Wednesday, July 8, 2026

When Lowest Doesn't Win: The Furniture Bid That Has Everyone Asking Questions 🪑⚖️


📖 Etymology corner, before we dive in

The word "tender" — as in a public procurement tender — comes from Old French tendre, "to offer, to extend," rooted in Latin tendere, "to stretch toward." The idea is elegant: you stretch your best offer toward a buyer, and the buyer picks the most suitable one stretched back.

The word "transparent," meanwhile, comes from Medieval Latin transparere — "to show through," trans- (across) + parere (to appear). Transparency means the decision mechanism shows itself clearly, like light through glass. The moment you can't see through the glass, "transparent" becomes just a word on paper. 🔍

Which brings us to today's case — a public procurement story from Ho Chi Minh City that's raising some very uncomfortable questions about what "evaluation criteria" actually mean in practice. Ngọc Prinny-mode: on. 🦊



🧐 The setup: a very ordinary furniture bid with a very un-ordinary result

The Client: Ho Chi Minh City Department of Civil Judgment Enforcement (Thi hành án dân sự TP.HCM) — the government body responsible for enforcing court judgments in Vietnam's largest city.

The Contract: Procurement, fabrication, and installation of office desks and document shelving for the department's workspace fit-out.

Budget cap: 3.1 billion VND.

Procurement method: Competitive quotation (chào hàng cạnh tranh).

Bids opened: 29 April 2026.

Seven contractors showed up to compete. Here's how they lined up on price — from lowest to highest:

The bar chart above tells the story. On 16 June 2026, the contracting authority announced the winner: Ura Decor Co., Ltd. — with the highest bid of 2.918 billion VND. All six other bidders, including the lowest bidder, were disqualified on technical grounds. 📋


🧐 "First instance": what everyone expected would happen

In a standard competitive procurement, the common expectation is:

  • Bidders who meet technical requirements compete on price.
  • The lowest price that clears technical review wins.
  • Public funds are spent as efficiently as possible.

DSD Co., Ltd. — submitting the lowest bid of 1.818 billion VND — walked in expecting exactly that logic to apply. 1.818 vs. 2.918 is not a small difference: DSD's bid would have saved the state budget roughly 1.1 billion VND compared to the winner. That's not pocket change. 💸


⚖️ "On appeal": what the evaluation report actually said — and why DSD disagrees

The evaluation report (prepared by Newstar Construction & Trading Co., Ltd.) disqualified DSD on three specific technical gaps:

  1. No detailed step-by-step narrative for the implementation and installation methodology
  2. No explanation of preservation/storage measures during transport, warehousing, and installation for each category of goods
  3. No detailed warranty procedure — no plan for post-warranty maintenance, spare parts, or upkeep

DSD's response, filed in a formal petition to both the contracting authority and the Ho Chi Minh City Department of Finance, amounts to: "We did provide all of that — please look again."

Specifically, DSD claims its dossier included:

  • A step-by-step implementation sequence: contract/technical dossier receipt → site survey → technical breakdown → production order → material prep → manufacturing/fabrication → quality check → packaging → transport → staging → installation → finishing → acceptance and handover
  • A maximum 15-day contract execution timeline, broken down by milestone and work category, consistent with the bid document requirements
  • Preservation and storage methods covering packaging, coding, transport, temporary warehousing, on-site storage, and protective measures categorized by product type: desks, MDF cabinets, doors, fittings, rails, hinges, locks, screws, brackets, strips, and related components

DSD's core argument: "The assessment that we had no explanatory narrative on these items needs to be objectively and thoroughly re-examined." 🔎


🚨 The detail that's making procurement observers uncomfortable

Here's where the story takes a turn. A quick search of Vietnam's National Procurement Network System (Hệ thống mạng đấu thầu quốc gia) reveals the following track records of the seven bidders:

ContractorPast procurement wins on record
Ura Decor (WINNER)Zero — none recorded
DSD Co. (protesting)36 wins (2018–present)
Moc Dai8 wins
Long Nguyen Star66 wins
Anh Duy Equipment55 wins
Nguyet Anh II327 wins
Moc Nhat Minh201 wins

