Why Not Just Go to Court?
Litigation in Vietnam’s state courts can be unpredictable for foreign entities. Judges in provincial courts often lack specialized experience in complex commercial matters like construction engineering (FIDIC), maritime logistics, or cross-border finance. Furthermore, court judgments are public (risking trade secrets) and, crucially, difficult to enforce abroad.
Arbitration offers four specific advantages in Vietnam:
Specialization: You pick the judge. For a construction dispute, you can appoint an engineer-arbitrator rather than a generalist judge.
Language: In court, proceedings must be in Vietnamese. In arbitration, you can agree to conduct proceedings in English, saving thousands in translation costs and reducing misinterpretation risks.
Finality: An arbitral award is final. There are no appeals on the merits. In contrast, a court case can drag through first instance, appeal, and cassation procedures for 3–5 years.
Enforceability: Vietnam is a signatory to the New York Convention. A VIAC award is technically enforceable in over 170 countries. A Vietnamese court judgment is generally enforceable only in Vietnam.
Drafting the Clause
The arbitration clause is often treated as “boilerplate” text pasted in at the last minute. This is a mistake. In Vietnam, the validity of an arbitration agreement is interpreted strictly. A vague clause (e.g., “disputes shall be settled by the economic court or arbitration”) can be declared invalid, forcing you into the very state litigation you tried to avoid.
Your lawyer’s role is not just to copy-paste, but to “bulletproof” this clause against future delay tactics.
The Golden Rule: Start Standard, Then Customize
Always start with the institution’s official model text. This signals to any judge that the parties clearly intended to arbitrate.
VIAC Model Clause: “Any dispute arising out of or in relation with this contract shall be resolved by arbitration at the Vietnam International Arbitration Centre (VIAC) in accordance with its Rules of Arbitration.”
The “Variables”: What You Must Define and Why
A lawyer should tailor the following specific elements to your project’s risk profile:
The Seat of Arbitration: A Strategic Jurisdiction, Not Just a Meeting Place
One of the most critical yet frequently misunderstood elements of the arbitration clause is the “Seat of Arbitration.” It is vital that business leaders and in-house counsel distinguish the legal seat from the physical venue. While the venue is merely where the hearings take place—which can be a hotel conference room in Singapore, an office in Hanoi, or even a virtual platform—the seat determines the legal “nationality” of your arbitration and, crucially, which country’s courts have the power to supervise the proceedings.
For contracts involving Vietnamese assets or operations, specifying “Hanoi, Vietnam” or “Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam” as the seat carries significant procedural weight. Choosing a Vietnamese seat places the arbitration under the framework of Vietnam’s Law on Commercial Arbitration, meaning the resulting decision is legally classified as a “domestic arbitral award.”
The Enforcement Advantage of a Vietnamese Seat The strategic value of a domestic award lies in its enforcement speed. A domestic award issued by the Vietnam International Arbitration Centre (VIAC) does not require a separate recognition process by a Vietnamese court before it can be enforced. If the losing party fails to pay, you can proceed directly to the state’s Civil Judgment Enforcement Agency to seize assets. This bypasses a lengthy judicial hurdle.
The Complexity of a Foreign Seat Conversely, if you designate a foreign seat—such as Singapore (SIAC) or Hong Kong (HKIAC)—you create a “foreign arbitral award,” even if the dispute is entirely about a factory in Vietnam. Before you can touch any assets located in Vietnam, you must first take that foreign award to a Vietnamese court and apply for “Recognition and Enforcement.” This adds a layer of judicial scrutiny that typically takes 12 to 24 months. During this phase, the Vietnamese court reviews the award to ensure it complies with local laws and “fundamental principles,” a broad standard that has historically been used to delay or block enforcement. Therefore, unless the counterparty has substantial assets outside of Vietnam, choosing a foreign seat often adds unnecessary time and legal risk to the recovery process.
