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VietNam

Last updated : December 31, 2025

Digital ID Overview

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Development of Viet Nam’s digital ID system began as part of the government’s ‘Project 06’ on National Digital Transformation for 2022–2025.[14] The Government’s Decision 06/QĐ-TTg (2022) sets out a scheme on developing the application of data on population, identification and electronic authentication  for the national digital transformation in the period 2022–2025.[15] The VNeID application, which was launched nationwide in 2023, enables users to authenticate electronically for online and offline transactions, display e-documents, and access services.[16] Services attached to the system include enrolment for social insurance, tax payments, medical records, e-government services, and digital banking authentication.[17] Vietnamese citizens may apply for VNeID accounts through local police authorities or via the VNeID mobile application, using a valid Citizen Identity Card and biometric verification.[18] Participation is formally voluntary, but in practice increasingly required to access public and private services.[19]

The country’s digital ID system is a process led by the Ministry of Public Security.[20] Public involvement in the law-making process is mandatory under Vietnamese law.[21] Relevant agencies, organizations, and individuals have the right, and must be enabled to provide comments on draft legal documents.[22] The law drafters and related agencies or organizations are responsible for facilitating the participation of other agencies, organizations, and individuals in providing feedback on the draft legislation including consulting with those directly impacted by the relevant draft law.[23] However, limited information is available on whether public consultations took place in the creation of the digital identity system law and policy. 

Foreign nationals residing in Viet Nam may apply for e-ID accounts under Decree No. 69/2024, using their passports or residence cards.[24] The decree defines two levels of access for foreigners, depending on the documentation submitted – Level 1, which allows limited authentication using basic identity information; and Level 2, which permits broader access to public services following biometric verification and residence documentation.[25] Stateless persons of Vietnamese origin are eligible for identity cards, but information available is limited on whether they are explicitly able to access e-ID accounts.[26]

Law

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Domestic law and policy

    Law No. 26/2023/QH15 on Identification regulates electronic identification and authentication.[27] Under this law, digital identity is defined as an electronic account containing a citizen’s identification number, biometric data, and other information verified through the national database.[28] In addition, Decree No. 72/2013/ND-CP introduces mandatory online identity verification requirements for certain internet services, raising concerns regarding privacy, surveillance, and access for individuals lacking recognized digital identities.[29] Each citizen is issued one unique electronic identification credential, which has the same legal validity as the physical identity card.[30]  Law No. 26/2023/QH15 provides in Article 6 an avenue for complaints, to settle complaints and denunciations and handle violations of the law on identity in accordance with law.[31] This suggests that the law does provide for complaints and handling of violations in the identity/ID regime. 

    Decree No. 69/2024/ND-CP on Electronic Identification and Authentication regulates issuance, use, locking/unlocking of electronic identification accounts (e-ID) for individuals, foreign nationals, organizations; integration with the national population or immigration databases; connection and sharing of data; legal validity of electronic identification and authentication services.[32] This decree also defines ‘electronic identity’ as information about an agency or an organization or an individual existing in an electronic identification and authentication system that makes it possible to uniquely identify that individual or agency or organization in cyberspace.[33]

    The legal and policy framework does establish a linkage between digital identity and citizenship, in that the identity card regime is for Vietnamese citizens, and the digital identity regime maps onto that system.[34] However, the digital identity framework also extends to foreign residents, so it is not strictly limited to citizens.[35]

    Data Protection

      Data Protection is primarily governed by two decrees, that is – Decree No. 13/2023/ND-CP (Decree No. 13) and Decree No. 69/2024/ND-CP (as discussed above). Decree No. 13 on Personal Data Protection sets out rights of data subjects and the manner in which personal data shall be used.[36] It states that data subjects have the right to be informed, to consent (and to withdraw consent), rights of access or correction, and rights to request deletion or return, except where other laws provide exceptions.[37] Decree No. 69/2024/ND-CP requires the Ministry of Public Security to build, operate and protect the e-ID system; it mandates permanent storage of e-identification in the national e-ID system and retention of access history for 5 years.[38]

