaction that requires sectoral consent, VCC review and remedies negotiation. Deal teams should build at least 90 working days of regulatory lead time into their signing-to-closing timetable as a baseline.
The Competition Law 2018 and its implementing decrees require parties to an economic concentration to notify the VCC before closing if their combined operations exceed certain thresholds. A failure to notify, or closing before clearance is obtained, can result in fines and, in theory, unwinding of the transaction.
| Threshold Type | Threshold Value | Who Must Notify |
|---|---|---|
| Combined total assets in Vietnam | VND 3,000 billion or more | All parties to the economic concentration |
| Combined total revenue in Vietnam | VND 3,000 billion or more | All parties to the economic concentration |
| Combined market share in the relevant market | 20 % or more | All parties to the economic concentration |
| Transaction value | VND 1,000 billion or more | All parties to the economic concentration |
If any one of these merger filing Vietnam thresholds is met, a Vietnam Competition Commission filing is mandatory. The notification must be made before the transaction is implemented, and the parties may not close until they receive clearance or the statutory review period lapses without a decision.
The VCC’s preliminary assessment phase runs for 30 working days from acceptance. If the VCC determines that the transaction does not raise competition concerns, it issues a clearance decision and the parties may proceed. However, if the preliminary assessment identifies potential anti-competitive effects, particularly where the combined market share approaches or exceeds 30 %, the case moves to an in-depth review of up to 90 working days, which may be extended further if remedies are proposed and negotiated.
The strategic interplay between VCC clearance and DPI approval is critical. The Investment Law does not expressly require VCC clearance as a precondition to DPI approval, and vice versa. In practice, however, most deal teams file both applications concurrently or begin the VCC notification slightly earlier, because a DPI-approved transaction that subsequently fails VCC clearance creates significant legal uncertainty. Industry observers expect the authorities to move toward more formal coordination in future regulatory guidance, but for now the prudent approach is to treat VCC clearance as a condition precedent in the SPA and to file as early as the parties have sufficient data to complete the notification form.
The following vignettes illustrate how the M&A approval requirements in Vietnam apply in practice across different transaction structures.
Before signing and filing, deal teams should verify each of the following items:
Red flags to watch for: inconsistent valuations between the SPA price and the valuation report; missing or expired notarisations; signatures by unauthorised representatives; and late VCC notification timing that risks closing before clearance.
The M&A approval requirements in Vietnam continue to evolve, with 2026 bringing stricter documentary expectations and greater regulatory coordination between investment and competition authorities. Deal teams that invest time in early dossier preparation, parallel filing strategies and proactive engagement with DPIs and the VCC will minimise delay and execution risk. For transactions involving conditional business lines, the additional layer of sectoral consent makes advance planning indispensable. Investors and counsel seeking transaction-specific guidance are encouraged to engage qualified Vietnam-based advisers through Global Law Experts.
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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