
Vietnam has officially left the crypto ‘Gray Zone’. In a decisive vote of 14 June, the National Assembly adopted the Digital Technology Industry Act, a radical legislative package that recognizes and regulates digital assets in one of the world’s most active crypto markets for the first time.
The law, which comes into force on January 1, 2026, ends for years of regulatory Limbo and aims to introduce changes such as a license regime for trade fairs, AML, and tax rules made to measure on digital assets. It positions Vietnam as the latest and potentially largest regulated cryptomarket in Southeast Asia.
Two asset classes, one national strategy
Under the new framework, Vietnam divides digital assets into two categories: “crypto assets” and “virtual assets”. The distinction reflects an attempt to balance innovation with control.
Crypto assets, including tokens with financial functions, will be subject to licenses, capital requirements and KYC rules. Virtual assets, such as in-game tokens or loyalty points, fall under looser obligations.
The law will probably be required that exchanges have a permit, have at least capital and maintain local offices. Operators without a permit are confronted with fines, where subdeceses cover tax, enforcement and technical compliance at a certain moment.
Regulatory push follow Fatf -pressure
The move comes after Vietnam was added to the “Gray List” of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) for AML/CTF enforcement lack of enforcement in 2023. That mention of limited cross-border capital flows and the growing fintech ecosystem of Vietnam endangered.
With the new crypto legislation that assumes protection in FATF style, Hanoi points out his intention to be removed quickly.
Vietnam ranks #5 worldwide in the acceptance of Crypto, with around 17 million holders and estimated companies of $ 100 billion, according to industry estimates. The absence of clear rules had delayed the institutional interest and left the domestic innovation in the dark.
That is now set to change. Capital comes with clarity: local developers get legal protection, foreign stock markets can request licenses and VC companies get confidence that outputs are not being caught in the dead end of the regulations.
The compliance until January 2026 gives everyone time to prepare for an expected peak in registrations of legal entities and recruitments per quarter.
A new hub in the making?
Vietnam’s ambitions go beyond compliance. The law offers incentives, including R&D tax benefits, blockchain pilot sandboxes and subsidies for highly skilled technical labor.
It is part of a broader urge to grow the digital economy of the countrywhich would be expected to reach $ 45 billion in gross merchandise value (GMV) by the end of the yearAccording to the Google-Temasek e-economy report.
Observers say that Vietnam could join Singapore and Thailand as a regional crypto -hub, especially if other ASEAN nations are left behind. With a youthful, technically skilled population and a robust developer community, Vietnam access in regulated crypto can again draw the Web3 card of the region.
Important questions remain. The law is wide, but light on details. Sub-declessions that owe in the next 180 days will determine how taxes are levied, how custody works and how Defi-platforms and Stablecoins are treated. As the financial authorities race to build internal expertise, enforcement capacity is also a concern.
Yet Hanoi’s message is clear: Regulation, no limitation, the path is ahead.
Timeline: how Vietnam became here
- March 1, 2025: Premier Directive orders the cramework of the crypto completed.
- May 9, 2025: National meeting begins the final debate.
- June 14, 2025: Law adopted in the final NA -session -mood.
- January 1, 2026: Law goes into force.
By replacing ambiguity with architecture, Vietnam bets that a recognized, control-bound crypto industry can become a pillar of its broader digital economy and a magnet for global capital.
