Electronic labour contracts in Vietnam: What FDI employers need to know
Vietnam has introduced a legal framework for electronic labour contracts, giving foreign-invested enterprises a digital alternative to paper employment contracts. For FDI employers, the priority is implementation, not the effective date: paper contracts remain fully valid, and those that opt in must work within a regulated framework. Electronic execution involves far more than signing a PDF, and Ecovis explains what this means in practice.
Employers adopting electronic labour contracts should treat this as a compliance exercise and follow the regulated procedure closely. An ordinary signed PDF, email exchange, or generic e-signature workflow may not satisfy Vietnamese compliance requirements.
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What needs to be done when using electronic labour contracts?
If an employer uses electronic labour contracts, the process generally requires:
- The use of a qualified e-contract service provider connected to the electronic labour contract platform
- The verification of the identity and signing authority of the parties
- Legally compliant digital signatures and timestamps
The executed contract must then be submitted to obtain an electronic contract identification code. This identification code is important for official recording and retrieval, as well as for linking to future appendices, amendments, and suspension or termination notices.
Electronic labour contracts are not just a digital HR tool – they are part of a broader compliance and corporate governance framework that international employers should implement with care.
Vu Manh Quynh, Attorney-at-Law, Managing Partner, ECOVIS Vietnam Law, Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam
What should FDI employers review?
FDI employers should review their HR documentation and internal procedures before implementation, including:
- Whether existing paper contracts should remain in use
- Who has the authority to sign employment contracts for the employer
- Whether Vietnamese–English employment contract templates are ready for electronic execution
- Whether the selected e-contract provider meets the platform and technical requirements
- How employee personal data will be processed, stored, and accessed
- Whether internal HR policies support electronic amendments and contract retrieval
Existing paper contracts remain legally valid and do not need to be converted just because the new framework is now operational; migration can be gradual and driven by business needs. To manage amendments or appendices electronically, the original contract and related documents should be reviewed first. Before adopting electronic labour contracts, employers should treat this as an implementation strategy, not a one-off IT task, and review the impact on HR governance, compliance, personal data protection, internal approval procedures and document management. Multinational employers should also confirm the process aligns with their global HR systems, electronic signature platforms and document retention policies. Investors should also seek specific advice based on their industry, ownership structure and investment location in Vietnam.