What a Virtual Office Actually Covers in Vietnam — and What It Doesn’t

A virtual office in Vietnam is a legitimate, legally recognised workspace solution — but what it covers in practice depends entirely on which questions you’re asking. The gap between what companies assume a virtual office provides and what it actually delivers is the source of most of the confusion in this market. This guide works through the five questions that determine whether a virtual office is the right structure for your company right now, with specific answers for the Vietnam legal and regulatory context.

What a virtual office actually is — in one paragraph

A virtual office Vietnam provides a company with a professional business address at a physical location, without the company occupying that space on a daily basis. The operator receives mail and official correspondence on the company’s behalf, displays the company’s name at the address, and typically provides access to coworking desks and meeting rooms when the team needs to work or meet on-site. The contract is paid monthly, the address is real, and — critically — it is legally valid for most official purposes in Vietnam.

What it does not provide: a dedicated private workspace, a permanent desk, or a space your team occupies daily. If those are requirements, a virtual office is not the right product.

The 5 questions that determine whether a virtual office is right for you

Question 1: Can you register a company with a virtual office in Vietnam?

Yes — with conditions.

Under Vietnam’s Law on Enterprises 2020 (Article 42), a company’s registered headquarters is defined as its official contact address. The law does not require minimum floor area or exclusive use of the space. Multiple companies can register at the same address, and virtual office addresses are routinely accepted by the Department of Planning and Investment (Sở Kế hoạch và Đầu tư) for business registration.

What you need for registration:

  • A signed service contract with the virtual office provider confirming your right to use the address
  • A nameplate displaying your company name at the registered address — most providers install this as part of the package
  • The address must be a real, verifiable location (not a PO box)

Where it gets complicated: some provinces and districts apply additional scrutiny to virtual office addresses, particularly for businesses in regulated sectors (banking, insurance, securities, pharmaceuticals). If your business requires a sector-specific operating licence, verify with a local lawyer before registering.

Question 2: Will the tax authority accept a virtual office address?

Yes — for most purposes.

The General Department of Taxation and local tax offices accept virtual office for tax registration Vietnam provided three conditions are met:

  • A nameplate is physically present at the registered address at all times
  • Mail and official documents are received and forwarded by the operator promptly — tax notices, audit requests, and VAT refund correspondence all go to the registered address first
  • A valid service contract exists confirming the company’s right to use the address — this document may be requested during tax registration or audit

What the tax authority cannot verify remotely: whether your team actually works at the address. Tax inspectors do conduct physical site visits for certain audit types. A good virtual office provider will brief you on this — and the standard response is that the company uses the space flexibly and that most team members work remotely or at client sites.

One practical note: the Q1 2026 tax declaration deadline fell on 4 May 2026 (not 30 April — due to the holiday cascade). Companies using a virtual office Ho Chi Minh City address in District 1 are within walking distance of Tax Sub-department No. 1 at 8 Nguyen Van Thu, Tan Dinh — which matters for any in-person submissions.

Question 3: Can you open a bank account with a virtual office address?

Usually yes — but it depends on the bank.

Most Vietnamese commercial banks — Vietcombank, BIDV, Techcombank, VIB, HDBank — will open a corporate account for a company with a virtual office address, provided the business registration certificate is valid and the company representative appears in person with full documentation.

Some international banks operating in Vietnam apply additional KYC requirements and may request evidence of actual business activity or a physical workspace. If you are targeting a specific bank for account opening, verify their requirements before registering the company address.

The practical checklist for bank account opening with a virtual office:

  • Valid Business Registration Certificate showing the virtual office address
  • Service contract with the virtual office provider
  • Company charter and founding documents
  • Identification of legal representative and authorised signatories
  • Evidence of business activity (contracts, invoices, or a business plan for new entities)

Check out Dreamplex’s options to help you choose the right office model for 2026.

Question 4: What happens during a tax audit or inspection?

This is the question most providers don’t address clearly.

Tax audits in Vietnam come in two forms: document reviews (conducted remotely, with companies submitting records to the tax office) and physical site inspections (where inspectors visit the registered address).

For document reviews — which represent the majority of routine audit activity — a virtual office address creates no complication. The company submits its records; the address is irrelevant.