In a procurement for standard office furniture — a category where track record, production capacity, and delivery reliability are primary indicators of execution capability — all six contractors with documented experience were disqualified on technical grounds, while the only contractor with zero procurement record was awarded the contract at the highest price. 😶

A procurement specialist quoted in the original report made this point plainly: evaluation of bid dossiers must be objective, fair, and transparent, anchored to the evaluation criteria in the bidding documents, with the overriding objective of selecting a capable and experienced contractor — ensuring state budget funds are used effectively. For a standard goods procurement, awarding a "brand-new" contractor at the top price while cutting every experienced bidder on technical grounds warrants very careful scrutiny.


🏠🚗 Real-life analogies

  • 🏠 The landlord who "tours" ten apartments and picks the most expensive one with the newest-looking doormat, disqualifying the others because they didn't hand over the utility bills in a specific folder. If the folder requirement was genuinely in the lease listing, fair enough. But if those folders were actually included and the landlord just missed them — then the evaluation process failed, not the tenants.
  • 🚗 A driving school hiring a new, untested instructor at the highest hourly rate, while rejecting instructors with decades of experience because their CVs used the "wrong font." Technically defensible on paper. Actually defensible in logic? That's another question.

🤔 Did you know? Quick legal trivia 🤔

  • Vietnam's Law on Procurement (Luật Đấu thầu) establishes that evaluation of bid dossiers must follow the specific criteria set out in the bidding documents (hồ sơ mời thầu) — evaluators cannot apply criteria that weren't disclosed upfront, and cannot ignore criteria that were. This is the foundation of DSD's protest: if their dossier actually satisfied the stated criteria, disqualification is legally contestable.
  • Contractors have the right to petition (kiến nghị) at multiple levels — first to the contracting authority, then to a higher authority — and the authority receiving the petition is obligated to respond within statutory timeframes. Silence or delay is itself a procedural violation.
  • The competitive quotation method (chào hàng cạnh tranh) in Vietnam is designed for standard, commonly available goods, where price competition is the primary value driver. Applying complex technical barriers to knock out experienced bidders on a standard furniture contract is exactly the scenario that procurement watchdog guidelines warn against.
  • This is not an isolated incident at the same department: other recent procurements at the same body (computer equipment for newly recruited officials, and computers for enforcement operations across 19 district units) also generated multiple clarification requests and protests.

📝 Quick self-quiz — are you procurement-literate yet?

  1. In a competitive quotation procurement, what is generally the primary deciding factor once technical requirements are met?
    A. The bidder's brand recognition B. Price competitiveness C. The evaluation committee's preference D. The bid submission font
  2. Under Vietnam's procurement system, if a bidder disagrees with the evaluation result, they can:
    A. Only accept the outcome B. File a petition to the contracting authority and/or a higher body C. Immediately go to court D. Publicly announce the result
  3. True or false: the contracting authority must always award to the lowest bidder, regardless of technical compliance.
  4. What is the name of Vietnam's online platform where procurement awards are publicly recorded?
    A. Cổng dịch vụ công B. Hệ thống mạng đấu thầu quốc gia C. VnExpress đấu thầu D. BHXH điện tử
  5. In this case, how much more expensive was the winning bid compared to the lowest bid?
    A. ~300 million VND B. ~600 million VND C. ~1.1 billion VND D. ~3 billion VND

Answer key: 1-B · 2-B · 3-False (technical compliance is the threshold, price is the deciding factor among compliant bids) · 4-B · 5-C 🎉


💡 Practical tips for bidders, rights holders, and procurement watchers

  • Read the bidding document (HSMT) against your submitted dossier line by line before submission. If a criterion asks for "step-by-step narrative," make sure your headings use that language explicitly, not just the content implied by it.
  • Keep a clean, indexed copy of your bid dossier. If you're disqualified, your petition needs to reference specific pages/sections that address the criteria the evaluator claims were missing.
  • Know your petition timeline. Procurement law sets statutory deadlines for petitions and for contracting authority responses — missing those windows can forfeit your right to contest.
  • Check the National Procurement Network (mạng đấu thầu quốc gia) when you win or lose — it's public, searchable, and a useful reference for benchmarking your competitors' track records.
  • If you're a contracting authority or evaluation committee member: document your reasoning thoroughly and specifically. "Doesn't meet technical requirements" without pinpointing exactly which criterion and why is the kind of vague finding that creates exactly this sort of contestable outcome.