      Decree No. 13 lists ‘distinctive physical attributes and biological characteristics’ (i.e. biometric information) among ‘sensitive personal data’, which triggers higher protection measures and additional organisational/technical requirements for controllers/processors.[39] With regard to the encryption of data, Decree No. 13 requires appropriate technical and organisational security measures and encourages the application of standards; it lists encryption or decryption as processing operations and requires technical safeguards.[40] Decree No. 69 also brings cryptographic or cipher guidance into the picture by naming the Government Cipher Committee to provide cryptographic standards and to assess cryptographic security for e-ID users.[41] Decree No. 13 also requires Personal Data Controllers to notify the Ministry of Public Security (Department of Cybersecurity & Hi-tech Crime Prevention) within 72 hours of detecting a violation of personal data regulations.[42] The decree also sets up a National Personal Data Protection Portal to receive notifications and complaints as well as to handle violations in relation to personal data protection in accordance with the law.[43]

      While there is no publicly available documentation indicating the misuse of data, it should be noted that the government has statutory power to access/process personal data for state functions and national security. [44] Civil society organisations have raised concerns that Viet Nam’s expanding digital identification and cybersecurity framework may facilitate state surveillance, particularly of human rights defenders and civil society actors.[45] Reports by Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch document spyware attacks and expansive monitoring powers under the 2019 Cybersecurity Law (Law No. 24/2018/QH14), raising risks that digital ID systems could be used to suppress dissent or target marginalised groups.[46]

      The aforementioned laws permit government access under statutory exceptions and do not institute an absolute prohibition.[47] Decree No. 13 establishes the Department at Ministry of Public Security as the specialised agency, with powers to inspect, receive notifications and handle violations.[48] Controllers or processors are explicitly required to cooperate and to supply information for investigations.[49] Similarly, Decree No. 69 places the build, operation, administration of the national e-ID system in the hands of the Ministry to connect or share data with other state bodies, and prescribes that e-ID records be stored permanently and access logs for five years.[50]

      International Commitments

        Viet Nam is not a party to any international treaty explicitly governing digital identification or data protection, but it is a signatory to major human rights treaties relevant to these domains. Notably, the Committee on the Rights of the Child, in its General Comment No. 25 states that digital systems should be created such that they enable all children to safely access essential digital public services and educational services without discrimination.[51]

        The ASEAN Framework on Personal Data Protection and Framework on Digital Data Governance sets out non-binding principles encouraging member states to adopt national data protection laws and supports mutual recognition.[52] However, it does not impose binding commitments or specific mandates on digital ID systems or make provisions for the protection of stateless persons.[53] The country has also pledged in 2025 to the Ministerial Declaration on a Decade of Action for Inclusive and Resilient Civil Registration and Vital Statistics in Asia and the Pacific where countries pledged to ensure that every birth is registered by 2030 and to close registration gaps among marginalized populations.[54] The Declaration highlights the barriers faced by stateless persons in access to civil registration services and pledged to  ‘develop and implement measures to avoid the potential exclusion of digitally marginalized or vulnerable populations from statistical data and facilitate their access to services and entitlements’.[55]

        Designed to Include?

        The Impact of Digital ID and Legal Identity on Citizenship and Nationality Rights

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        The introduction of Viet Nam’s digital ID system has had mixed implications for statelessness and inclusion. On one hand, it has reduced administrative exclusion for people of Vietnamese origin lacking nationality confirmation, who can now receive identity certificates and access certain services.[56] On the other hand, it has digitized existing inequalities by embedding access barriers into digital platforms dependent on legal documentation. The grant of a digital ID does not confer citizenship. While revocation of a digital ID does not affect an individual’s legal nationality or possession of a physical Citizen Identity Card, it may result in functional exclusion from essential public and private services, creating conditions of de facto statelessness without altering formal legal status. Stateless individuals and undocumented migrants face exclusion from essential services integrated into VNeID and the national authentication system, such as social insurance and public healthcare, banking and telecommunications registration, education enrolment, among other administrative procedures.[57]

        The Identification Law (2023) constitutes a significant step forward by providing identity certificates to a previously unrecognized group.[58] However, access for non-Vietnamese stateless persons remains legally undefined. Additionally, there are no publicly reported judicial precedents on digital ID and rights related to statelessness in Viet Nam. 

