Every foreign acquirer entering Vietnam faces the same structural fork in the road: set up a subsidiary (a separate Vietnamese legal entity) or register a branch (an extension of the overseas parent). The subsidiary vs branch Vietnam decision determines who holds the land‑use rights, how capital‑gains tax lands on exit, whether the parent’s balance sheet is directly exposed to local liabilities, and how long the approvals process will take. With 2026 updates to Vietnam’s investment‑registration guidance and clarified land‑use rules now in effect, the calculus has shifted for PE sponsors, strategic acquirers and in‑country CFOs structuring bids on land‑heavy targets.
This guide delivers a practical, deal‑level decision framework, not a definitional overview, so you can choose the right vehicle before the SPA is drafted.
Under Vietnam’s Law on Enterprises, a subsidiary is a separate Vietnamese legal person. It can take one of two common forms, a limited liability company (LLC, either single‑member or multi‑member) or a joint‑stock company (JSC). Because the subsidiary carries its own legal personality, it can enter contracts, hold assets, employ staff and, critically for M&A, hold land‑use rights in its own name, provided it satisfies investment‑registration conditions under the Law on Investment.
For acquirers, the subsidiary is the default vehicle when the target involves real‑estate assets, a project requiring an Investment Registration Certificate (IRC), or any business line where ring‑fencing the parent from local creditor claims is non‑negotiable. It is also the only practical route if the buyer intends to exit later via a share sale, because charter‑capital interests in a Vietnamese LLC or JSC are transferable in a single transaction, far cleaner than unwinding a branch.
When to consider setting up a subsidiary in Vietnam:
Formation begins with applying for an IRC (if the project meets investment‑registration thresholds) and an ERC from the provincial Department of Planning and Investment (DPI). The investor must open a direct‑investment capital account at a licensed Vietnamese bank, contribute charter capital within the statutory deadline, and file post‑registration notices. For projects that also require land allocation or lease, provincial People’s Committee approval adds a parallel track. Industry observers report an indicative timeline of four to twelve weeks from first filing to ERC issuance, though land‑allocation steps can extend that significantly. Setup costs are higher than for a branch, but the structure provides a cleaner platform for long‑term operations and eventual transfer.
For a deeper look at approval thresholds, see our guide to Vietnam’s investment law for foreign investors.
A branch of a foreign company in Vietnam is not a separate legal person. It is a legal extension of the overseas head office, authorised to carry on commercial activities within the scope stated on its branch licence. Under the Law on Enterprises and the Commercial Law, a branch can generate revenue, issue invoices, hire local employees and enter contracts, but all obligations flow back to the parent company. The parent bears unlimited liability for every branch commitment in Vietnam.
Branches are most commonly used by foreign trading or service companies that need a limited local presence, for example, a logistics firm managing a warehouse, a consultancy billing local clients, or a distributor importing goods. They are rarely the right vehicle for acquiring a Vietnamese target with significant assets, because the branch cannot hold land‑use rights in its own name and transferring a branch business to a third‑party buyer is procedurally complex.
When a branch may still be appropriate:
The parent company applies to the provincial Department of Industry and Trade (DOIT) for a branch licence, submitting legalised corporate documents, a financial statement showing the parent has been operating for at least five years (for commercial branches under the Commercial Law), and a proposed scope of activities. Once the licence is issued, the branch registers for tax, opens a bank account and can begin operations. Indicative timeline: two to six weeks for straightforward applications. The lower upfront cost is offset by a narrower permitted scope and the absence of land‑holding capacity, limitations that matter greatly in an M&A context.
The table below distils the branch office vs subsidiary M&A choice into ten decision dimensions. Each cell gives a single declarative answer; the detailed analysis follows in the next section.