🌿 A quick detour into nature's version of this rule

Evolutionary biology describes a concept called honest signaling — where signals that convey quality or fitness are only reliable when they're genuinely costly or difficult to fake. An animal with a bright, symmetrical plumage can't easily fake that symmetry — it's an honest signal of genetic fitness. The entire logic of competitive procurement is built on the same principle: price is an honest signal because it directly costs the bidder real money. A bidder willing to do the job for 1.818B when others ask for 2.918B is sending a strong, real-cost signal of confidence in their production efficiency. When procurement evaluations systematically filter out the "honest signals" — on technical grounds that the bidder disputes — and elevate a bidder with no track record at the highest price, the signaling system breaks down. 🦚 And when signaling systems break down, trust in the entire ecosystem erodes.


🗣️ Over to you

Should a "brand-new" contractor with zero procurement wins ever be awarded a public contract at the highest bid, while six more experienced and cheaper competitors are eliminated on technical grounds? Is this a legitimate evaluation outcome, or does it point to something the system needs to look at more closely? Drop your take in the comments — especially if you've participated in (or watched) a similar procurement process in Vietnam. And if you work in public procurement, procurement law, or civil judgment enforcement, this conversation is exactly for you. Tag them. 📣


#VietnamLaw #PublicProcurement #BidDispute #Transparency #LawOnProcurement #DeluluVN #NgocPrinny #LegalEducation #GovernmentContracting #CivilEnforcement


🚨 Fun but serious: a brief legal disclaimer 🚨

Hey there, legal explorer! 🕵️‍♀️ Before you close this tab —

  • This article is a map, not a teleporter 🗺️ — it'll orient you, but it won't file your procurement petition for you.
  • Every procurement dispute turns on its own specific dossier and evaluation record 🦄 — the outcome in this case doesn't automatically predict yours.
  • For real-world procurement quests, summon a professional legal wizard 🧙‍♀️ — may we suggest Thầy Điệp & Associates Law Firm, the firm that reviews what gets published here.
  • Reading this doesn't make you a procurement lawyer, the same way watching The Apprentice doesn't make you a business mogul. 💼😉

Full disclaimer details: ngocprinny.blogspot.com/2024/08/disclaimer.html

#LegalInfo #delulu.vn #NotLegalAdvice #ConsultAPro #NgocPrinny


💝 Support your legal ninja's wellness fund! 🍵

Enjoyed this deep dive into the world where the lowest bid doesn't always win? Every article like this one runs on:

  • Hours of reading procurement reports and system records 📚
  • 10+ years of hands-on legal expertise ⚖️
  • A healthy dose of healthy skepticism 📝
  • And — you guessed it — herbal tea 🍵

If this post helped you understand how procurement disputes work in Vietnam (or just scratched your "wait, that doesn't seem right" itch), consider treating this ninja to a green tea →. It keeps the puns flowing, the research honest, and the ninja caffeinated for the next one. 🌱

More about the author and the DELULU world: delulu.vn/about-2/

Author: Nguyễn Lê Bảo Ngọc (Ngọc Prinny)
Reviewed by: Lawyer Lê Thị Kim Dung and Lawyer Nguyễn Văn Điệp, Thầy Điệp & Associates Law Firm

And a little closing wish, timed exactly to whenever you're reading this:

🇬🇧 Wherever you're reading from — may your bids be fairly evaluated and your lowest price actually mean something.
🇯🇵 いつ読んでいても、心穏やかな一日を。
🇫🇷 Et où que vous soyez, que la transparence soit toujours au rendez-vous. ☘️

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

🚗💸 He Paid a Bribe in Cash — So Why Did the Court Confiscate His Car?


