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Apolo Editorial Team
Apolo Lawyers Editorial Desk
Inheritance Law in Vietnam: Rights of Foreign Heirs
Introduction
When a person passes away in Vietnam — whether Vietnamese or foreign — their estate is distributed according to Vietnamese inheritance law if the assets are located in Vietnam. For foreign heirs, navigating this process involves unique challenges.
Legal Framework
Vietnam's inheritance law is governed by:
Civil Code 2015 (Part IV: Inheritance)Law on Private International Law 2015Housing Law 2023 (for real estate inheritance)Land Law 2024 (for land use rights)
Types of Inheritance
Inheritance by Will (Testamentary)
A valid will in Vietnam must meet these conditions:
Testator was of sound mind and not coercedWill must be in writing (except emergency situations)Witnesses required if the will is not notarizedContent must not violate law or public morality
Inheritance by Law (Intestate)
When there is no valid will, assets are distributed by priority:
First order: Spouse, biological parents, adoptive parents, biological children, adopted children
Second order: Grandparents, siblings
Third order: Great-grandparents, uncles, aunts, nieces, nephews
All heirs within the same order receive equal shares.
Rights of Foreign Heirs
Movable property (cash, securities, vehicles)
Foreign heirs have the same inheritance rights as Vietnamese nationals for movable property. No restrictions apply.
Real estate (houses and apartments)
Foreign heirs can inherit:
Houses and apartments in approved projectsSubject to the same ownership caps as foreign buyers (30% per building, 250 per ward)Ownership limited to 50 years (renewable)
If the property exceeds foreign ownership limits, the heir must sell within one year and receives the sale proceeds.
Land use rights
This is the most restricted area:
Foreign individuals generally cannot hold land use rightsIf inherited, they must transfer the land use rights to an eligible personThey receive the monetary value of the transfer
Practical Procedures
Step 1: Obtain death certificate
Issued by the commune People's CommitteeFor deaths abroad: legalized death certificate from the relevant embassy
Step 2: Gather estate documents
Property certificates (CLUR, vehicle registration)Bank account informationWill (if any)Family relationship certificates
Step 3: Notarize inheritance
All heirs appear before a notary officeDeclare and agree on estate distributionIf agreement is reached: notarized inheritance agreementIf not: file a lawsuit at the People's Court
Step 4: Register property transfer
Submit notarized documents to the Land Registration OfficeProcessing time: 10-30 working daysPay transfer tax and registration fees
Taxes and Fees
Income tax on inheritance: 10% of the estate value exceeding 10 million VNDRegistration fee: 0.5% of property valueNotarization fees: varies by value
Common Challenges for Foreign Heirs
Distance and language: Navigating Vietnamese bureaucracy from abroadDocument legalization: Foreign documents must be apostilled/legalizedProperty restrictions: May be forced to sell certain assetsMultiple jurisdictions: Estate may span multiple countriesStatute of limitations: 30 years for real estate, 10 years for movable property
Conclusion
Inheritance matters involving foreign heirs in Vietnam require specialized legal knowledge spanning international private law, property law, and tax law.
Contact Attorney Vo Thien Hien at Apolo Lawyers for expert guidance on inheritance matters in Vietnam.
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Apolo Editorial Team
Apolo Lawyers Editorial Desk
Authored by the Apolo Lawyers editorial team — senior associates and content specialists — with legal content reviewed by Managing Partner Vo Thien Hien before publication.