Get a 1-Year Visa Without Border Runs: The Student Visa Strategy
Tips & Guides
Da Nang

Get a 1-Year Visa Without Border Runs: The Student Visa Strategy

Linh Nguyen
Linh Nguyen
December 16, 2025 6 min read 48

Yes, you can stay in Vietnam for a full year without visa runs by getting a student visa, it costs about $1,635/year total (course + visa fees) and you actually learn Vietnamese. Compare that to $600-1,200/year in visa run costs plus lost time. Here's how it works in Da Nang.

The Student Visa Advantage

Why this is better than constant visa runs:

  • One full year of legal residence (first year requires one extension, but you don't leave Vietnam to do it)
  • No border runs or visa runs required
  • Automatic extension capability - you can renew each year by enrolling in a new course
  • Bonus: You actually learn Vietnamese - you're not just extending your stay, you're developing a real skill
  • Cultural integration - attending university puts you in touch with Vietnamese students and teachers
  • Legitimate status - this is legal, above-board, and traceable

The catch? You actually have to attend classes. But that's also kind of the point.

The Real Costs: Breaking It Down

Here's exactly what you'll spend for one year on a student visa in Da Nang, based on actual university pricing:

Course fees (3 days/week option): $1,380/year

Visa costs:

  • Visa application fee: 1,200,000 VND (~$50 USD)
  • 3-month initial stamp: $25
  • Extension stamp: $145
  • Total visa: ~$220

Required documents (one-time costs):

  • Health insurance: varies, but basic options available
  • Health certificate: $15-20 (can get done in Vietnam)

Total first year cost: approximately $1,635 + insurance

Compare this to visa run costs ($150-300 per run, 4 times per year = $600-1200, plus flights, accommodation, and time lost), and you're ahead financially.

How the Student Visa Actually Works

Year 1 Process:

  • Enroll in a language course at a Da Nang university
  • Receive initial 3-month student visa
  • Get the extension stamp at immigration (no exit required)
  • That gets you through the full first year

Year 2+:

  • Enroll in a new course
  • Receive a full 1-year visa directly
  • Repeat indefinitely

The key: you're not doing the 3-month extension dance every year. After year one, you get the full year from the start.

Course Options at Da Nang Universities

3 days/week option:

  • Cost: $1,380/year
  • Schedule: 8:30-11:30 AM or 2:00-5:00 PM
  • Class size: 8-10 students (smaller, more personal)
  • Holidays: Christmas, Tet, Labor Day, summer vacation

5 days/week option:

  • Cost: $960/year (actually cheaper!)
  • Schedule: 8:00-11:30 AM and 1:00-4:30 PM
  • Class size: 20-22 students (more social)
  • Holidays: Tet, Labor Day

Course start dates: March, June, September, November (flexible enrollment)

The 5-day option is actually better value if you want immersion. The 3-day option gives you more flexibility for work or travel.

What Documents You Actually Need

This is simpler than most people think:

  • High school diploma or your highest degree (just a copy, doesn't need to be original)
  • Health insurance (any type - even basic travel insurance works)
  • Health certificate (you can get one in Da Nang for $15-20, no need to bring one from home)
  • Proof of funds: $2,000 USD (or equivalent) - banks usually ask for bank statements showing this amount

That's it. The university handles most of the immigration paperwork for you.

The Immigration Timeline

Initial application: 1-2 weeks to get your first 3-month visa

Extension in-country: 5-7 days for the extension stamp (no exit required)

Total time for year 1 legal status: About 3-4 weeks from enrollment

You don't need to wait. You can stay while the paperwork processes, as long as you've submitted it.

The Reality: Is This Actually a Good Idea?

Who this works great for:

  • People who want to stay longer than a year
  • Anyone tired of visa runs
  • People who actually want to learn Vietnamese (the classes are legitimate)
  • Remote workers who want legal long-term residence
  • Expats interested in cultural integration

Who this might not work for:

  • People only planning to stay 2-3 months (not worth it)
  • People who absolutely can't commit to classes
  • People who have visa issues or immigration problems (get advice first)

The Catch (There's Always One)

You actually have to attend the classes. Immigration does check attendance records, especially if there are issues. This isn't a fake enrollment situation—you're actually expected to show up.

That said, classes run 3-5 days per week and are entirely doable for remote workers or anyone with flexible schedules.

Why More Expats Don't Do This

Honestly? They don't know about it. Many expats stick with tourist visas, visa runs, and tourist visa extensions because it's the default option. They don't realize that a student visa is often cheaper, easier, and more reliable.

It requires taking one extra step at the beginning (enrolling in a course), but that one step eliminates months of visa stress and expense.

How to Get Started

Step 1: Contact a university in Da Nang offering Vietnamese language courses. UED (University of Economics and Education) is one option, but there are others.

Step 2: Ask about enrollment for the next course start date (March, June, September, or November)

Step 3: Ask them about the student visa process. They handle most of it.

Step 4: Prepare your documents (diploma, health insurance info, proof of funds)

Step 5: Enroll, and let them guide you through the visa process

Step 6: Show up to class (seriously, just go)

The Bottom Line

If you're planning to stay in Da Nang for more than 3-4 months, a student visa beats visa runs hands down. It's cheaper, it's legal, it's less stressful, and you actually learn something useful in the process.

Plus, you can say you're a student in Da Nang. That's actually kind of cool.

Related Vietnam Guides

Offer visa or language services? List your business on ExpatsList.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a Vietnam student visa cost?
Total first-year cost: approximately $1,635. This includes course fees ($1,380/year for 3 days/week), visa application (1.2M VND), 3-month stamp ($25), and extension ($145). Plus basic health insurance.
Do I actually have to attend classes?
Yes, you must attend a real Vietnamese language course at a Da Nang university. This isn't a visa loophole—you're genuinely enrolled as a student. Most courses run 3 days/week, leaving time for remote work.
Can I renew the student visa each year?
Yes, you can renew annually by enrolling in a new course. Many expats study Vietnamese for 2-3 years this way, gaining language skills while maintaining legal residency without border runs.
Written by
Linh Nguyen
Linh Nguyen
Vietnam From Hanoi, Vietnam | Vietnam Living in Da Nang, Vietnam

Marketing strategist and content creator based in Da Nang. After five years in Ho Chi Minh City's corporate scene, I relocated to Central Vietnam for a better quality of life. I write about Vietnamese business culture, hidden local spots, and building a career along the coast.

View Full Profile

Found this helpful?

Join the conversation. Share your own tips, experiences, or questions with the expat community.

Write Your Own Blog
48
People Read This

Your blog could reach thousands too

Back to Da Nang Blogs