A "3 Mins Legal" Nutshell Breakdown by Ngọc Prinny

📖 First, a Little Etymology Detour

Before we dive in, let's geek out for 15 seconds on the word "confiscate." 🤓

It comes from the Latin confiscarecon- ("together") + fiscus ("the state treasury, the public purse"). Literally: "to gather something into the treasury." The Roman fiscus is also where we get "fiscal" and "fisc." So when a court "confiscates" your car, it's etymologically just sending your beloved Camry on a one-way trip into the government's wallet. 💰🚙➡️🏛️

Cute word origin. Less cute when it's your car. Which brings us to today's case.



🎬 The Case, In a Nutshell

Picture this — not a galaxy far away, but Đồng Nai province, and a Toyota Camry that's about to have a very eventful legal journey. 🏛️🚗

A university rector — let's call him Mr. Bảo Long (former Rector of a public university, name changed for clarity) — was being investigated for financial irregularities. Wanting that headache to disappear, he and two associates (we'll call them Mr. Thành and Mr. Thắng) reached out to a forensic examiner at the provincial Finance Department, whom we'll call Mr. Quốc Trung, and arranged for 39 million VND 💵 to flow his way — in exchange for a forensic conclusion stating there were no financial violations worth worrying about.

Mr. Trung accepted, and issued forensic conclusions stating the university's accounting and tax handling for the 2018–2019 period had no violations and caused no loss to the state budget. Spoiler: that conclusion didn't hold up — a later official audit (Nov 2025) found the university had actually caused over 6.29 billion VND in financial damage. 😬

One detail turns out to matter a lot for our story: on January 15, 2023, when handing over 10 million VND of that bribe, Mr. Long personally drove his own Toyota Camry 2.0E to a spot across from the Finance Department's gate to make the handoff.

Bribery happened. That part isn't in dispute (Mr. Trung even self-confessed in June 2023). The real legal puzzle is about something else entirely: the Camry. 🚗❓


⚖️ Round 1: The First-Instance Trial

📌 First-Instance Criminal Judgment No. 206/2024/HSST, dated September 23, 2024 — Đồng Nai Provincial People's Court

The trial court found Mr. Long guilty of giving a bribe under Article 364 of the Penal Code and sentenced him to 9 months in prison (with three co-defendants also convicted for related bribery offenses).

But the court didn't stop there. Applying Article 47 of the Penal Code and Article 106 of the Criminal Procedure Code, it also ordered the confiscation of the Toyota Camry 2.0E (along with its key and registration papers) into the state treasury — ruling that the car counted as a "tool/instrument used to commit the crime" (phương tiện phạm tội) because he'd driven it to the bribery meeting.

Key Round 1 takeaway: ✅ Bribery conviction stands. 🚗 Camry seized as "crime equipment."

Mr. Long appealed on October 3, 2024 — specifically asking for a lighter sentence AND the return of his car. 🙋‍♂️


⚖️ Round 2: The Appeal — Where It Gets Worse, Not Better

📌 Appellate Criminal Judgment No. 57/2025/HS-PT, dated January 14, 2025 — High People's Court in Ho Chi Minh City

Despite Mr. Long specifically requesting his car back, the appellate court upheld everything — the conviction, the sentence, and the car confiscation. No changes. 🔁

This is actually the part the Supreme People's Procuracy called out most harshly. According to their official notice, the appellate court "failed to detect the trial court's error and upheld its decision on the judicial measure — a serious mistake that affected the defendant's lawful rights and interests." 😳 In other words: the chance to fix this was right there, and the appellate court missed it.

So at this point, two courts in a row had agreed: car = crime tool = state property now.


🚨 Round 3: The Plot Twist (Cassation Review)

Here's where it gets spicy. 🌶️ On October 21, 2025, the Chief Procurator of the Supreme People's Procuracy filed a cassation protest (kháng nghị giám đốc thẩm) against the appellate judgment — essentially saying: "Hold on. Something doesn't add up here."

