Vietnam Entry Requirements 2026: Health Declaration + Digital Arrival Card for Da Nang, Ho Chi Minh City & Hanoi

Two separate steps from July 1, 2026, untangled so you breeze through immigration.

Updated June 2026
The 30-second version

StartsJuly 1, 2026 (health declaration) — Digital Arrival Card rolls out airport by airport
Health declarationEveryone (arrival, departure, transit) — within 7 days — online or paper — free
Digital Arrival CardForeign visitors — within 72 hours of arrival — online only — free — emails you a QR code
Official siteprearrival.immigration.gov.vn (watch for paid ‘agent’ copycats)
Arrival card live atHo Chi Minh City & Hanoi now — Da Nang not yet
Da Nang (DAD)Health declaration only (Digital Arrival Card not rolled out there)
VisaSeparate, and depends on your nationality — many travelers need an e-visa

1. What actually changes on July 1, 2026

Two brand-new, completely separate steps land on July 1, 2026 — and the big mistake is treating them as one thing.

① Health declaration
Everyone crossing the border — arriving, leaving, or transiting — at every air, land, and sea entry point. Yes, that includes Da Nang. Online or on paper, and it’s free.
② Digital Arrival Card
Foreign visitors pre-submit their info online before they fly. This one is rolling out airport by airport: live at Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi, not yet at Da Nang.

Different agencies run them, different laws back them, and they apply to different people. Keep them in two separate mental boxes and everything else falls into place. The quick-scan table below covers both at a glance.

2. Health declaration vs Digital Arrival Card, side by side

Same trip, two unrelated forms. Here’s how they line up.

Health declarationDigital Arrival Card
What it isA health questionnaire for border crossingPre-arrival info that replaces the old paper NA1 card
Who runs itMinistry of HealthImmigration Department (Ministry of Public Security)
Who files itEveryone — any nationality, any visa, any airlineForeign visitors (Vietnamese passport holders and same-day transit are exempt)
WhenWithin 7 days of your arrival, departure, or transitWithin 72 hours before you arrive
HowOnline or paper formOnline only, at the official site
CostFreeFree
Where it appliesEvery entry point, including Da NangOnly at airports where it’s live (Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi now)
If you skip itIt’s a legal requirement — expect delays and extra health screening at the checkpointPossible delays or refusal at immigration

3. The health declaration, in detail

Everyone files this from July 1, 2026 — and it covers people leaving and transiting, not just arrivals.

It’s backed by Vietnam’s disease prevention law and Decree 165/2026/NĐ-CP. The form asks about your current health, any symptoms, and recent travel history. It comes in English and Vietnamese, and you can submit it electronically or on paper — the paper version is the official annex form, handed out by airlines and at border counters.

Timing is generous: fill it in within 7 days of your arrival, departure, or transit date. On arrival, expect a quick temperature and quarantine check. If you have symptoms, staff may review your form and ask a few questions (usually sorted within a couple of hours). Keep any vaccination or medical paperwork handy, just in case they ask.

Heads up: this isn’t just an arrival thing — departing and transiting travelers file it too. The declaration is a legal requirement, so skipping it can mean delays at the checkpoint, extra health screening, and trouble getting in.

4. The Digital Arrival Card, in detail

This online form replaces the old paper NA1 card, and every foreign visitor at a live airport needs to file it — separately from any visa.

The Immigration Department runs it. You complete it at the official site, prearrival.immigration.gov.vn, anytime within 72 hours before you arrive (file too early and the system won’t take it). You’ll enter your passport details, your name exactly as printed in the passport, your flight and arrival date, your accommodation address in Vietnam, and an email. A few minutes later you get a QR code by email — show that at immigration.

Who’s exempt: Vietnamese passport holders and same-day airport transit passengers. For minors, a parent or guardian files on their behalf.

The Digital Arrival Card is not a visa. You still need your visa or visa-free entitlement sorted out separately — even e-visa holders complete this card. The visa side is covered in our e-visa walkthrough.
The official card is free, and prearrival.immigration.gov.vn is the only official domain. If a site charges you a “service fee,” it’s a copycat.

5. Where it’s live: airport-by-airport status

The Digital Arrival Card is rolling out in stages. As of June 2026, here’s the picture — but it moves fast, so confirm your own arrival airport before you fly.

Airport / cityDigital Arrival CardHealth declaration
Tan Son Nhat (Ho Chi Minh City, SGN)Live (since Apr 15, 2026)Required
Noi Bai (Hanoi, HAN)Live (since Jun 10, 2026)Required
Phu Quoc (PQC)Live (since Jun 1, 2026)Required
Da Nang (DAD)Not yet liveRequired
Land & sea bordersNot yet liveRequired
Flying into Da Nang (DAD)? The Digital Arrival Card isn’t rolled out there yet — you only need the health declaration. It’s expected to come, but there’s no confirmed date. Always check the official portal for your arrival airport before departure. (Note: the health declaration applies at every border from July 1, Da Nang included — this table is only about the Digital Arrival Card.)

6. Your before-you-go checklist

Do these five things in order and you’re set.

1. Sort your visa
Check whether your nationality needs an e-visa or qualifies visa-free. Details in our Vietnam visa rundown.
2. Digital Arrival Card (if your airport is live)
File at prearrival.immigration.gov.vn within 72 hours of arrival, then save the QR code.
3. Health declaration
File online within 7 days, or be ready to fill the paper form on the plane.
4. Back it up
Screenshot and print your QR code and any confirmations.
5. Double-check your name
Make sure everything you entered matches your passport exactly.

7. Filling in the Digital Arrival Card, step by step

It’s a short online form — five minutes if you have your details ready.

