Vietnam Overstay Fines Just Doubled: Here's What You Need to Know (Dec 2026)
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Vietnam Overstay Fines Just Doubled: Here's What You Need to Know (Dec 2026)

Linh Nguyen
Linh Nguyen
December 16, 2025 6 min read 42

Vietnam overstay fines doubled in December 2025 - the maximum fine is now 40 million VND ($1,520 USD) for extended overstays. Overstays of 16+ days can result in deportation in addition to fines. This affects all visa types: tourist, work, business, and temporary residency. The fine scales based on duration - longer overstays mean higher penalties. Here is what you need to know to stay legal.

The New Overstay Fines Explained

Under the new decree (replacing Decree 144/2021), overstay penalties have been restructured:

Maximum fine: 40 million VND ($1,520 USD) for extended overstays (typically one year or more)

How fines scale: The penalty increases based on how long you overstay. The longer you're illegally in Vietnam, the higher the fine:

  • Short overstays (days): Lower fines, typically in the millions of VND range
  • Medium overstays (weeks to months): Mid-range fines, escalating based on duration
  • Long overstays (6+ months): Significantly higher, approaching or hitting the 40 million VND cap
  • Very long overstays (1+ year): Maximum fine, plus potential deportation

Deportation possibility: For overstays of 16 days or more (depending on severity and circumstances), you can face deportation in addition to the fine.

Who This Affects

Tourist visas: If your 90-day tourist visa expires and you don't leave, you're overstaying. The fine clock starts immediately after your visa expiration date.

Work visas: If you're on a work permit and it expires, overstay rules apply to you too.

Temporary residency: If you're on an extended stay (marriage visa, temporary residence card, etc.) and you overstay, this new decree applies.

Visa exemption holders: If Vietnam granted you visa-free entry (common for many nationalities), you still have a legal stay period. Overstaying beyond that is illegal.

Why Vietnam Is Tightening This

Vietnam has seen an influx of long-term visitors living on renewed tourist visas, digital nomads, and people technically overstaying but not getting caught. The government wants to:

1. Enforce legal compliance: Make it clear that visa rules are serious and have consequences.

2. Increase government revenue: Higher fines mean more money for the government. This isn't hidden—it's a policy choice.

3. Manage immigration: Force people to either get proper legal status (work permits, temporary residency) or leave. This separates "real" residents from people gaming the system.

4. Reduce strain on resources: As one expat noted in discussions, Vietnam doesn't want to become like Thailand pre-pandemic where poor foreigners lived cheaply and didn't contribute economically or pay taxes.

What Triggers an Overstay Fine?

You get fined when:

  • Your visa expires and you haven't left Vietnam
  • You're caught by immigration police during routine checks
  • You try to leave Vietnam (officers check your passport at the airport or border)
  • You're involved in any situation requiring immigration documentation (police stop, hospital admission, legal issue)

The most common scenario: You try to leave Vietnam, immigration reviews your passport, sees you overstayed, and you get fined before you can exit.

The Math: Is It Worth Overstaying?

Let's be honest about the calculation some people make:

Tourist visa cost: Roughly $100-200 depending on your nationality and visa type

Renewal process: Visa runs to Cambodia or Laos (flight + visa + time) cost $150-300

Overstay fine risk: 40 million VND ($1,520) if caught

Some people think: "If I overstay a month and don't get caught, I save money compared to visa runs."

That's gambling. The fine is now steep enough that one caught overstay erases months of savings.

How to Avoid This Entirely

Option 1: Visa Run

Before your visa expires, fly to Cambodia (Phnom Penh or Sihanoukville), Laos, or Thailand. Get a new tourist visa, come back. Yes, it's a hassle and costs money. But it's legal and you know exactly what you're paying.

Option 2: Temporary Residency Card

If you're staying longer than a few months, get a temporary residency card. This costs more upfront but gives you legal status for months or years. You can work, live legally, and don't have to worry about overstay fines.

Option 3: Work Permit or Business Visa

If you're working in Vietnam (as a freelancer, employee, or entrepreneur), get proper work authorization. It requires more paperwork but is genuinely legal.

Option 4: Marriage/Family Visa

If you're married to a Vietnamese person or have family here, there are longer-term visa options available.

Option 5: Leave On Time

Sometimes the simple answer is the right one. If you're on a tourist visa and you know you can't renew or get temporary residency, leave before it expires. Come back next year.

What Happens If You Get Fined

At the airport or border: Immigration calculates your overstay duration, tells you the fine amount, and you pay before you can leave. No negotiation. You need to have the money (cash or card) or they won't let you exit.

If caught during an immigration check: You can be fined, and depending on circumstances, deported. Deportation means you're banned from Vietnam for a period (sometimes 1-5 years depending on severity).

On your record: An overstay fine gets recorded. Future visa applications will flag it. Some countries' embassies care about this more than others, but it's not a good look.

The Bottom Line

Vietnam is serious about visa compliance now. The doubled fine and clear enforcement message suggest this isn't just talk.

If you're thinking about overstaying:

  • It's not worth the risk. The fine is steep, and the consequences (deportation, visa bans) can affect your ability to travel for years.
  • Legal options exist. Yes, they're more work and cost money. But they're infinitely better than the alternative.
  • If you want to stay long-term, get proper status. It's not hard in Vietnam—just requires paperwork and patience.

Vietnam has a right to enforce its borders and visa requirements. This isn't controversial. The new fines are a signal: They want people who are here legally or not at all.

Plan accordingly.

Related Vietnam Guides

Offering visa services in Vietnam? List your business on ExpatsList.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the maximum overstay fine in Vietnam?
As of December 2025, maximum is 40 million VND ($1,520 USD), doubled from previous 20 million. Actual fine depends on overstay duration.
Can I be deported for overstaying in Vietnam?
Yes, overstays of 16+ days can result in deportation plus fines. Extended overstays almost certainly trigger deportation.
Does this apply to tourist visa holders?
Yes, all visa types affected: tourist, work, temporary residency, and visa exemption holders.
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.

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