And honestly? They had a point. The bribe-by-car portion was just 10 million VND out of a 39-million-VND total. The Camry seized in "compensation" was worth many, many times more. That's not exactly proportional. 📉➡️📈

On January 13, 2026, the Judicial Council of the Supreme People's Court accepted the protest and reasoned through it logically:

  • 🚗 The car was only used to drive to the meeting point — basic transportation.
  • 🚫 It was not the direct instrument used to commit the act of bribery (the money was — and the money, separately, is handled as proceeds of crime).
  • 🚫 It wasn't used to store, conceal, or transport evidence in any decisive way.
  • 🔗 There was no direct causal link between the car and the act of bribery itself — meaning the bribery could have happened just as easily on foot, by motorbike, by Grab, or by teleportation if that existed. The car wasn't essential to the crime.

Conclusion: The Camry was not a "tool of the crime" under Article 47 of the Penal Code. Both the trial court and the appellate court had misapplied the law — the trial court for making the error in the first place, and the appellate court for failing to catch and fix it. The confiscation portion of the appellate judgment was annulled (hủy), and the case was sent back for a fresh appellate trial on that specific point, to be decided correctly this time. 🔄

The Supreme People's Procuracy didn't stop at fixing this one case, either — it issued Official Notice No. 128/TB-VKSTC (dated May 20, 2026) instructing procuracy offices nationwide to study this case and tighten up their oversight of how courts apply judicial measures like asset confiscation. Translation: "Let's not do this again, everyone." 📢


📊 Quick Infographic: The Case at a Glance

┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│  THE BRIBE CAMRY CASE — TIMELINE                             │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│  💵 Total bribe:              39,000,000 VND (3 people)      │
│  🚗 Bribe handed via car:     10,000,000 VND (Jan 15, 2023)  │
│  🚙 Car seized:               Toyota Camry 2.0E (worth FAR   │
│                                more than the bribe itself)   │
│                                                               │
│  ROUND 1 — Trial Court                                       │
│   No. 206/2024/HSST (Sep 23, 2024)                           │
│   ➜ Guilty (9 months) + Car confiscated                     │
│                                                               │
│  ROUND 2 — Appellate Court                                   │
│   No. 57/2025/HS-PT (Jan 14, 2025)                           │
│   ➜ Upheld everything, even after defendant asked for        │
│      the car back. Missed the error.                         │
│                                                               │
│  ROUND 3 — Cassation Review (Supreme People's Court)         │
│   Protest filed Oct 21, 2025 → Decided Jan 13, 2026           │
│   ➜ Car confiscation ANNULLED, sent back for re-trial        │
│                                                               │
│  📢 Nationwide guidance: VKSTC Notice 128/TB-VKSTC            │
│      (May 20, 2026)                                          │
│                                                               │
│  🔑 Legal test for "tool of crime" (Art. 47 Penal Code):     │
│     1️⃣ Directly used to commit the act?                     │
│     2️⃣ Used to store/conceal/transport evidence?             │
│     3️⃣ Direct causal link to the crime?                     │
│     ➜ Camry failed ALL THREE. Mere transportation ≠          │
│        instrument of crime.                                  │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

🏠🚗 Real-Life Examples (So This Isn't Just Abstract)

  • 🚗 The Getaway Car Analogy: If someone uses a van specifically to smuggle stolen goods, that van is a tool of the crime — it's functionally part of how the crime worked. But if a thief simply drove to the store before shoplifting, the car didn't do the stealing — his hands did. Same logic applies here: the Camry didn't bribe anyone. Mr. Long did, with cash.
  • 🏠 The House Analogy: If you host an illegal gambling den in your living room every night, your house could arguably be treated as a tool/location of the crime. But if you simply happen to live somewhere and once made a phone call from your kitchen to plan something illegal, your house isn't suddenly state property. Context and necessity matter.
  • 📱 The Phone Analogy: Texting "let's meet at 3pm" to arrange a crime doesn't usually make your phone a confiscatable "weapon." It's incidental, not instrumental.

