Why Vietnam in 2026
Vietnam has undergone a remarkable economic transformation over the past two decades. With a young, urbanising population and a rapidly expanding middle class, demand for quality imported food products is growing at a pace that outstrips most markets in the region.
The EVFTA (EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement), in force since 2020, has significantly reduced tariffs on European food products — making this an increasingly favourable moment for European brands to enter the market.
Field Observation
In our field mapping across Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi and Da Nang, we consistently found that Vietnamese importers are actively seeking quality European food products — particularly dairy, charcuterie, confectionery, olive oil and specialty beverages. The demand is real. The gap is in the connection between European suppliers and qualified local importers.
Understanding the Distribution Landscape
Vietnam's food distribution operates across several distinct channels, each with different requirements, margins and volumes. Understanding which channel fits your product is the critical first decision.
Modern Trade (Supermarkets & Hypermarkets)
The fastest-growing channel — WinMart, Co.opMart, Lotte Mart, Aeon and BigC are the dominant players. Listing fees, promotional requirements and payment terms (60-90 days) are significant barriers for smaller brands, but the volume and visibility are unmatched.
Specialty & Premium Retail
Annam Gourmet, The Food Republic and similar specialty stores cater to expats and upper-middle-class Vietnamese consumers. Easier to list in, smaller volumes, but premium positioning and faster payment terms.
Ho.Re.Ca (Hotels, Restaurants, Catering)
A growing channel for premium products, particularly dairy, charcuterie and specialty ingredients. International hotel chains are reliable buyers with predictable volumes.
E-commerce
Shopee, Lazada and TikiNow are major platforms. Cross-border e-commerce is also expanding. This channel works particularly well for health food, supplements and specialty products.
Regulatory Requirements
Food import into Vietnam is regulated by the Ministry of Health (MOH), the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development (MARD) and customs authorities. The key requirements vary by product category but generally include:
- Import licence — your Vietnamese importer must hold the relevant food import licence for your product category
- Product registration or self-declaration — depending on the product, either a full registration with MOH or a self-declaration is required before import
- Vietnamese labelling — all products must display a Vietnamese label with mandatory information (ingredients, allergens, nutritional values, expiry date, importer details)
- Certificates of origin — required to benefit from EVFTA preferential tariffs
- Health certificates — required for animal-origin products (dairy, meat, fish)
- Phytosanitary certificates — required for plant-origin products
On Labelling
Vietnamese labelling requirements are strictly enforced at customs. A common and costly mistake is shipping products without the Vietnamese label pre-applied, expecting to label at destination. Customs will block the shipment. Always arrange Vietnamese labelling at origin — either printed directly on the packaging or as a sticker applied before export.
Finding the Right Import Partner
Your Vietnamese importer is your most important strategic decision. They are not just a logistics intermediary — they are your market representative, your regulatory gatekeeper and often your face to the trade. Choosing the wrong one can cost you years.
What to look for in a Vietnamese food importer:
- An existing distribution network aligned with your target channel
- Experience with imported European products (or similar categories)
- A valid food import licence for your product category
- Financial stability — ask for references and visit their operations if possible
- A team with English-language capability for day-to-day communication
- Willingness to invest in marketing and brand building, not just distribution
Pricing Your Products for Vietnam
Margin stacking is significant in the Vietnamese distribution chain. A rough model for modern trade looks like this:
- CIF Vietnam price → your base
- Import duties + VAT (5% or 10% depending on category) + customs clearance costs
- Importer margin: typically 20–35%
- Distributor/retailer margin: typically 25–40%
- Listing fees, promotional contributions, slotting fees (modern trade)
Work backwards from your target retail price to ensure your ex-factory price leaves room for all these layers while remaining competitive on shelf. Premium European products can command a significant premium — but there is a ceiling above which Vietnamese consumers will not go, even for imported goods.
Practical Steps to Launch
- Define your target channel and product positioning before approaching any importer
- Prepare Vietnamese-compliant labelling and packaging ahead of your first shipment
- Identify and qualify 3–5 potential importer candidates before committing to one
- Visit Vietnam (or mandate a local representative) to meet importers in person
- Start with a test shipment — limit risk before scaling volume
- Build a 12-month launch plan with your importer including listing targets, sell-through rates and marketing activations
Final Thoughts
Vietnam is a genuinely exciting market for European food brands — but it rewards preparation and penalises shortcuts. The brands that succeed are those that take the time to understand the local landscape, choose their importer carefully, and commit to building a real presence over time.
If you are considering Vietnam as part of your Asia expansion strategy and would like to connect with our qualified importer network, get in touch — this is exactly what we do.