When to Choose Vietnam? The decision ultimately rests on the location of the assets. If your counterparty is a Vietnamese entity with 100% of its real estate and capital in Vietnam, selecting Vietnam as the seat is often the most pragmatic choice to ensure a direct path to enforcement. With the recent 2025 legislative reforms concentrating judicial oversight in specialized courts in Hanoi, Da Nang, and Ho Chi Minh City, the historical risks of local protectionism in domestic arbitration have been significantly mitigated, making the “home turf” option safer than in previous decades.
The Language: Avoiding the “Translation Trap”
What to write: “The language of the arbitration shall be [English].”
Of all the logistical details in a contract, the language clause is the most frequently underestimated, yet it possesses the greatest potential to explode your legal costs. Under Article 10 of Vietnam’s Law on Commercial Arbitration (2010), the rules are strict: for purely domestic disputes (between two Vietnamese entities), the language must be Vietnamese. However, for disputes involving a “foreign element” (e.g., a foreign investor), the parties are free to choose the language.
The danger lies in silence. If your contract involves a foreign element but fails to specify a language, the Arbitral Tribunal has the statutory discretion to determine the language of the proceedings. If the Tribunal chooses Vietnamese—which is common if the presiding arbitrator is a local national—you will face a logistical nightmare. Every email, technical drawing, witness statement, and internal report must be translated into Vietnamese to be admissible. This not only causes massive delays but can cost tens of thousands of dollars in translation fees. Furthermore, legal arguments often lose nuance in translation. By explicitly locking in “English” (or your preferred language) at the drafting stage, you ensure that the battle is fought in a language your team understands, saving both time and money.
The Number of Arbitrators: Balancing Cost against Expertise
What to write: “The dispute shall be resolved by [one / three] arbitrators.”
This decision is a trade-off between speed and security. If you do not specify a number, the default rule under the VIAC Rules is often a three-member tribunal, which may be excessive for smaller disputes.
The Case for Three Arbitrators: For complex, high-stakes disputes (typically exceeding $1 million USD), a three-member panel is the gold standard. This structure allows each party to nominate one arbitrator. While these nominees must remain independent, they ensure that at least one person on the panel understands your specific cultural or industrial context. These two nominees then select a third “Presiding Arbitrator” (the Chair). This “wingman” system acts as a check and balance, reducing the risk of a rogue decision by a single individual who might misunderstand a critical technical detail.
The Case for a Sole Arbitrator: For smaller commercial disputes, such as straightforward debt recovery or contracts under $500,000 USD, a three-person tribunal is often overkill. It is significantly more expensive (you pay three fees instead of one) and slower, as coordinating the calendars of three busy professionals can delay hearings by months. Specifying a “Sole Arbitrator” in the clause can reduce administrative costs by approximately 30% and streamline the timeline significantly.
Qualification of Arbitrators: The “Expert” Edge
One of arbitration’s distinct advantages over litigation is the ability to choose a judge with specific subject-matter expertise. In a state court, a judge who spent the morning hearing a divorce case might preside over your complex construction dispute in the afternoon. In arbitration, you can ensure the decision-maker speaks your industry’s language.
Standard model clauses do not mention qualifications, but you should consider adding them for specialized projects. For instance, in a renewable energy joint venture, your lawyer might add: “The arbitrators shall have at least 10 years of experience in the energy sector.” This prevents the opposing party from appointing a generic commercial lawyer who may lack the technical literacy to understand engineering evidence. However, a word of caution: do not be too specific. A clause requiring “a British engineer with 20 years of experience in hydro-power residing in Hanoi” might make it impossible to find a candidate, rendering the arbitration clause “pathological” (defective) and potentially invalid . Keep the requirements broad enough to ensure a pool of available candidates while narrow enough to guarantee competence.
Strategic Decision: When to Choose Vietnam (VIAC) vs. Foreign Arbitration (SIAC)?
