Digital Marketing Services in Vietnam: A 2026 Market Overview

Posted by Written by Tom Sedzro Reading Time: 6 minutes

Digital marketing services in Vietnam are rapidly evolving into essential components of business growth strategies for foreign-invested companies, driven by a large, engaged online audience and increasing specialization among agencies.


Digital marketing services are now a core part of market entry and growth strategy for foreign-invested businesses in Vietnam, rather than an add-on for branding. Vietnam’s online audience is large and highly engaged, with approximately 85.6 million internet users in October 2025 (84.2 percent penetration), alongside 79.0 million social media user identities (77.6 percent of the population).

Growth has coincided with greater specialization among agencies, as providers differentiate by channel and platform expertise. It is estimated that Vietnam’s digital marketing market reached US$1.64 billion in 2024 and projects it could reach US$4,651.2 million by 2033, pointing to sustained expansion across performance marketing, content, and commerce-led channels.

At the same time, the compliance bar is rising. Decree 356/2025/ND-CP took effect on January 1, 2026, and replaces the previous Decree 13/2023/ND-CP framework for personal data protection. Advertising rules are also being updated: Decree 342/2025/ND-CP (effective February 15, 2026) adds detailed requirements for online advertising formats and includes provisions on preventing and removing illegal online advertisements.

Market scale and trajectory

Vietnam’s digital marketing services market is expanding as brands allocate more budget to channels that are measurable and closely tied to sales outcomes. This growth is being driven by Vietnam’s large online user base, rising e-commerce activity, and intensifying competition in consumer-facing categories. The channel mix is also shifting:

  • Paid social and short-form video continue to gain share;
  • Influencer-led conversions are becoming more structured; and
  • Marketplace advertising is increasingly important for brands selling through major platforms.

Indicator

Latest data point

What it signals for digital marketing budgets

Digital marketing services market size and outlook

US$1,642.6 million (2024); forecast US$4,651.2 million (2033); CAGR 12.26% (2025–2033)

Sustained expansion across performance marketing, content, and commerce-led channels

Internet users and penetration

85.6 million internet users; 84.2 percent penetration

Large addressable audience, increasing competition and optimization pressure

Social media user base

79.0 million social media user identities; 77.6 percent of the population

Social discovery remains central to acquisition and paid media mix

E-commerce demand signal

E-commerce market projected to exceed US$16.18 billion by 2025

Commerce growth continues pulling spend toward measurable, conversion-led activity

Source: IMARC Group; Data Reportal

Service offering structure

Vietnam’s digital marketing agencies typically offer a mix of search, social, content, influencer, e-commerce, and analytics support, with scopes and commercial arrangements varying by channel and campaign objective.

Service line

What it includes in practice

What it is commonly used for

Typical commercial arrangement

SEO (search engine optimization)

Technical site audit; Vietnamese keyword mapping; on-page optimization; content briefs; link strategy; monthly reporting

Building sustained organic visibility; reducing reliance on paid media; business-to-business (B2B) lead generation

Monthly retainer; one-off projects for audits or migrations

SEM (search engine marketing) and PPC (pay-per-click)

Campaign setup; keyword and ad copy; landing page recommendations; conversion tracking; bid and budget optimization; reporting

Capturing high-intent demand; launching products; lead generation

Retainer plus management fee; setup fee plus ongoing retainer; sometimes performance-linked

Social media marketing

Content planning; community management; paid social campaign execution; creative testing; social listening; reporting

Brand building and demand creation; rapid offer testing; always-on acquisition

Retainer; campaign-based projects; hybrid models with media management fees

Content marketing including video

Localization (not just translation); articles and scripts; design or video production support; distribution plan; performance measurement

Educating the market; building trust; supporting conversion with explainers and FAQs (frequently asked questions)

Per-project and per-asset; content retainers for ongoing output

Influencer programs using KOL (key opinion leader) and KOC (key opinion consumer)

Creator sourcing and vetting; briefing; contracting and usage rights; post monitoring; measurement; optional paid amplification

Social proof; launches; creator-led conversion and social commerce

Campaign-based fees; retainers for ongoing programs; add-ons like affiliate commissions

E-commerce and marketplace marketing

Store optimization; promotional calendar planning; marketplace ads; affiliate support; product page improvements; ROAS (return on ad spend) reporting

Driving sales on marketplaces; maximizing peak sale events; improving conversion

Retainers; store build or refresh projects; sometimes performance-linked

Analytics and MarTech (marketing technology) support

Tracking plan; tag and pixel setup; event taxonomy; dashboards; attribution support; CRM (customer relationship management) integration support

Improving measurement and decision speed; scaling budgets; aligning HQ (headquarters) and local reporting

Project setup plus retainer; often bundled into broader retainers

How to choose the right agency

Vietnam’s digital marketing services market is typically organized around three provider types:

  • Global network agencies and integrated groups are often chosen for multi-market governance, standardized reporting, and coordinated creative and media planning, especially where regional alignment and brand consistency matter.
  • Local digital-first agencies tend to deliver stronger Vietnamese-language execution and faster iteration for social and commerce-led campaigns, including platform-native creative and community management.
  • Specialist firms focus on a single capability, such as search marketing, influencer programs, or e-commerce and marketplace growth, and are often used alongside a lead agency for deep expertise and rapid optimization in priority channels.

