Vietnam Cuts Conditional Business Lines: Implications for Investors

Posted by Written by Vu Nguyen Hanh Reading Time: 6 minutes

Vietnam’s government has recently reduced the number of conditional business lines from 198 to 142 and expanded post-inspection supervision. Learn how the reform affects foreign investors and business licensing in 2026.


Vietnam is moving forward with one of its most significant business environment reforms in recent years.

Following the adoption of the amended Law on Investment in late 2025, the government has issued Resolution No. 66.17/2026/NQ-CP, introducing a major reduction in conditional business lines and accelerating the shift from pre-licensing controls toward post-inspection supervision.

The resolution forms part of Vietnam’s broader effort to simplify market entry procedures, reduce administrative burdens, and improve the country’s competitiveness as a destination for foreign investment.

For businesses operating in Vietnam or considering market entry, the resolution provides important clarity on how the licensing reforms announced under the amended Investment Law will be implemented in practice.

Resolution 66.17 and Vietnam’s broader investment reform agenda

Vietnam’s amended Law on Investment, approved in December 2025, established the legal foundation for a comprehensive review of the country’s conditional business regime. One of its key objectives was to reassess whether existing licensing requirements remained necessary to achieve legitimate regulatory goals.

Resolution 66.17 operationalizes this agenda by approving a substantial reduction in sectors and trades subject to conditional business requirements. The reform reflects the government’s intention to move away from administrative controls that require businesses to obtain approval before commencing operations and toward a compliance-based framework supported by inspections and enforcement.

This approach aligns with Vietnam’s long-term objectives of improving the ease of doing business, facilitating investment, and encouraging innovation while maintaining regulatory oversight in areas involving public safety, national security, health, and environmental protection.

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Conditional business lines reduced from 198 to 142

Under Resolution 66.17, Vietnam will reduce the number of conditional business lines from 198 to 142, eliminating or substantially simplifying requirements across numerous sectors.

The reform follows a government review of existing licensing conditions, many of which were considered overlapping, outdated, or unnecessarily burdensome for businesses.

The revised framework focuses conditional business requirements on sectors where regulatory intervention remains necessary, while allowing businesses operating in lower-risk activities to enter the market with fewer administrative procedures.

The reduction is expected to benefit both domestic and foreign-invested enterprises by lowering compliance costs, shortening market-entry timelines, and reducing regulatory uncertainty.

List of Conditional Business Lines in Vietnam

No.

Sector

1

Seal making

2

Trading in supporting tools (including repair services)

3

Trading in assorted fireworks (excluding firecrackers)

4

Trading in camouflage equipment, recording devices, positioning devices, information interference devices, and mobile communication jamming devices

5

Trading in military uniforms, equipment, weapons, materiel, vehicles, components, spare parts, and specialized technologies for military and public security forces

6

Pawnshop services

7

Massage services

8

Security services

9

Legal services

10

Notarial services

11

Judicial assessment services

12

Auditing services

13

Operation of bonded warehouses and container freight stations

14

Operation of customs clearance, goods gathering, inspection, and supervision facilities

15

Securities trading

16

Securities registration, depository, clearing, settlement, and carbon trading exchange support services

17

Insurance business activities (excluding auxiliary insurance services)

18

Price appraisal services

19

Lottery business

20

Prize-winning games, casinos, and betting businesses

21

Credit rating services

22

Voluntary pension fund management services

23

Petroleum trading

24

Industrial explosives business (including destruction services)

25

Explosive precursor trading

26

Activities involving industrial explosives and explosive precursors

27

Blasting services

28

Chemical trading, storage, and specialized consultancy services

29

Tobacco products, materials, and specialized tobacco industry equipment trading

30

Food business subject to specialized management

31

Commodity exchange operations

32

Electricity generation, transmission, distribution, wholesale, and retail

33

Rice export

34

Industrial precursor trading

35

Goods trading and related activities by foreign service providers

36

Multi-level marketing

37

E-commerce platform operations and electronic contract authentication

38

Petroleum activities

39

Vocational education

40

Occupational skills assessment services

41

Occupational safety inspection services

42

Overseas labor dispatch services

43

Voluntary drug rehabilitation services

44

Road transport business

45

Automobile manufacturing, assembly, and import

46

Motor vehicle inspection services

47

Driver training services

48

Driver testing services

49

Traffic safety inspection services

50

Inland waterway vessel crew training services

51

Maritime crew training, recruitment, and supply

52

Air transport business

53

Aircraft design, manufacture, maintenance, and testing services

54

Import/export of aircraft, UAVs, engines, and equipment

55

Research, manufacture, testing, repair, and maintenance of aircraft and UAVs

56

Airport operations

57

Aviation services at airports

58

Aviation personnel training

59

Railway transport business

60

Railway infrastructure operations

61

Hazardous cargo transport services

62

Real estate business

63

Construction project management and site chief commander practice

64

Construction survey services

65

Construction design and design verification services

66

Construction supervision consultancy services

67

Specialized construction testing services

68

Urban and rural planning consultancy

69

Postal services

70

Telecommunications services

71

Trust services

72

Publishing house operations

73

Printing services (excluding certain packaging printing)