  1. Go to the official site, prearrival.immigration.gov.vn.
  2. Enter your passport info, flight number and arrival date, accommodation address, and email.
  3. Submit the form.
  4. Open the confirmation email and save the QR code it sends you.
Have your hotel name and address plus your flight number on hand before you start. Then screenshot and print the QR code as a backup — phone batteries die at the worst moments.
💡 If the site won’t load
The official portal is brand new and can be slow or unreachable from outside Vietnam. Try a different browser or network (mobile data often works), or come back a little later. Best of all, finish it before you fly and screenshot the QR, because airport WiFi is patchy. If you still can’t, you can fill it in on arrival, but leave extra time; the health declaration can also be done on paper.

8. City-by-city notes

What you actually need depends on where you land.

Ho Chi Minh City — Tan Son Nhat (SGN)
Both forms: Digital Arrival Card + health declaration. Planning time down in the south? Get the card done before you fly.
Hanoi — Noi Bai (HAN)
Both forms: Digital Arrival Card + health declaration. Same drill if you’re headed up north.
Da Nang — Da Nang Int’l (DAD)
Health declaration only for now; the Digital Arrival Card isn’t live here yet (confirm officially). More on the central coast.

Phu Quoc (PQC) is live too, so if that’s your gateway, file the card before you fly.

9. Common mistakes to avoid

Most slip-ups come from copycat sites and bad timing. Here’s what trips people up.

Paid “agents” and fake sites. The official Digital Arrival Card is free, and prearrival.immigration.gov.vn is the only official domain. Fake visa sites are common too — see our rundown on travel rip-offs before you book anything.
Missing the 72-hour window. You can’t file the arrival card too early — the system only opens 72 hours before arrival.
No saved QR code. Don’t rely on finding the email at the counter. Screenshot and print it.
Name mismatch. Your entries must match your passport exactly.
Forgetting departure and transit. The health declaration covers leaving and transiting, not just arriving.
Confusing the card with a visa. The Digital Arrival Card is not a visa — you need both.

10. How this fits with your visa

Neither form replaces a visa. They sit on top of whatever visa or visa-free entitlement you already have.

Visa rules depend on your nationality — many travelers need an e-visa, while some passports get visa-free entry for a set number of days. Whatever your situation, you still complete the health declaration, and the Digital Arrival Card too if your airport is live. Sort the visa side first with our e-visa step-by-step.

11. After you land: what happens at the airport

Quarantine check, then immigration, then you’re through.

First you pass the health screening (a temperature and quarantine check). At immigration, you show your Digital Arrival Card QR code — at airports where it’s live — along with your passport. Once you’re stamped in, grab your bags and go.

For the ride from the airport into town, see how getting around works in our ride-hailing primer. For data the moment you land, an eSIM means you skip the hunt for a SIM counter. And if you want the big picture for the whole trip, our complete Vietnam planner ties it all together.
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Vietnam entry FAQ for 2026

Q. From July 2026, what do I actually have to do to enter Vietnam?

Two things, depending on where you land. Everyone files a health declaration (within 7 days, online or on paper, free). On top of that, if you arrive at an airport where the Digital Arrival Card is live — Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi right now — you also file that card online within 72 hours of arrival. Both are free and neither is a visa.

Q. Are the health declaration and the Digital Arrival Card the same thing?

No — they’re completely separate. The health declaration is run by the Ministry of Health, applies to everyone at every border, and can be filed on paper. The Digital Arrival Card is run by the Immigration Department, applies only to foreign visitors at live airports, and is online only. Different agencies, different laws, different scope. You may need both.

Q. I’m flying to Da Nang — do I need the Digital Arrival Card?

Not right now. The Digital Arrival Card isn’t rolled out at Da Nang yet, so you only need the health declaration. It’s expected to arrive eventually, but there’s no confirmed date — so check the official portal for your arrival airport before you fly.

Q. How much does the Digital Arrival Card cost?

It’s free. The only official site is prearrival.immigration.gov.vn. If a website charges you a fee to file it, it’s a third-party copycat, not the real thing. Same goes for fake visa sites — be careful where you enter your details.

Q. When do I fill each form in?

The Digital Arrival Card opens within 72 hours before you arrive — not earlier, or the system rejects it. The health declaration can be filed within 7 days of your arrival, departure, or transit. So in practice, the health declaration is the one you can knock out first.

Q. What happens if I don’t do them?

The health declaration is a legal requirement, so skipping it can mean delays at the checkpoint, extra health screening, and trouble getting in. Skipping the Digital Arrival Card where it’s required can mean delays or even refusal at immigration. Neither is worth the hassle when both are free and quick.

Q. I already have an e-visa — do I still need the Digital Arrival Card?

Yes. The e-visa and the Digital Arrival Card are separate steps. Having an e-visa doesn’t file the card for you, and filing the card doesn’t get you a visa. If your arrival airport is live, you complete both.

Q. Can I just do it on paper?

The health declaration, yes — paper is accepted, and airlines or border counters hand out the form. The Digital Arrival Card is online only. The upside: once you’ve filed the Digital Arrival Card, you don’t need the old paper NA1 card at all.

Q. Do I file the health declaration when I leave Vietnam too?

Yes. The health declaration covers arrival, departure, and transit — all three. A lot of travelers forget the departure part, so plan to file it again within 7 days of your flight home.

Q. Which website is the official one?

For the Digital Arrival Card, it’s prearrival.immigration.gov.vn — and only that. Anything charging a “service fee” or promising to speed things up is a paid agent or a scam. The official card is free.

Got entry sorted? Pull the rest of your trip together — visas, getting around, where to base yourself, and what to do in each region — with our complete Vietnam travel planner.

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