Nomad Almanac2026 Edition

Vietnam

Vietnam Residency and Citizenship for Nomads (2026)

The long game in Vietnam, and why for most nomads there isn't one: the temporary residence card needs a sponsor, permanent residence takes three continuous years and tight criteria, and citizenship after five years generally demands renouncing your old passport.

IK
Igor KukoljEditor & Researcher
Updated May 2026. Reviewed by Pending legal review.

Paths to residency

  • E-visa visitor status

    Immediate

    The 90-day e-visa that most nomads live on grants no residence at all. The years spent border-running do NOT count toward any residence card or citizenship. You remain a perpetual visitor, which is the central limit of nomad life in Vietnam.

  • Temporary residence card (TRC)

    Immediate

    A 2 to 10 year card that replaces the visa for the holder, but it is NOT open to ordinary remote workers. It requires a qualifying basis: a sponsoring Vietnamese employer, investment, or marriage to a Vietnamese citizen. Without one of those, a nomad cannot get a TRC.

  • Permanent residence card (PRC)

    After 3 yr

    Requires at least 3 continuous years of temporary residence plus a qualifying category, such as long-term contribution to Vietnam, investment, or family ties to a Vietnamese citizen or permanent resident. It is hard to obtain and not a route the typical nomad can simply age into.

  • Citizenship by naturalization

    After 5 yr

    Generally needs at least 5 consecutive years of legal residence on a valid residence card, a fixed address, Vietnamese-language ability, and means of support. Vietnam generally requires renouncing your prior nationality, with retention permitted only by special presidential approval. Dual citizenship is the exception, not the norm.

For most nomads, there is no ladder

Spain and Portugal sell a clear path: a nomad visa that counts toward permanent residence and eventually a passport. Vietnam offers nothing of the kind to the ordinary remote worker, and that is the defining fact of its long game. The 90-day e-visa that nearly every nomad lives on is a visitor permit, and the years you spend resetting it at the Cambodian border accrue toward nothing. There is no clock running, no progress banking, no eventual reward for sticking around. You are a perpetual visitor, and the system is content to leave you that way.

That does not mean residency in Vietnam is impossible, only that it runs on entirely separate tracks that a location-independent nomad usually cannot board. Temporary residence, permanent residence, and citizenship all exist, but each requires a qualifying basis, a sponsoring employer, real investment, or family ties, that the typical remote worker does not have. Understanding this upfront saves disappointment: Vietnam is a place to live for a while, not a place most nomads can settle permanently through the front door.

The e-visa goes nowhere

It is worth stating plainly because it inverts the logic of the better nomad destinations. On the e-visa, time does not count. A nomad who spends three years in Da Nang on rolling 90-day e-visas, dutifully running the border every quarter, is in exactly the same legal position at the end as on day one: a visitor with no residence rights and no accumulated path to anything. The effort of staying does not compound into status the way it does in Spain.

This is the single biggest structural weakness of Vietnam as a long-term base, and it is why even nomads who love the country tend to treat it as a chapter rather than a home. If the goal is a base that eventually becomes residency and maybe a second passport, Vietnam cannot deliver it through the route nomads actually use. If the goal is a cheap, sociable place to live for a season or two with no illusions about permanence, the e-visa's dead-end nature is irrelevant.

The temporary residence card, and the sponsor problem

The first real rung, if you can reach it, is the temporary residence card. It is a card valid from two to ten years that replaces the need for repeated visas, lets the holder come and go freely, and is the document that finally starts a genuine residence clock. The problem is access. A temporary residence card is not available simply for being a long-staying remote worker; it requires a qualifying basis, most commonly sponsorship by a Vietnamese employer, a qualifying investment in a Vietnamese company, or marriage to a Vietnamese citizen.

That gate shuts most nomads out. A location-independent worker earning from a foreign employer has no Vietnamese sponsor and no local investment, and therefore no straightforward way to obtain the card. The nomads who do hold temporary residence cards have almost always crossed into a different category: they took a real job in Vietnam, started or invested in a business there, or married a local. For them the card transforms life, ending the border runs and opening the longer path. For everyone else, it is out of reach, and the e-visa treadmill remains the only option.

Permanent residence at three years, in theory

Permanent residence sits one level up and is genuinely hard to obtain. The headline requirement is at least three continuous years of temporary residence, but that is necessary, not sufficient: you also need to fall into a qualifying category, such as recognized long-term contribution to Vietnam, substantial investment, or family ties to a Vietnamese citizen or permanent resident. The three years presuppose you already hold a temporary residence card, which, as above, most nomads cannot get in the first place.

So permanent residence is doubly gated. You must first secure temporary residence through a sponsor, investment, or marriage, then maintain it continuously for three years, then meet the qualifying criteria. It is a real route for the spouse of a Vietnamese national, a serious investor, or a long-term employee, and a non-starter for the ordinary remote worker. No nomad simply ages into permanent residence in Vietnam by staying long enough, because the staying they do, on the e-visa, does not count toward it.

Citizenship, and the renunciation rule

Citizenship is the most distant prospect of all, reachable mainly by those who have already built genuine ties. Naturalization generally requires at least five consecutive years of legal residence on a valid residence card, a fixed and clear address in Vietnam, demonstrated Vietnamese-language ability, and proof you can support yourself. Those five years must be real residence on a proper card, not e-visa visitor time, so the same upstream gate applies: you cannot even begin the count without the residency status that nomads struggle to obtain.

The decisive catch sits at the end. Vietnam generally requires naturalizing citizens to renounce their previous nationality, and retention of your old passport is permitted only by special approval at the presidential level rather than as a normal right. Dual citizenship is the exception, not the rule. For an American, Briton, or Australian, that means Vietnamese citizenship would, in the ordinary case, cost them their original passport, a price almost no nomad would pay. Combined with the difficulty of starting the residence clock at all, citizenship is effectively off the table for the typical remote worker and a heavy, document-intensive commitment for the rare person with deep local ties who pursues it.

What this means for your plan

Plan around the reality, not the hope. If you are an ordinary location-independent nomad, treat Vietnam as a cheap, enjoyable base with no path to permanence, and do not orient years of your life around a residency that the e-visa cannot deliver. Enjoy it as a season, keep your stays under the tax line, and move on when it is time, with no status lost because none was ever building.

If you genuinely want to stay, accept that it requires changing your relationship to the country: a real Vietnamese job with a sponsoring employer, a substantial investment, or marriage to a Vietnamese citizen are the routes that open the temporary residence card and everything above it. Those are large life decisions, not visa tactics. For the entry mechanics that govern the visitor life most nomads actually live, see the visa page, and for how the 183-day line interacts with any decision to settle, the tax page. For the texture of daily life that makes people consider staying in the first place, the Da Nang city guide.

Primary sources

Frequently Asked Questions