        The issuance of identity certificates to persons of Vietnamese origin with undetermined nationality represents meaningful progress and is a positive step towards addressing documentation gaps. However, without extending similar protections to all stateless residents, many individuals remain excluded due to the lack of documentation. As digital ID becomes the gateway to nearly all public services, ensuring inclusive access and data privacy is essential for Viet Nam’s compliance with its human rights obligations and towards safeguarding the right to legal identity for all persons within its territory.

        1.^

         Law No. 26/2023/QH15 on Identification 2023.

        2.^

         ibid; ‘Law on Identity’ (vietnamlawmagazine.vn) <https://vietnamlawmagazine.vn/law-on-identity-71703.html>.

        3.^

         Law No. 26/2023/QH15 on Identification (n 1); ‘Law on Identity’ (n 2).

        4.^

         Law No. 26/2023/QH15 on Identification (n 1) art 26; ‘Law on Identity’ (n 2); ‘Children under Six Years Old to Be Issued ID Cards from July 1’ (vietnamnews.vn) <https://vietnamnews.vn/society/1658438/children-under-six-years-old-to-be-issued-id-cards-from-july-1.html> accessed 10 November 2025; Khanh Phuong, ‘Viet Nam to Collect Biometric Information for Identification from July’ (Government News, 19 February 2024) <https://en.baochinhphu.vn/viet-nam-to-collect-biometric-information-for-identification-from-july-111240219111759363.htm> accessed 10 November 2025.

        5.^

         Law No. 60/2014/QH13 on Civil Status.

        6.^

         ibid 15, 16.

        7.^

         ibid 16.

        8.^

         ‘Law on Vietnamese Nationality’ (Refworld) <https://www.refworld.org/legal/legislation/natlegbod/2008/en/69861> accessed 10 November 2025.

        9.^

         ibid; ‘Vietnam: What Is a Personal Identification Number? In Hanoi, Vietnam’ (Tin tức pháp luật) <http://www.lawnet.vn/thong-tin-phap-luat/en/hanh-chinh/vietnam-what-is-a-personal-identification-number-148455.html> accessed 10 November 2025.

        10.^

         ‘Law on Vietnamese Nationality’ (n 8) arts 11, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17.

        11.^

         ‘Law on Vietnamese Nationality’ (n 8).

        12.^

         Law No. 26/2023/QH15 on Identification (n 1) art 30; ‘Quy Cách Giấy Chứng Nhận Căn Cước Từ Ngày 01/07/2024’ <https://thuvienphapluat.vn/chinh-sach-phap-luat-moi/vn/ho-tro-phap-luat/chinh-sach-moi/65813/quy-cach-giay-chung-nhan-can-cuoc-tu-ngay-01-07-2024> accessed 10 November 2025.

        13.^

         ‘National Assembly Discusses Identification Law, Passes Vote of Confidence Results’ (vietnamnews.vn) <https://vietnamnews.vn/politics-laws/1605687/national-assembly-discusses-identification-law-passes-vote-of-confidence-results.html> accessed 5 November 2025.

        14.^

         Luật Dữ Liệu Pháp, ‘Decision No. 06/QD-TTg dated January 06, 2022 on approving Scheme for Application of population data, e-identification and e-authentication to national digital transformation in 2022 - 2025 period, with a vision by 2030’ (Dữ Liệu Pháp Luật) <https://dulieuphapluat.vn/van-ban/cong-nghe-thong-tin-van-ban/decision-no-06qd-ttg-dated-january-06-2022-on-approving-scheme-for-application-of-population-data-e-identification-and-e-authentication-to-national-digital-transformation-in-2022-2025-period-with-a-vision-by-2030-1112967.html> accessed 15 October 2025.

        15.^

        ibid

        16.^

         ‘VNEID - Ứng Dụng Định Danh Điện Tử Có Giá Trị Sử Dụng Thay Thế Các Giấy Tờ Truyền Thống’ <https://vneid.com/> accessed 12 November 2025.

        17.^

         ‘Vietnam’s Digital ID Revolution: Boosting Security, Efficiency’ <https://www.bioenabletech.com/news/vietnams-digital-id-revolution-boosting-security-efficiency> accessed 12 November 2025.

