Cross your fingers for Vu The Binh, deputy chairman of the Vietnam Tourism Association (VITA), who has called on the government to waive visa fees for all international tourists for the second half of this year. Any international tourists who visit Vietnam between July and December should enjoy a zero visa fee, whereas local tour organizers who join a national campaign to boost tourism should pay zero value-added tax for one year, Binh suggested. These solutions are crucial to improving Vietnam’s troubled tourism industry, which has repeatedly suffered declining tourist arrival numbers over the last 11 months, he said at a VITA conference held to work out “urgent solutions” to win back international tourists in Hanoi on Monday. Vacationers currently have to meet strict requirements, complete complicated procedures and pay high fees to get a visa for their Vietnam trip, attendees said at the event, where relaxing visa requirements topped the agenda. Vietnam waived visa fees for all international tourists in late 2009, when the country’s tourist arrival numbers were slumping, according to the VITA deputy chairman. “The visa fee waiver then benefited more than 100,000 international holidaymakers and the arrival numbers surged 36 percent in 2010,” Binh added. It is unclear, however, whether Binh and his association will lodge an official proposal for the visa fee waiver to the government or not. But Vietnam’s visa rules are obviously contributing greatly to keeping tourists away from the country, according to industry insiders. A holidaymaker must pay US$45 for their visa, a fee Nguyen Thi Van Anh, general director of Hanoi Redtours, said is relatively high compared to other countries in the region. “This is not to mention that tourists in fact have to pay at least $100,” she revealed. “Many customers of ours said they could not pay the fee directly but via an agent, and have to incur unofficial fees to be able to get a visa to Vietnam.” Vietnam currently accepts a visa on arrival, which must be confirmed in advance, and has yet to launch any online visa system. Tran Khang Thuy, chairman of the Exotissimo - Cesails Co. Ltd., said the visa on arrival procedure is not as simple as it seems. “If there is only one flight with a couple of people who need to get a visa on arrival, the procedures run smoothly,” he said. “But when there are two to three flights with more tourists, they have to wait for up to two hours to get the visas.” The travel firms thus suggested that Vietnam gradually exempt visa requirements for its important markets, such as the EU countries or the Trans-Pacific Partnership participants. The 11-member trade pact, excluding Vietnam, includes Australia, Brunei, Canada, Chile, Japan, Malaysia, Mexico, New Zealand, Peru, Singapore and the United States. Binh, the VITA deputy chairman, also urged that Vietnam set up the online visa system to facilitate tourists. ASEAN tourists are now exempt from visas when visiting Vietnam, as do those from seven other key markets, including Russia, Japan, South Korea, Denmark, Sweden and Finland. “Waiving visas is the initial step in attracting tourists to Vietnam,” Binh said. VITA thus proposed that the government continue waiving visas for vacationers from France, the UK, Germany and Australia, which are always in the top-ten of Vietnam’s largest sources of tourists, according to the official. “Many French tourists wanted to come to Vietnam after their trips in Thailand but canceled the plan immediately after learning of our stringent visa rules,” he said. Vietnam’s tourism expanded 34.8 percent in 2010, but the pace cooled down to only 4 percent last year, and minus 12.9 percent in the first four months of this year, according to VITA figures.
More

Vietnam court jails 8 for Hanoi fire that killed 56
The owner of the nine-storey block deserved 'the most serious punishment' for the blaze in September 2023, the court in Hanoi said
Read more

Circumcision leaves 37 boys with genital warts in northern Vietnam
Thirty-seven boys in northern Hung Yen Province have developed genital warts after allegedly undergoing circumcisions at an unlicensed clinic
7 years agoHighlights

PM requests study of mechanism allowing foreigners to purchase residence cards in Vietnam
Ministries will focus on addressing the concerns of international partners regarding work permits and visas
Latest news

PM requests study of mechanism allowing foreigners to purchase residence cards in Vietnam
Ministries will focus on addressing the concerns of international partners regarding work permits and visas

Expectation vs reality: 32% of Ho Chi Minh City workers seek pay hardly any firms offer
A mismatch exists between job seekers’ salary expectations and the levels employers offer

Starship carrying Tesla bot to depart for Mars by end of 2026, Musk says
Musk added that human landings could follow as soon as 2029

SpaceX launch paves way for return of astronauts 'stranded' on space station
The two former U.S. Navy pilots have been stuck aboard the orbital lab since June

Locals struggle to cope with scorching heatwave in Ho Chi Minh City
Outdoor workers like delivery drivers and street vendors are braving the scorching conditions to earn a living

Mexicans seek answers after bones, shoes found at cartel camp
A group of families searching for people who have disappeared reported the find this month at a ranch in the western state of Jalisco

In Vietnam, 2 women risk lives for photos on railway tracks
Although no injuries or damages were reported, the incident highlights a disregard for railway safety

Ebola-infected monkeys cured with a pill, raising hopes for humans: study
For their experiment, Geisbert and colleagues tested the antiviral Obeldesivir, the oral form of intravenous Remdesivir

Vietnamese energy firms ink $4.15bn cooperation deals with US partners
Beyond these agreements, negotiations are ongoing for additional deals, with an estimated total value of $36 billion in the near future

Hanoi to demolish iconic ‘Shark Jaw’ building before April 30 to expand public square
The demolition will allow for the expansion of Dong Kinh-Nghia Thuc Square