🤔 Did You Know? — Legal Trivia Break

  • 🧠 Under Vietnamese criminal law, judicial confiscation measures are NOT automatic punishments — they're separate "judicial measures" (biện pháp tư pháp), and courts must justify each one individually, not just bundle them in for good measure.
  • 🧠 "Giám đốc thẩm" (cassation review/supervisory review) isn't a third level of appeal you can request anytime — it's a special procedure triggered by serious legal errors in a case that's already final, usually initiated by senior procuracy or court officials.
  • 🧠 Confiscating "proceeds of crime" (tài sản do phạm tội mà có) and confiscating "tools used in the crime" (phương tiện phạm tội) are two completely different legal baskets — mixing them up is exactly the mistake this case corrects.
  • 🧠 Even when a defendant explicitly asks for an asset back on appeal (as Mr. Long did here), that doesn't guarantee the appellate court will catch a legal error from the trial below — which is exactly why this case needed a third round of review to get fixed.

🌿 Nature's Version of This Law

Even ecosystems follow a "proportionality and necessity" principle, in their own brutal way: a predator doesn't waste energy hunting prey that isn't worth the calories burned chasing it. 🦁 Evolution punishes disproportionate effort for the result. Courts, similarly, aren't supposed to seize disproportionate assets just because they were nearby when a crime happened. Nature: "don't burn fuel you don't need to." Law: "don't confiscate property you don't need to." Same energy. 🌱⚖️

💡 Tips for Understanding & Applying This Principle

  1. Ask "would the crime still have happened without this item?" If yes — it's probably not a "tool of crime," just incidental property.
  2. Separate "instrument of crime" from "proceeds of crime." Different legal categories, different rules, different outcomes.
  3. Proportionality matters. A 39-million-VND bribe and a multi-hundred-million-VND car seizure should raise eyebrows — courts are expected to apply judicial measures fairly, not punitively beyond what the law authorizes.
  4. If you're ever facing asset seizure in a criminal matter, get a lawyer to specifically challenge which legal category the prosecution/court is using to justify it. This case proves that distinction is exactly where appeals (and cassation protests) win.

📝 Quick Self-Check Quiz

  1. What is the legal term for the special review procedure used here to overturn a final judgment due to serious legal error?

    • A) Phúc thẩm (Appeal)
    • B) Giám đốc thẩm (Cassation/supervisory review)
    • C) Tái thẩm (Reopening due to new facts)
  2. Under Article 47 of the Penal Code, which of these is NOT one of the tests used to determine whether an asset is a "tool of crime"?

    • A) Was it directly used to commit the act?
    • B) Was it used to store/conceal/transport evidence?
    • C) Was it purchased with the defendant's own salary?
  3. True or False: Even though the defendant asked the appellate court to return his car, the appellate court still upheld the confiscation — meaning the error survived two full court levels before being fixed.

(Answers: 1-B, 2-C, 3-True — scroll back up if you need the receipts 😉)


🗣️ Now It's Your Turn

So — do you think the Supreme People's Procuracy got it right by stepping in here? Or do you think "well, he did drive it there, so..." has a point? 👀 Drop your take in the comments below — I read every single one (between sips of green tea 🍵). And if you've ever had property seized or threatened with seizure in a legal matter, I'd genuinely love to hear how that distinction between "tool of crime" vs. "incidental property" played out for you.