        18.^

         ‘Stipulations on Electronic Identification and Authentication’ <http://moj.gov.vn/en/Pages/Activities-of-public-administrative-and-justice-reform.aspx?ItemID=3417> accessed 20 December 2025.

        19.^

         ‘Decree No. 69/2024/ND-CP on Electronic Identification and Authentication’ (31 May 2025) <https://lawfirm.vn/van-ban/decree-no-69-2024-nd-cp-on-electronic-identification-and-authentication/> accessed 12 November 2025.

        20.^

         By Huyen Trang, ‘MPS Hosts Scientific Conference on Building and Managing VNeID System in Digital Era’ <https://en.bocongan.gov.vn/article/mps-hosts-scientific-conference-on-building-and-managing-vneid-system-in-digital-era-1757669896> accessed 12 November 2025.

        21.^

         Law No. 80/2015/QH13 2015 art 6.

        22.^

        ibid

        23.^

         Law No. 80/2015/QH13.

        24.^

         Kim Loan, ‘Viet Nam launches 50-day campaign to issue digital identity accounts for foreigners’ (en.baochinhphu.vn, 30 June 2025) <https://en.baochinhphu.vn/viet-nam-to-issue-digital-identity-accounts-for-foreigners-over-50-days-111250630184401243.htm> accessed 12 November 2025.

        25.^

         ibid; Duane Morris LLP-Dr Oliver Massmann, ‘Vietnam - Legal Alert on Decree 69/2024/Nd-Cp on Electronic Authentication and Identification’ (Lexology, 19 May 2025) <https://www.lexology.com/library/detail.aspx?g=10316578-7722-4f91-a242-777a53586f2b> accessed 12 November 2025.

        26.^

         Hanoitimes, ‘Vietnam Considers Issuing ID Cards for Stateless People’ (Hanoitimes) <https://hanoitimes.vn/vietnam-considers-issuing-id-cards-for-stateless-people-321126.html> accessed 12 November 2025; Law No. 26/2023/QH15 on Identification (n 1).

        27.^

         Law No. 26/2023/QH15 on Identification (n 1).

        28.^

        ibid

        29.^

         Carla, ‘Vietnam: Identity Verification Mandate Will Violate International Human Rights | ICJ’ (International Commission of Jurists, 5 August 2023) <https://www.icj.org/viet-nam-identity-verification-mandate-will-violate-international-human-rights/> accessed 20 December 2025; ‘Vietnam Issues New Decree Governing Internet Services and Online Information’ (Tilleke & Gibbins) <https://www.tilleke.com/insights/vietnam-issues-new-decree-governing-internet-services-and-online-information/> accessed 20 December 2025.

        30.^

         Law No. 26/2023/QH15 on Identification (n 1) art 31.

        31.^

         ibid 6.

        32.^

         ‘Decree No. 69/2024/ND-CP on Electronic Identification and Authentication’ (n 19).

        33.^

        ibid

        34.^

         Law No. 26/2023/QH15 on Identification (n 1).

        35.^

         ‘Vietnam Grants Level-2 e-ID Accounts to Foreign Residents from July 1’ (vietnamlawmagazine.vn) <https://vietnamlawmagazine.vn/vietnam-grants-level-2-e-id-accounts-to-foreign-residents-from-july-1-74580.html> accessed 5 November 2025.

        36.^

         Decree No. 13/2023/ND-CP on Personal Data Protection 2023.

        37.^

        ibid

        38.^

         ‘Decree No. 69/2024/ND-CP on Electronic Identification and Authentication’ (n 19).

        39.^

         Decree No. 13/2023/ND-CP on Personal Data Protection.

        40.^

        ibid

        41.^

         ‘Decree No. 69/2024/ND-CP on Electronic Identification and Authentication’ (n 19) art 38.

        42.^

         Decree No. 13/2023/ND-CP on Personal Data Protection art 23.

        43.^

         ibid 29.

        44.^

         Decree No. 13/2023/ND-CP on Personal Data Protection; ‘Decree No. 69/2024/ND-CP on Electronic Identification and Authentication’ (n 19).

