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These 6 Vietnam Visa Mistakes Are Ruining People’s Travel Plans

Many travelers don’t realize they’ve made a Vietnam visa mistake until they’re denied boarding or stopped at immigration. Here are six common errors that can derail your trip — and how to avoid them.

HANOI – Foreigners applying for visas to Vietnam are increasingly running into delays, rejections, and fines — not because of policy shifts, but because they are making the same procedural mistakes in a system that has become stricter, more digital, and less forgiving.

Immigration advisers and airline agents point to a pattern of errors that now account for a significant share of failed or delayed entries.

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The Most Common Mistakes

1. Applying for the wrong visa type.
Tourists often select business or work visas without a legal sponsor, while some workers arrive on tourist visas that do not permit employment-related activity.

2. Using outdated rules.
Applicants rely on pre-pandemic or unofficial information, assuming old extension practices or relaxed enforcement still apply.

3. Missing or mismatched documents.
Errors in passport numbers, misspelled names, invitation letters, or photo formats routinely trigger automatic rejections in the online system.

4. Applying too late.
Processing times now fluctuate with demand and holidays, but many travelers still apply only days before departure. Requiring expensive emergency visa request.

5. Payment and submission errors.
Failed transactions, duplicate payments, or incomplete uploads can invalidate applications without clear notice.

6. Ignoring nationality-specific rules.
Visa length, eligibility, and entry conditions vary by passport, but many applicants assume uniform treatment.

Why It Matters

Vietnam’s immigration system has become more automated and more tightly enforced, reducing the tolerance for informal workarounds that once existed. The result is a system that is more predictable — but also less flexible.

For travelers, investors, and remote workers, the cost of getting it wrong is rising: missed flights, overstays, fines, forced exits, and lost business opportunities happen more often.

How to Avoid It

Experts advise travelers to verify visa requirements through official government channels, apply well in advance of travel, and ensure that all submitted information matches their passport and supporting documents exactly. Applicants are also urged to select visa types based on the actual purpose of their visit — not convenience.

Travelers should use the official e-Visa portal operated by the Ministry of Public Security’s Immigration Department. Current fees are approximately US$25 for a single-entry visa and US$50 for a multiple-entry visa, subject to change.

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