Hashtags: #VietnamLaw #CriminalLaw #LegalEducation #3MinsLegal #NgocPrinny #PenalCode #AssetForfeiture #BriberyCase #LegalTrivia #LawExplained #delulu.vn


🚨 Fun But Serious: A Brief Legal Disclaimer 🚨

Hey there, legal explorer! 🕵️‍♂️ Before you bounce off to tell all your friends about a Camry's wrongful arrest, let's get real for a second:

  • 📖 This article is a map, not a teleporter — it'll help you understand the terrain, but it won't zap your own legal situation away.
  • 🦄 Every legal journey is unique. Your facts, your province, your judge — all of it changes the outcome. Mileage will vary.
  • 🧙‍♂️ For real-world legal quests, please summon an actual legal wizard. May we humbly suggest Thầy Điệp & Associates Law Firm, who handle exactly this kind of criminal law nuance.
  • 📜 Need notarization for something unrelated but equally important? Say hello to our friends at Thủ Thiêm Notary Office.
  • ✈️ Remember: reading this doesn't make you a lawyer, just like watching Top Gun doesn't make you a fighter pilot. 😉

For the full, formal version of this disclaimer, see: ngocprinny.blogspot.com — Disclaimer

#LegalInfo #delulu.vn #NotLegalAdvice #ConsultAPro #NgocPrinny


💝 Support Your Legal Ninja's Wellness Fund! 🍵

Enjoyed this witty deep-dive into confiscation law? Help keep this legal ninja caffeinated, researched, and ready for the next case breakdown! Every article here is fueled by:

  • 📚 Hours of digging through judgments and procuracy notices
  • ⚖️ 10+ years of legal know-how (and counting)
  • 📝 Way too much creative energy spent on car-related puns
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If this post helped you navigate one more corner of Vietnam's legal labyrinth, consider buying this ninja a cup of tea: Support Ngọc Prinny here 🍵💝

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🌙 Reading this at night? Sleep well and dream of fair, proportional judgments. 😴⚖️ ☀️ Reading this in the morning? Wishing you a bright day, zero legal headaches, and plenty of good coffee (or tea!) to go with it. ☕🌞

Author: Nguyễn Lê Bảo Ngọc (Ngọc Prinny

Consulted by: Luật sư Lê Thị Kim Dung & Luật sư Nguyễn Văn Điệp 

Source: Official Notice No. 128/TB-VKSTC, dated May 20, 2026, issued by the Supreme People's Procuracy of Vietnam

Sunday, June 28, 2026

5 Pieces of Good News for Businesses, Effective 01 July 2026 🎉⚖️ (Yes, Really — All Five Are Good)


📖 Etymology corner, before we dive in

The word "boon" comes from Old Norse bón — a favor, a request granted, something given freely for someone's benefit. The word "bureaucracy" comes from French bureau ("desk") fused with Greek -kratia ("rule, power") — literally, "rule by desk."

Today's article sits exactly at the intersection of those two words: it's about the rare moment when "rule by desk" politely steps aside and hands you a boon instead. Five of them, actually. Let's count them, Kurzgesagt-style — calm, structured, no roleplay, just the mechanism. 🦊



🧐 Meet our guide through the changes

Founder Penny Swift runs NextGen Innovations Co., a small Vietnamese startup dabbling in software and a bit of hardware. She's about to discover that, starting 01 July 2026, five separate legal instruments quietly made her life easier. Let's walk through her year, before-and-after style. ⏳


🧐 "The Old Ruling": life before 01 July 2026

Before this date, Penny's reality looked like this:

  • 198 business lines required a conditional investment license, including plenty that arguably didn't need one anymore.
  • Every enterprise, regardless of size, prepared and filed financial statements — even tiny one-person operations.
  • Business registration timelines in Hanoi followed the general statutory framework, without a dedicated fast-track.
  • There was no single, official list flagging which high-tech fields qualified for investment priority.
  • Fire-safety and labor-safety compliance often meant re-doing acceptance checks even when an earlier appraisal had already cleared the same design.

Verdict on the old setup: thorough, but not exactly speedy. ⏱️


⚖️ "The New Ruling": what changes on 01 July 2026

Here are Penny's five boons, mapped out:

Let's unpack each one. 👇

1️⃣ Conditional business sectors: cut from 198 down to 142

Under Resolution 66.17/2026/NQ-CP, the Government trimmed 56 sectors off the conditional-investment list. The logic:

  • Removing sectors no longer essential for national defense, security, public order, social ethics, or public health.
  • Shifting oversight to technical standards — managing risk through post-launch inspection rather than upfront licensing.
  • Cutting unclear, duplicated, or dormant conditions — sectors whose "conditions" were vague, overlapping with other rules, or had simply never had implementing conditions issued at all.