For foreign-invested businesses, selection should prioritize:

  • Localization quality: Strong partners must demonstrate the ability to adapt messaging beyond literal translation, ensuring cultural resonance and market relevance for the Vietnamese digital audience.
  • Measurement discipline: The agency should utilize clear frameworks for tracking performance and defining KPIs, ensuring that digital campaigns are continuously optimized based on objective data.
  • Operational control: Selection should favor partners who provide transparent workflows and structured reporting mechanisms to maintain clear oversight of digital activities.
  • Fee transparency: Partners must offer clearly articulated pricing structures that distinguish between agency fees and actual media spend to prevent hidden costs.
  • Media management practices: Agencies should have documented processes for media planning and verification to ensure accountability and budget efficiency across local digital platforms.

Common pitfalls include:

  • Unclear ownership of ad accounts, tracking assets, and audiences, which can create switching risk;
  • Weak usage-rights terms for creative and influencer content, which can limit reuse and increase disputes; and
  • Unadequately designed performance-linked arrangements, which can incentivize short-term tactics that undermine brand safety or compliance.

Regulatory environment

Vietnam’s regulatory environment directly affects the design, delivery, and measurement of digital marketing campaigns. Compliance expectations extend beyond advertising claims and online content formats to how customer and prospect data is collected, used, and shared across marketing systems. Outreach channels such as email, SMS, and calls are also subject to anti-spam controls, increasing the importance of consent records and suppression practices.

In parallel, Vietnam’s cybersecurity framework and related data localization considerations can shape platform operations and vendor selection, particularly where marketing stacks rely on cross-border tools and data processing.

Title

Governs

Affected parties

Changes for digital marketing

Law No. 16/2012/QH13 (Law on Advertising), effective January 1, 2013

Advertising content, prohibited practices, and regulations for online and telecom-based ads

Advertisers, agencies, publishers, and online platforms

Establishes foundational compliance standards for content accuracy, format regulations, and advertising conduct across digital channels

Decree No. 342/2025/ND-CP, effective February 15, 2026

Online ad formats, user protections, and requirements for addressing illegal ads

Advertisers, agencies, online ad service providers, and platforms

Introduces stricter requirements for ad design and functionality, including easy ad removal, and mandates faster action on illegal ads

Decree No. 38/2021/ND-CP, effective June 1, 2021

Administrative penalties for violations related to advertising

Advertisers, agencies, publishers, and platforms

Increases enforcement penalties and strengthens internal processes for ensuring compliance with advertising regulations

Decree No. 356/2025/ND-CP, effective January 1, 2026

Personal data protection, data transfer rules, and impact assessments

Organizations processing personal data, including marketing agencies and tech vendors

Enhances data governance protocols for campaigns, including requirements for consent, purpose limitation, and cross-border data management

Decree No. 91/2020/ND-CP, effective October 1, 2020

Rules for anti-spam measures in SMS, email, and telemarketing

Businesses engaging in outbound marketing, telecom providers, and email marketers

Establishes stricter consent and message frequency requirements, ensuring compliance with anti-spam and opt-in regulations

Law No. 24/2018/QH14 (Law on Cybersecurity), effective January 1, 2019

Cybersecurity obligations for platforms and digital services

Digital service providers, platforms, and data-heavy vendors

Introduces comprehensive cybersecurity regulations that impact how digital platforms handle and protect user data, relevant to marketing technology stacks

Decree No. 53/2022/ND-CP, effective October 1, 2022

Data storage and localization requirements under the Cybersecurity Law

Service providers and platforms operating in Vietnam

Imposes stricter data storage and access regulations that affect how digital marketing platforms and ad technologies structure operations in Vietnam

Law No. 116/2025/QH15 (Law on Cybersecurity), effective July 1, 2026

Consolidation of cybersecurity regulations for digital services

Organizations and individuals in Vietnam’s digital space

Consolidates the cybersecurity framework and replaces prior laws; implementing guidance will clarify operational requirements relevant to platforms and marketing technology

To maintain robust compliance management, each stakeholder should adopt the following strategies:

  • Businesses should tighten internal review and approval processes for advertising claims, endorsements, and messaging in regulated categories.
  • Agencies and platforms should be required to show how they meet online ad format rules and execute rapid removals when notified.
  • Privacy controls should also be built into tracking and targeting from the outset, including:
    • Documented consent and purpose management;
    • Clear allocation of responsibilities across vendors; and
    • Practical cross-border data transfer procedures for campaigns that rely on offshore platforms, analytics, or CRM (customer relationship management) tools.

Key takeaways

Vietnam’s digital marketing market should continue to grow as mobile-first consumption, social discovery, and e-commerce shift more budget toward measurable, always-on campaigns. For foreign brands, digital marketing is less a discretionary branding expense and more a core market-entry capability, especially where acquisition depends on social video, creators, and marketplace conversion.

2026 should be treated as a compliance reset year. Decree 356 on personal data protection (effective January 1, 2026) marks a new phase of rules for how marketing data is collected, used, and shared, while Decree 342 on advertising (effective February 15, 2026) updates key requirements for online advertising and handling illegal ads. These shifts make partner selection more consequential: weak consent management, unclear vendor responsibilities, and non-compliant content can quickly erase performance gains.

Tam Nguyen
DSA
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