Table of Contents
Vietnam eVisas and visa exemptions cannot be extended from within the country. However, options such as visa runs or visa conversions are available. This guide outlines the official methods for continuing a stay in Vietnam in 2026.
The Hard Truth: eVisas and Visa Exemptions Are Non-Extendable
Let us start with the most important fact: if you entered Vietnam on an eVisa or under a visa exemption, your stay cannot be extended from within Vietnam. The eVisa — which allows stays of up to 90 days — is a fixed-duration document. Once it expires, you must leave the country. The same applies to the 45-day visa-free entry available to citizens of the UK, Germany, France, Italy, Spain, Japan, South Korea, Russia, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, Finland, and Belarus, as well as the 30-day visa-free entry for ASEAN nationals. There is no immigration office you can visit to add more days to these visa types.
As of 2026, Vietnam eVisas (both single-entry $25 and multiple-entry $50) cannot be extended or renewed from inside Vietnam. You must exit the country before your visa expires.
Overview: All Methods to Stay Longer in Vietnam
Even though your current visa cannot be extended, there are several legitimate strategies to continue your stay in Vietnam. Each method has different costs, timeframes, and complexity levels. Below is a comparison of every option available in 2026:
| Method | Who It's For | Cost Estimate | Processing Time | Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Visa Run (exit & re-enter) | eVisa and visa-free holders | $25–$100+ (new eVisa + travel costs) | 3–7 working days (eVisa processing) | Easy |
| Apply for new eVisa before expiry | Anyone planning ahead | $25 (single) / $50 (multiple) | 3-5 working days | Easy |
| Convert to business/work visa | Those with a Vietnamese sponsor | $100–$500+ (agency + govt fees) | 2–4 weeks | Moderate to Hard |
| Convert to study visa | Enrolled students | Varies by institution | 2–4 weeks | Moderate |
| Embassy visa (long-term) | Business travelers, investors | Varies by embassy | 1–4 weeks | Hard |
| Overstay (NOT recommended) | N/A | Fines from 500,000 VND to 40,000,000 VND | N/A | Illegal — severe consequences |
Option 1: The Visa Run — Exit and Re-Enter Vietnam
The visa run is the most popular and straightforward method used by travelers, digital nomads, and long-term tourists. The concept is simple: leave Vietnam before your visa expires, then apply for a new eVisa while abroad and re-enter with a fresh 90-day allowance. Popular destinations for a visa run include Thailand (Bangkok is a short flight from Ho Chi Minh City), Cambodia (the Moc Bai — Bavet land border is just a few hours from HCMC), and Laos (the Lao Bao border crossing in Central Vietnam). Here is how to do it step by step:
- Step 1: Check your visa expiry date on your entry stamp or eVisa document. Plan to exit at least 2–3 days before it expires.
- Step 2: While still in Vietnam, apply for your new eVisa on the official portal. Select your intended re-entry port (must be one of the 83 eVisa-approved ports).
- Step 3: Exit Vietnam through any border checkpoint. Your departure will be recorded.
- Step 4: Wait in the neighboring country for your new eVisa to be approved (typically 3-5 working days).
- Step 5: Once approved, re-enter Vietnam through your chosen port with your new eVisa printed out.
- Step 6: Re-enter Vietnam using the newly issued eVisa.
Applicants may choose a multiple-entry eVisa ($50) to allow multiple entries and exits within the 90-day validity period.
Option 2: Apply for a New eVisa Before Your Current One Expires
If you are planning ahead, you can apply for your next eVisa while your current visa is still valid — but there is a critical rule: you must be outside Vietnam when your new eVisa starts. You cannot hold two active eVisas simultaneously for overlapping dates. The best approach is to time your application so the new eVisa's start date begins on or after your exit date. This method works well if you already have onward travel planned. For example, if your current eVisa expires on July 15, you could fly to Bangkok on July 12, have your new eVisa start on July 14, and re-enter Vietnam the same day. The eVisa costs $25 for single-entry or $50 for multiple-entry and takes approximately 3-5 working days to process. Applications must be submitted via the National Web Portal on Immigration, or through services like Entry Vietnam for guided assistance.
You cannot apply for a new eVisa from inside Vietnam. You must physically exit the country first, then apply, wait for approval, and re-enter.
Option 3: Convert to a Different Visa Type (Sponsor Required)
If you need to stay in Vietnam long-term — for work, business, or study — you may be able to convert your status to a different visa type. This is more complex than a visa run but is the only way to stay in Vietnam without leaving. However, it requires a Vietnamese sponsor (an employer, business partner, or educational institution). Common conversion paths include:
- Business Visa (DN1/DN2): Requires a Vietnamese company to sponsor your visa. Allows stays of 1–12 months, potentially extendable through the Immigration Department.