For physical site inspections, the inspector visits the registered address. A quality virtual office Vietnam provider will:

  • Have your company nameplate displayed at the address
  • Have reception staff who can confirm your company is registered there
  • Provide a meeting room for the inspector if needed
  • Forward the inspection notice to you promptly so you can arrange to be present

What inspectors are looking for in a site visit is confirmation that the address is real and your company is reachable there. A professional virtual office operator satisfies this — the concern arises when the address is a residential property, a PO box, or an unmanned location with no staff present.

Question 5: When does a virtual office stop making sense?

At four specific points:

Trigger

What it signals

Next step

Team grows past 8–10 people meeting regularly

people meeting regularlyShared coworking is becoming insufficient for confidential conversations

Move to dedicated coworking desks or a private office

Clients visit more than twice a month

The impression created by the meeting room matters more than the address

Upgrade to a serviced office with a branded reception

A sector regulator requires proof of physical premises

Virtual address is no longer sufficient for the operating licence

Move to a physical office — virtual office becomes a secondary address if needed

The company is preparing for fundraising or audit

Investor or auditor due diligence may flag a virtual-only setup

Add a physical workspace to complement the registered address

The good news: a virtual office vs physical office Vietnam transition doesn’t require changing your registered address, your tax code, or your company registration. A company that starts on a virtual address can add coworking desks or a private office later — at the same location — and retain all its official registrations without modification.

Who a virtual office is designed for

Best fit:

  • Foreign companies establishing a representative office or subsidiary in Vietnam, needing a legal address before the team arrives
  • New companies that want to minimise initial overhead while validating the business model
  • Companies with remote or hybrid teams who need a professional address for official correspondence but don’t require daily on-site space
  • Companies with an existing physical office in one city, establishing a registered address in a second city (HCMC or Hanoi)

Not a good fit:

  • Companies with daily client visits or walk-in business
  • Businesses with regulatory requirements for dedicated physical premises (retail, childcare, food service, certain financial services)
  • Teams of 10+ who work on-site most days — the cost-per-seat advantage of a virtual office disappears compared to a coworking or private office at this scale

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What to verify before signing a virtual office contract

Not all virtual office Ho Chi Minh City providers offer the same level of legal and operational support. Before signing:

  • Confirm the address has been used for previous company registrations — ask for confirmation that other companies have successfully registered here and that the Department of Planning and Investment has accepted the address
  • Check that a nameplate will be installed — this is a legal requirement for tax registration validity
  • Verify the mail handling process — how quickly are official documents forwarded? Is there a digital scanning service for time-sensitive correspondence?
  • Ask about site inspection support — what does the provider do if a tax inspector arrives unannounced?
  • Confirm the minimum contract term — most virtual office Vietnam contracts require 12 months minimum to satisfy the address stability requirements for business registration

What to ask

Why it matters

Has this address been used for company registration before?

Confirms DPI acceptability

Will my company nameplate be installed?

Required for tax registration validity

How are official documents handled?

Affects tax compliance and audit readiness

What happens if a tax inspector visits?

Determines audit risk level

What is the minimum contract term?

12 months is standard for registration stability

The bottom line

A virtual office in Vietnam is a legitimate, practical starting point for many companies — not a workaround or a grey-area arrangement. The Law on Enterprises is explicit about what constitutes a valid headquarters address, and a quality provider satisfies all the relevant requirements.

What makes the difference is choosing a provider who understands the legal and regulatory context, installs your nameplate on day one, handles correspondence professionally, and can support you if official attention arrives at the address.

For companies at the right stage — new market entry, early-stage operations, or multi-city presence at low cost — a virtual office is not the compromise option. It is the structurally correct option, until the business reaches a point where daily on-site presence creates enough value to justify the additional investment.

That point arrives at a predictable inflection — and the best virtual office providers make it easy to transition when it does.

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Dreamplex offers virtual office addresses at five locations in Ho Chi Minh City (Districts 1 and 2) and one in Hanoi (Đống Đa), from VND 1,200,000/month. All addresses are accepted for business registration and tax purposes. Nameplate installation, mail handling, and member benefits included.

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