74

Social networking services

75

Online gaming services

76

Pay television and radio services

77

Website development services

78

Processing and repair of certain used IT products for foreign traders

79

Electronic authentication services

80

Cybersecurity products and services

81

Imported press distribution services

82

Civil cryptography products and services

83

Preschool education

84

General education

85

Higher education

86

Foreign educational institutions and branches

87

Continuing education

88

Fishing

89

Aquatic products trading

90

Production of aquaculture and livestock feed and treatment products

91

Fishing vessel registration and inspection

92

Pesticide trading

93

Plant quarantine treatment services

94

Pesticide testing services

95

Veterinary drugs, vaccines, and animal health products trading

96

Animal testing and surgery services

97

Veterinary healthcare services

98

Veterinary drug testing and experimentation services

99

Farm-based livestock breeding business

100

Livestock and poultry slaughtering

101

Fertilizer production

102

Fertilizer testing services

103

Livestock breed and crop variety business

104

Aquatic breed production and breeding

105

Trading in genetically modified products

106

Medical examination and treatment services

107

Pharmaceutical business

108

Cosmetic production

109

Medical equipment trading

110

Radiation-related services

111

Atomic energy application support services

112

Conformity assessment services

113

Technology assessment and valuation services

114

Intellectual property representation services

115

Film dissemination services

116

Relic and antique appraisal services

117

Heritage preservation, restoration, and supervision services

118

Karaoke and discotheque services

119

Travel services

120

Sports business and professional sports club activities

121

Accommodation services

122

Trading, preservation, restoration, and digitization of relics and antiques

123

Import of cultural goods under specialized management

124

Surveying and mapping services

125

Hydrometeorological forecasting and warning services

126

Groundwater drilling and exploration services

127

Water resource exploitation services

128

Mineral exploration services

129

Mineral mining

130

Hazardous waste transportation and treatment services

131

Scrap import

132

Environmental monitoring services

133

Commercial banking operations

134

Non-bank credit institution operations

135

Cooperative banks, people’s credit funds, and microfinance institutions

136

Payment intermediary, non-account payment, and mobile money services

137

Credit information services

138

Gold trading (excluding jewelry and handicrafts)

139

Data intermediary, analysis, and aggregation services

140

Data exchange platform services

141

Crypto-asset related services

142

Personal data processing services

Source: Resolution No. 66.17/2026/NQ-CP

Transition from pre-licensing to post-inspection supervision

One of the most important policy shifts introduced by the resolution is the continued transition from pre-operation licensing toward post-inspection compliance management.

Traditionally, businesses in conditional sectors were required to obtain licenses, certificates, approvals, or confirmations before commencing operations. Under the new approach, a growing number of activities will instead be governed by publicly disclosed operating conditions, with compliance monitored through inspections after operations begin.

Under the emerging framework, businesses will generally be permitted to operate if they satisfy prescribed conditions. Regulatory authorities will increasingly focus on monitoring compliance through audits, inspections, and enforcement actions rather than controlling market entry through extensive licensing procedures.

For investors, this may create greater operational flexibility but also places increased importance on maintaining robust compliance systems, documentation, and internal controls.

Relationship with the amended Law on Investment

Resolution 66.17 should be viewed alongside the amendments introduced under the 2025 Law on Investment.

Several reforms under the law are designed to complement the licensing reductions, including:

  • Narrowing the scope of projects requiring in-principle investment approval;
  • Streamlining approval authority among central and provincial agencies;
  • Reducing circumstances requiring adjustments to approved investment projects;
  • Expanding access to special investment procedures in designated economic areas; and
  • Allowing certain foreign investors to establish enterprises before obtaining an Investment Registration Certificate (IRC).

Together, these measures indicate a broader effort to simplify investment procedures while maintaining regulatory oversight through risk-based supervision mechanisms.

See also: Vietnam’s Amended Investment Law: Key Transitional Provisions for Existing and New Projects

Sectors expected to see the greatest impact

While implementing regulations will provide detailed guidance on affected activities, the government’s review has targeted a wide range of service sectors where licensing requirements were deemed excessive relative to regulatory risks.

Previous announcements associated with the investment law reform identified sectors such as:

  • Tax procedure services;
  • Customs brokerage services;
  • Certain transportation activities;
  • Selected construction-related services; and
  • Various technical and professional service sectors.

Businesses operating in these areas should closely monitor implementing regulations to determine whether existing licenses remain necessary, are modified, or are replaced by compliance obligations subject to post-inspection review.

Tam Nguyen
DSA
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