| Dimension | Subsidiary (LLC / JSC / JV) | Branch (Extension of Foreign Parent) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal status | Separate Vietnamese legal person, limits parent liability to contributed capital. | Not a separate legal person, direct extension of the head office. |
| Can hold land‑use rights | Yes, if the entity holds an IRC and meets Land Law conditions, standard for project‑based M&A. | Generally cannot hold land‑use rights in its own name, problematic for land‑heavy deals. |
| Tax residency & CIT | Vietnamese tax resident; standard CIT at 20% on worldwide income managed in Vietnam; eligible for incentive rates on qualifying projects. | Taxed on Vietnam‑source income at standard CIT rates; no incentive eligibility in most cases. |
| WHT on profit repatriation | Dividends to foreign parent, treaty rates typically reduce the headline rate (often to 5–10% under DTAs). | Profits remitted to head office, generally not subject to a separate dividend WHT, but no DTA dividend‑rate benefit because payments are intra‑entity. |
| Liability exposure | Parent liability capped at charter‑capital contribution, ring‑fenced from subsidiary creditors. | Parent bears unlimited, direct liability for all branch obligations in Vietnam. |
| Approvals & filings (2026) | IRC + ERC from DPI; M&A‑specific filings under revised 2026 guidance; competition‑law notification where thresholds are met. | Branch licence from DOIT; limited investment‑registration pathway; 2026 filing updates may require additional notices for certain activities. |
| Transfer mechanics (exit) | Share or charter‑capital transfer, single SPA, cleaner buyer due diligence, standard capital‑gains tax treatment. | No shares to sell; requires contract‑by‑contract asset/business transfer, significantly more complex and tax‑inefficient. |
| Timing to set up | 4–12 weeks (longer if land allocation is needed). | 2–6 weeks for a standard branch licence. |
| Enforceability & dispute resolution | Subsidiary enters contracts as a local party; can agree to arbitration (VIAC, SIAC, ICC) with clear local enforcement under the Law on Commercial Arbitration. | Branch contracts bind the parent directly; enforcement may require cross‑border recognition steps. |
| Post‑close integration | Subsidiary absorbs employees, VAT registrations and licences directly, smoother operational integration. | Branch scope limits may require restructuring into a subsidiary post‑close, adding cost and delay. |
The pros and cons are asymmetric: the subsidiary wins on nearly every dimension that matters for M&A, land, liability, exit and scope. The branch’s sole structural advantages are speed and lower setup cost, which are decisive only when operations are narrow and no land or long‑term equity position is involved.
Tax is often the dimension that breaks the tie in the subsidiary vs branch Vietnam tax implications debate. The table below summarises the key exposures.
| Tax Item | Subsidiary | Branch |
|---|---|---|
| Standard Corporate Income Tax (CIT) | 20% on taxable income; qualifying investment projects may access preferential rates (10% or 17%) and tax holidays under the Law on Investment. | 20% on Vietnam‑source income; incentive rates generally unavailable. |
| WHT on outbound dividends | Treaty‑dependent, commonly reduced to 5–10% under Vietnam’s DTA network (e.g., treaties with Singapore, Hong Kong SAR, Japan, South Korea). | Profit remittance is intra‑entity, so dividend WHT typically does not apply; however, the head office is taxed on the consolidated profit in its home jurisdiction. |
| Capital gains on share / equity sale | Foreign seller pays CIT (or WHT collected by the buyer) on the gain, currently treated as business income; the acquiring subsidiary itself is not liable. | No shares exist to sell. Asset‑by‑asset transfer may trigger VAT on each taxable asset plus CIT on any gain, often higher aggregate tax. |
| VAT recovery | Full input‑VAT credit and refund eligibility for export‑oriented or investment‑phase activities. | Input‑VAT credit available on branch activities, but refund eligibility may be more limited. |
| Registration / licensing fees | Enterprise registration and investment registration fees (nominal); stamp duty on charter‑capital contribution is not separately levied. | Branch licence fee (nominal); some regulated activities carry additional licence fees. |
The practical takeaway: the subsidiary unlocks CIT incentive rates on qualifying projects and delivers a cleaner capital‑gains exit. The branch avoids dividend WHT on profit remittance but sacrifices incentive eligibility and forces an asset‑transfer route that is typically more tax‑costly on exit.
For any deal where the target holds, or needs, land ownership Vietnam subsidiary structures are effectively mandatory. Under the Land Law, foreign‑invested enterprises (i.e., subsidiaries with an IRC) may be allocated land by the State, lease land directly from the State, or sublease land in industrial or economic zones. The subsidiary holds the Land‑Use Right Certificate (LURC) in its own name, making it transferable together with the entity’s shares on a future exit.
A branch, by contrast, has no standing to be allocated or leased land from the State in its own name. It can lease commercial premises from a private landlord under an ordinary lease, but it cannot hold a LURC. For land‑heavy projects, manufacturing plants, resort developments, renewable‑energy sites, the branch is a structural dead end. This single dimension eliminates the branch option for most real‑estate M&A scenarios in Vietnam.
A subsidiary targeting an M&A transaction typically follows one of two approval pathways: (a) acquiring shares or charter‑capital in an existing Vietnamese company (triggering M&A registration with the DPI and, where thresholds are met, competition‑law notification to the National Competition Commission), or (b) establishing a new subsidiary and contributing capital (requiring an IRC and ERC). The 2026 updates to investment‑registration guidance, discussed in the next section, have refined the documentary requirements and tightened turnaround expectations for provincial DPIs.