        45.^

         ‘Click and Bait: Vietnamese Human Rights Defenders Targeted with Spyware Attacks’ (Amnesty International, 24 February 2021) <https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/research/2021/02/click-and-bait-vietnamese-human-rights-defenders-targeted-with-spyware-attacks/> accessed 20 December 2025; ‘Viet Nam: New Cybersecurity Law a Devastating Blow for Freedom of Expression’ (Amnesty International, 12 June 2018) <https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2018/06/viet-nam-cybersecurity-law-devastating-blow-freedom-of-expression/> accessed 20 December 2025; ‘Vietnam: Repeal Harmful Internet Laws | Human Rights Watch’ (10 December 2024) <https://www.hrw.org/news/2024/12/11/vietnam-repeal-harmful-internet-laws> accessed 20 December 2025.

        46.^

         ‘Click and Bait: Vietnamese Human Rights Defenders Targeted with Spyware Attacks’ (n 45); ‘Viet Nam: New Cybersecurity Law a Devastating Blow for Freedom of Expression’ (n 45); ‘Vietnam: Repeal Harmful Internet Laws | Human Rights Watch’ (n 45).

        47.^

         Decree No. 13/2023/ND-CP on Personal Data Protection; ‘Decree No. 69/2024/ND-CP on Electronic Identification and Authentication’ (n 19).

        48.^

         Decree No. 13/2023/ND-CP on Personal Data Protection.

        49.^

        ibid

        50.^

         ‘Decree No. 69/2024/ND-CP on Electronic Identification and Authentication’ (n 19).

        51.^

         ‘General Comment No. 25 (2021) on Children’s Rights in Relation to the Digital Environment’ <https://www.unicef.org/bulgaria/en/media/10596/file>.

        52.^

         ASEAN TELMIN, ‘Framework on Personal Data Protection’ (2016) <https://cil.nus.edu.sg/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/2016-Frmwk-PDP.pdf>; ASEAN TELMIN, ‘Framework on Digital Data Governance’ (2018) <https://cil.nus.edu.sg/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/2018-Framework-Digital-Data-Governance.pdf>.

        53.^

         ASEAN TELMIN, ‘Framework on Personal Data Protection’ (n 52); ASEAN TELMIN, ‘Framework on Digital Data Governance’ (n 52).

        54.^

         ‘Asia-Pacific Nations Reaffirm Commitment to Legal Identity for All at Third Ministerial Conference on Civil Registration and Vital Statistics | Get Every One in the Picture’ <https://crvs.unescap.org/news/asia-pacific-nations-reaffirm-commitment-legal-identity-all-third-ministerial-conference-civil> accessed 7 November 2025.

        55.^

         UNESCAP, ‘Ministerial Declaration on a Decade of Action for Inclusive and Resilient Civil Registration and Vital Statistics in Asia and the Pacific’ (2025) ESCAP/MCCRVS/2-25/6/Add.1 <https://www.unescap.org/sites/default/d8files/event-documents/2500197E_ESCAP_MCCRVS_2025_6_Add1_Ministerial_Declaration.pdf?_gl=1*vdnplp*_ga*NTMxNDc5Mjc4LjE3NjIzMjk2NDg.*_ga_SB1ZX36Y86*czE3NjIzMjk2NDckbzEkZzEkdDE3NjIzMzA1MDgkajI3JGwwJGgw>.

        56.^

         Law No. 26/2023/QH15 on Identification (n 1); Hanoitimes (n 26).

        57.^

         ‘Vietnam: eID Requirement Forthcoming for All Administrative Procedures’ (Fragomen - Immigration attorneys, solicitors, and consultants worldwide - Vietnam: eID Requirement Forthcoming for All Administrative Procedures) <https://www.fragomen.com/insights/vietnam-eid-requirement-forthcoming-for-all-administrative-procedures-introduced.html> accessed 20 December 2025; ‘UNHCR Welcomes Steps by Viet Nam to Tackle Statelessness - Viet Nam | ReliefWeb’ (21 December 2018) <https://reliefweb.int/report/viet-nam/unhcr-welcomes-steps-viet-nam-tackle-statelessness> accessed 20 December 2025; ‘Vietnam’ (La Sección Migrantes y Refugiados) <https://migrants-refugees.va/es/blog/country-profile/vietnam/> accessed 20 December 2025.

        58.^

         Law No. 26/2023/QH15 on Identification (n 1).