- Work Visa (LD): For those with a valid work permit issued by a Vietnamese employer. Can be extended as long as your work permit is valid.
- Student Visa (DH): For those enrolled in a Vietnamese educational institution. The school handles sponsorship and extension paperwork.
- Investor Visa (DT): For individuals making qualifying investments in Vietnam. Requires significant documentation and capital proof.
Visa conversion is typically handled by a local immigration agency in Vietnam in coordination with the Immigration Department. Budget 2–4 weeks and $100–$500+ in combined agency and government fees.
Option 4: Long-Term Embassy Visa (Before You Arrive)
If you already know you will need to stay in Vietnam for more than 90 days, the smartest approach is to apply for a longer visa through a Vietnamese embassy or consulate in your home country before your trip. Embassy-issued visas — particularly business and work visas — can have validity periods of 6 months to 1 year, and some categories are potentially extendable through the Immigration Department in Vietnam. This is the best option for business travelers, remote workers with company sponsorship, and anyone planning an extended stay. The process typically involves submitting your passport, application form, photos, and a sponsorship letter from a Vietnamese entity. Processing time varies by embassy but is usually 1–4 weeks. While this requires more upfront planning, it eliminates the stress of visa runs and provides a more stable legal status in Vietnam.
Contact the Vietnamese embassy in your country well before your trip. Embassy visas offer the most flexibility for long-term stays and may be extendable — unlike eVisas.
What Happens If You Overstay? Penalties in 2026
Overstaying a visa in Vietnam is a serious offense with real consequences. Under Decree 282/2025/ND-CP (effective December 15, 2025), Vietnam has significantly tightened enforcement and increased fines. Penalties for overstaying include significant fines, deportation, and potential long-term entry bans. Always check the exact exit date on your visa or entry stamp and plan accordingly.
| Overstay Duration | Fine (VND) | Fine (USD Approx.) | Additional Consequences |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1–15 days | 500,000 – 2,000,000 | ~$19 – $76 | Fine only, recorded in system |
| 16–29 days | 5,000,000 – 10,000,000 | ~$190 – $380 | Possible deportation review |
| 30–59 days | Up to 15,000,000 | ~$570 | Likely deportation |
| 60–89 days | Up to 20,000,000 | ~$760 | Deportation + possible blacklisting |
| 90 days – 6 months | Up to 25,000,000 | ~$950 | Deportation + blacklisting (1–5 years) |
| 6 months – 1 year | Up to 30,000,000 | ~$1,140 | Deportation + blacklisting (3–7 years) |
| Over 1 year | Up to 40,000,000 | ~$1,519 | Deportation + blacklisting (5–10 years) |
Blacklisting means foreign nationals will be banned from entering Vietnam for 1–10 years depending on the severity of the overstay. This restriction is recorded across all border checkpoints.
Planning Ahead: Tips to Avoid Visa Problems
The best way to deal with visa extensions is to plan before you need one. Here are practical tips to stay legal and stress-free during your time in Vietnam:
- Set a phone reminder 2 weeks before your visa expires. This gives you enough time to apply for a new eVisa and book travel if needed.
- Always photograph your entry stamp on arrival day. The exit date printed there is your legal deadline — not the date on your eVisa alone.
- Consider the multiple-entry eVisa ($50) if planning to travel to neighboring countries during the trip. It allows unlimited exits and re-entries within 90 days.
- Keep the passport valid for at least 6 months beyond the intended stay, with at least 2 blank pages for stamps.
- If considering a long-term stay, start the sponsor or work permit process early.
- Rely on official government regulations rather than informal online forums regarding overstaying. The penalties are strictly enforced.
- Applications can be submitted via the official portal or through Entry Vietnam for assistance.
Vietnam immigration is fully digital in 2026. Every entry, exit, and overstay is tracked electronically. There is no way to quietly overstay — the system will flag you at any border checkpoint.
Which Option Is Best for You?
The ideal extension method depends on the individual situation. For short-term tourists or remote workers, a visa run is generally the most straightforward solution — especially utilizing land borders like the Moc Bai–Bavet crossing to Cambodia. For business professionals with a Vietnamese sponsor, converting to a business visa provides a more stable long-term status. For individuals planning an extended visit before arrival, applying for an embassy visa in the home country offers the most flexibility. Overstaying a visa carries significant legal risks, including fines, deportation, and multi-year entry bans. Compliance with immigration regulations is strictly enforced. For visa assistance, apply via Entry Vietnam.