One of the most consequential decisions a foreign investor must make is whether to resolve disputes on “home turf” in Vietnam or on “neutral ground” abroad, typically in Singapore. While international counsel often default to recommending the Singapore International Arbitration Centre (SIAC) due to its perceived neutrality and maturity, this choice can inadvertently create significant enforcement hurdles if the commercial reality does not match the legal strategy. For businesses with operations and assets concentrated entirely within Vietnam, choosing a local seat under the Vietnam International Arbitration Centre (VIAC) is increasingly the superior strategic option.
The decision should primarily be driven by the physical location of the counterparty’s assets. If your Vietnamese partner holds 100% of their capital, real estate, and factories within Vietnam, winning an arbitration in Singapore is only the first half of the battle. A “foreign award” issued by SIAC has no immediate legal effect inside Vietnam; it must first undergo a rigorous “Recognition and Enforcement” procedure before the Vietnamese courts. This process adds a layer of judicial scrutiny that typically lasts between 12 to 24 months, during which the Vietnamese court reviews the foreign award to ensure it does not violate “fundamental principles of Vietnamese law”—a broad and somewhat ambiguous standard that has historically been used to block the enforcement of foreign awards. Consequently, a foreign investor might spend years and significant capital winning a case in Singapore, only to face a retrial of sorts during the recognition phase in Vietnam.
By contrast, selecting VIAC with a Vietnamese seat yields a “domestic award.” Crucially, domestic awards skip the recognition phase entirely. A winning party can proceed directly to the Civil Judgment Enforcement Agency to seize assets, cutting out years of potential delay and avoiding the “fundamental principles” review that foreign awards must navigate. For contracts where the counterparty has no offshore assets to pursue, the efficiency of this direct enforcement path often outweighs the perceived neutrality benefits of Singapore.
Investors have historically hesitated to use VIAC due to a fear of “home court advantage”—specifically, the risk that a local Vietnamese court might arbitrarily annul (cancel) a VIAC award to protect a domestic company. However, the legal landscape in 2025 has shifted dramatically to mitigate this risk. The government has recognized that judicial inconsistency deters FDI and has responded with Resolution No. 81/2025/UBTVQH15. Effective July 1, 2025, this reform stripped general provincial courts of the power to annul arbitral awards, concentrating this jurisdiction exclusively in the specialized People’s Courts of Hanoi, Da Nang, and Ho Chi Minh City. This centralization ensures that awards are reviewed by the country’s most experienced and commercially minded judges, drastically reducing the likelihood of “hometown” protectionism or errors by inexperienced local judges.
Furthermore, the data supports a growing pro-arbitration trend within the Vietnamese judiciary. Statistics from the 2011–2024 period indicate that Vietnamese courts now reject approximately 76% of applications to set aside arbitral awards. This high survival rate suggests that while the risk of judicial intervention exists, the burden of proof has shifted firmly against the party seeking to overturn the award.
In summary, the choice of venue is a calculation of enforcement security. If the contract is of extremely high value (exceeding $50 million) or involves complex offshore financing structures where assets are distributed across multiple jurisdictions, the neutrality and global weight of a SIAC award make it the logical choice. However, for the vast majority of operational disputes where the counterparty’s assets are locked inside Vietnam, choosing VIAC provides the fastest, most direct, and increasingly secure path to actual financial recovery.
The Process: A Step-by-Step Timeline
For a business executive accustomed to court litigation, the arbitration lifecycle can feel unfamiliar. It is faster, more front-loaded, and unforgiving of delay. Under the VIAC Rules of Arbitration (2017)—which remain the operational standard pending the full adoption of the 2025 revisions—the process is designed to move a dispute from filing to final award in approximately 12 to 18 months.
The following guide breaks down the critical pivots where cases are won or lost.
Phase 1: The Trigger – (Days 1–30)
The process initiates when the Claimant files a Request for Arbitration. Unlike state court litigation, where filing fees are nominal and paid later, VIAC requires the Claimant to advance 100% of the arbitration costs (based on the dispute value) immediately upon filing. If these fees are not transferred, the case does not start. This “pay to play” model requires significant upfront liquidity but serves as a powerful filter against frivolous claims.