A branch follows a simpler establishment path (application to DOIT), but its narrow scope means that if the acquirer’s commercial plans outgrow the branch licence, a subsequent conversion or parallel subsidiary formation is required, duplicating cost and timeline.
The subsidiary’s ring‑fencing of parent liability is a deal‑structuring essential. If the Vietnamese subsidiary faces creditor claims, employee disputes or environmental liabilities, the parent’s exposure is limited to its charter‑capital contribution. A branch offers no such protection: every branch obligation is a direct obligation of the foreign head office, enforceable against the parent’s global assets in principle. For acquirers conducting M&A in sectors with significant operational risk, construction, chemicals, food processing, this alone justifies the subsidiary route.
In a subsidiary structure, an exit is straightforward: the investor sells its shares or charter‑capital interest via a share‑purchase agreement, the buyer files the transfer with the DPI, and the subsidiary continues operating with a new owner. Contracts, employees, licences and land‑use rights remain with the entity.
A branch cannot be “sold” in the same way. The acquirer must negotiate individual transfers of each contract, asset and employee relationship, a process that is slower, creates tax‑triggering events on each asset, and introduces counterparty consent risk. In practice, most advisers recommend converting a branch to a subsidiary before any sale process. That conversion itself takes time and incurs additional registration and tax costs, reinforcing the advice to start with a subsidiary if an exit is foreseeable.
Several regulatory developments in 2026 have shifted the foreign investor structure Vietnam 2026 landscape in ways that directly affect vehicle selection for M&A.
The net effect: the subsidiary remains the dominant M&A vehicle, but 2026 changes demand closer attention to filing details, land‑allocation timelines and IRC coverage at the pre‑bid stage. For details on investment‑law thresholds, see our Vietnam Investment Law 2026 guide.
Use the quick‑reference table below to match your deal priority to the right vehicle, then confirm with the detailed bullet lists that follow.
| If Your Priority Is… | Choose |
|---|---|
| Owning land or running a project that requires an IRC | Subsidiary |
| Speed and minimal local compliance for narrow trading or service activities | Branch |
| Clean post‑close transferability and a future share‑sale exit | Subsidiary |
| Ring‑fencing the parent from local creditor and operational liabilities | Subsidiary |
| Accessing CIT incentive rates on a qualifying investment project | Subsidiary |
| Minimal setup cost for a representative or sales‑support function | Branch (or representative office, depending on activity) |
Choose a subsidiary when:
Choose a branch when:
Scenario 1, PE sponsor acquiring a land‑heavy manufacturing target. The target holds a LURC over a 10‑hectare industrial site. The sponsor plans a five‑year hold. A subsidiary is the only viable vehicle: it preserves the LURC, enables a share‑sale exit, and ring‑fences the fund’s other assets from local claims.
Scenario 2, Regional service firm buying a Vietnamese trading company. The target has no land, a small workforce and stable cash flows. A branch could technically work for ongoing operations, but the acquirer still needs a subsidiary (or direct share purchase of the target) to execute the acquisition cleanly, asset‑by‑asset transfer through a branch would be slower and more tax‑costly.
Scenario 3, Foreign operator acquiring a regulated fintech platform. The target operates under a conditional business licence requiring an IRC. A branch cannot hold such a licence. The acquirer must form or acquire a subsidiary and obtain an updated IRC reflecting the new ownership, 2026 guidance makes it essential to confirm post‑close IRC coverage before signing the SPA.
This is not a decision to make from a template. Engage Vietnam‑qualified M&A counsel in any of the following situations:
Bring these documents to your first meeting with counsel: the target’s current ERC, IRC (if any), LURC or land lease, latest audited financials, the proposed ownership structure diagram, and your indicative timeline. To find experienced Vietnam M&A counsel, use our lawyer directory and filter by Vietnam and M&A.
The subsidiary vs branch Vietnam decision is not a close call for most M&A transactions. The subsidiary wins on land ownership, liability ring‑fencing, exit flexibility, CIT incentive access and post‑close integration. The branch is viable only for narrow, non‑land‑dependent trading or service operations where speed outweighs all other considerations. With 2026 investment‑registration and land‑allocation updates adding new filing details to the subsidiary pathway, pre‑bid due diligence on the target’s IRC coverage and land status has become even more critical. Structure the vehicle correctly before you bid, the cost of retrofitting a branch into a subsidiary after closing is measured in months, tax triggers and deal risk that no acquirer needs.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Hien Truc Nguyen at VILAF, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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