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vietnamese passport

NNg26

Hello,

My husband is born in Vietnam but he got French citizen from his grand father who was in 1914/1918 war.
He went to France at 12 Years old.
In 2011 he got Vietnamese passport from the Vietnam consulate in Geneva with citizen Vietnamese writing on.
He has a french passport too!

We live now in Thailand and we think to go to Vietnam and get a job there.
Does he need a visa and work permit  to live in Vietnam.

Thank you for your help.

Nadine

See also

Visas for VietnamTourist visa in VietnamPortrait photo and passport photo evisa online formGolden VisaLittle Visa confusion, how does this work?
eodmatt

If he has a full Vietnamese passport as a Vietnamese citizen he will not need a visa or work permit.

NNg26

thank you for your answer. Nice to have help.....

So he has double citizen Vietnamese and french?

And for me his wife, can i work in Vietnam? Does i need a visa and which visa?

THIGV

You can come on a tourist visa but to stay for a while you need more than that.  You should read the threads on VEC and TRC.  To work you will need a Work Permit.

Also if you are staying a while, as a Vietnamese citizen, your husband must be registered in a Hộ khẩu or family registry.  I guess he could establish his own book if you intend to stay indefinitely but it would probably be easier to piggy back on their book if he has any living relatives.  He also will need a Vietnamese National ID card.  After that he can sponsor you for the VEC or TRC.  The Hộ khẩu system is an idea imported years ago from Imperial China and is a somewhat effective means of governmental population and political control.  It should be simple but it's not.  Unless he has a lot of knowledgeable relatives to guide you it might be best to see a lawyer.

Coincidentally, I once posed this question to my wife, of how a Vietnamese citizen who returns to the country with no residence and no living relatives obtains a Hộ khẩu and she couldn't even get her head around the concept.  For Vietnamese, to have no family and no hometown is incomprehensible.