As of June 2024, VIAC launched its eCase platform. Parties can now file documents, pay fees, and track procedural orders digitally, significantly reducing the administrative drag that historically slowed down the initial phase.
Phase 2: The Defence Trap – The 30-Day Hard Deadline (Days 30–60)
Once VIAC verifies the Request, it sends a Notice to the Respondent. This triggers the most critical deadline in the entire proceedings. The Respondent has exactly 30 days to file a Statement of Defence.
Crucially, this is also the window to nominate an arbitrator. Many foreign investors, accustomed to the slow pace of Vietnamese courts, mistakenly ignore this initial notice. This is a fatal strategic error. If the Respondent fails to nominate an arbitrator within these 30 days, they do not stop the process; instead, they lose their right to choose a judge. The VIAC President will appoint an arbitrator on their behalf—stripping the Respondent of their most valuable advantage in arbitration.
Phase 3: Forming the Tribunal (Month 2–3)
Once both sides have nominated their arbitrators, these two individuals have 15 days to agree on a third person to act as the Presiding Arbitrator (Chair). The Chair holds the swing vote and manages the procedural timetable. If the two nominees cannot agree—which is common in hostile disputes—the VIAC President will step in to appoint the Chair to prevent deadlock.
Phase 4: The Proceedings – No “Discovery” Surprise (Months 3–9)
Business leaders fearing US-style litigation should be reassured: there is no massive “discovery” process in Vietnam. You cannot demand millions of internal emails from the other side to fish for evidence. The process follows a civil law tradition where parties mostly rely on the evidence they already possess. While the Tribunal has the power to request documents or summon witnesses, it cannot send marshals to raid an office.
If you fear the counterparty is liquidating assets to make themselves “judgment proof,” the Tribunal can issue Interim Measures (e.g., freezing bank accounts or prohibiting asset transfers). While effective on paper, enforcing these orders often requires a second step of assistance from state courts, which counsel must manage carefully.
Phase 5: The Hearing and Final Award (Months 10–12)
The dispute culminates in a hearing, which is conducted in camera (private). Unlike a public trial, only the parties and their lawyers are present. The Tribunal typically adopts an inquisitive style, actively questioning witnesses and experts rather than just listening to lawyers’ speeches.
Under VIAC Rules (Article 32), the Tribunal is required to issue the Final Award within 30 days of the last hearing. This is a “hard” deadline designed to prevent the decision paralysis often seen in local courts. The award is final and binding from the moment of issuance; there is no appeal on the merits.
Summary of Key Milestones
| Stage | Action | Typical Timing | Strategic Note |
| 1. Filing | Claimant files Request & pays fees | Day 0 | Full costs must be paid upfront. |
| 2. Notice | VIAC notifies Respondent | Day 10 | The “clock” officially starts. |
| 3. Defence | Respondent files Defence & nominates Arbitrator | Day 40 | Missing this 30-day window forfeits the right to pick a judge. |
| 4. Formation | Co-arbitrators select the Chair | Day 55-60 | If deadlocked (15 days), VIAC appoints the Chair. |
| 5. Submissions | Detailed arguments & evidence exchange | Month 3 – 6 | Limited discovery; rely on your own documentation. |
| 6. Hearing | Private oral arguments | Month 7 – 9 | Confidential setting; no public record. |
| 7. Award | Tribunal issues Final Award | Month 10 – 12 | Must be issued within 30 days of hearing closure. |
Note: Timelines are estimates for a standard procedure. Complex construction or energy disputes can extend to 18–24 months, while Expedited Procedures for smaller claims can conclude in under 6 months.
The 2025 Game-Changers: Two Major Reforms
The legal landscape for dispute resolution in Vietnam has shifted dramatically in the last 12 months, effectively rewriting the rules of engagement for foreign investors. Two landmark resolutions have addressed the market’s most persistent concerns: the inconsistency of local courts and the lack of absolute finality in arbitral awards.
Centralized Judicial Oversight (Resolution No. 81/2025)
Effective July 1, 2025, the government fundamentally restructured the relationship between the judiciary and arbitration. Previously, the power to set aside (annul) an arbitral award theoretically rested with any provincial court where the debtor resided. This often meant that complex international awards were reviewed by inexperienced judges in remote provinces who might be susceptible to local protectionism. Resolution No. 81/2025/UBTVQH15 has stripped these general provincial courts of this power, concentrating jurisdiction exclusively in the People’s Courts of Hanoi, Da Nang, and Ho Chi Minh City.
Article 2. Territorial jurisdiction of provincial People’s Courts over requests for annulment of arbitral awards and registration of ad-hoc arbitral awards
1. The provincial People’s Courts which exercise their jurisdiction to process requests for annulment of arbitral awards and registration of ad-hoc arbitral awards comprise:
a) People’s Court of Hanoi City;
b) People’s Court of Da Nang City;
c) People’s Court of Ho Chi Minh City.
2. The territorial jurisdiction of provincial People’s Courts specified in clause 1 of this Article over requests for annulment of arbitral awards and registration of ad-hoc arbitral awards is provided for as follows:
…
b) The People’s Court of Da Nang City has territorial jurisdiction over 07 provinces and cities, including Da Nang City, Hue City; provinces of Dak Lak, Gia Lai, Khanh Hoa, Quang Ngai and Quang Tri;
c) The People’s Court of Ho Chi Minh City has territorial jurisdiction over 09 provinces and cities, including Can Tho City, Ho Chi Minh City; provinces of An Giang, Ca Mau, Dong Nai, Dong Thap, Lam Dong, Tay Ninh and Vinh Long;
This centralization is a strategic game-changer. It ensures that your award is reviewed by a specialized bench of judges in Vietnam’s economic hubs—judges who are trained in international commercial law and accustomed to cross-border disputes. By removing the “hometown judge” variable, the risk of an award being overturned on arbitrary procedural grounds has been significantly reduced, providing investors with a level of enforcement predictability that was previously absent.
The “Waiver of Annulment” (Resolution No. 222/2025 – IFC)
Perhaps the most radical development in Vietnam’s legal history is the introduction of the Waiver of Recourse mechanism under Resolution No. 222/2025/QH15, passed by the National Assembly on June 27, 2025. This resolution establishes the legal framework for the new International Financial Center (IFC) in Ho Chi Minh City and Da Nang.
Modeled on the pro-arbitration laws of jurisdictions like Switzerland and Belgium, the Resolution introduces a mechanism previously absent in Vietnamese law: the statutory right to opt-out of judicial review entirely.
The Rule: Under Article 30, for disputes involving IFC members (or between members and external investors) that are resolved at the International Arbitration Center of the International Financial Center, the law now explicitly permits parties to agree in writing to waive their right to challenge the award in court.
Article 30, Clause 3: “The disputing parties have the right to agree to waive the right to request the court to annul the decision to recognize the successful conciliation or the legally effective arbitral award… The court shall not resolve the request to annul the award or decision of the Arbitration Council when the parties have agreed in writing to waive this right.”
This provision effectively removes Vietnamese courts from the equation entirely for these specific disputes. Under this regime, once the tribunal issues its decision, it is deemed “final and effective” immediately. The losing party cannot delay enforcement by launching a set-aside procedure in local courts, as the court is statutorily barred from hearing such requests. For global financial institutions and major investors, this waiver mechanism offers the “gold standard” of legal certainty, guaranteeing that the commercial decision of the arbitrators cannot be second-guessed by the state judiciary.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Commercial laws in Vietnam change rapidly; always consult with qualified local counsel before drafting contracts.