🏠 Real-life analogy: it's like a city deciding you no longer need a permit to repaint your own fence, while still requiring one for knocking down a load-bearing wall. The risky stuff stays regulated; the harmless stuff gets out of your way.

2️⃣ Micro-enterprises: goodbye, annual financial statements (for some)

Per Article 10.1, Circular 58/2026/TT-BTC:

  • Micro-enterprises paying CIT as a percentage of revenue no longer have to prepare financial statements for submission to state authorities — unless another law specifically requires it.
  • Micro-enterprises paying CIT on taxable income still must file annual financial statements, within 90 days of fiscal year-end.

The dividing line isn't "small vs. tiny" — it's which CIT calculation method you use. That detail matters more than headcount.

3️⃣ Hanoi: business registration now takes 2 working days

Under Article 6, Resolution 12/2026/NQ-HĐND (Hanoi People's Council), the standard processing time drops to 2 working days from full-dossier receipt for:

  • Private enterprises, single-member LLCs, multi-member LLCs, joint stock companies, partnerships
  • Companies formed via division, separation, or merger
  • Branch, representative office, and business-location registration (plus notification of overseas branches/rep offices)

A slightly longer 4 working days applies to terminating a branch/rep office/business location or dissolving a company entirely.

🚗 Real-life analogy: this is the legal equivalent of swapping a multi-stop road trip for a direct flight. Same destination, dramatically less time in transit.

4️⃣ A brand-new map: 70 high-tech fields flagged for priority investment

Decision 23/2026/QĐ-TTg rolls out an official list of 70 priority high-tech fields plus 100 encouraged high-tech products, covering AI, big data, cloud computing, semiconductors, biotechnology, new materials, new energy, environmental technology, and digital-transformation tech.

For businesses operating in these fields, this list is a practical signal, not just a formality:

  • Potential tax, land, and credit incentives
  • Support for R&D, technology transfer, and workforce training
  • A reference point authorities use to prioritize investment projects

5️⃣ Fewer hoops: simplified procedures under Resolution 66.18/2026/NQ-CP

Several overlapping checks get streamlined:

  • No repeat fire-safety acceptance testing for works, items, or vehicles already design-appraised by the police on fire-prevention grounds.
  • No fire-safety acceptance required for works/vehicles holding a design-appraisal certificate that hadn't yet reached the acceptance-approval stage.
  • Simplified dossier requirements for fire-safety design appraisal of technical/construction drawings within economic-technical reports and post-base-design construction designs.
  • No more eligibility review for businesses that self-train their own occupational safety and hygiene programs.
  • No more waiting on a state-issued confirmation certificate for declaring the use of machines/equipment/materials with strict safety requirements — businesses still must declare to the local Department of Home Affairs (Sở Nội vụ) before use, but no longer sit in a queue for a certificate first.

🚗 Real-life analogy: if your car's brakes were already inspected and certified last month, you shouldn't need a second, redundant brake inspection this month just to use the same brakes. That's exactly the kind of duplication being trimmed here.


🤔 Did you know? Quick legal trivia 🤔

  • The conditional-business-sector list isn't a "set once, forget forever" document — Vietnam periodically reviews and trims it as part of an ongoing administrative-reform push, and this 56-sector cut is one of the larger reductions in recent years.
  • "Micro-enterprise" status for CIT purposes in Vietnam typically hinges on revenue and/or labor thresholds, and the method of calculating CIT (flat % of revenue vs. taxable income) — not just size — is what decides whether the financial-statement exemption applies.
  • A national list of priority high-tech fields, like the new 70-item list, is a common policy tool worldwide for steering investment incentives toward strategic sectors — Vietnam's version explicitly folds in fields like semiconductors and AI, signaling where the next wave of incentives is likely headed.

📝 Quick self-quiz — are you boon-fluent yet?

  1. How many conditional business sectors remain after the July 2026 cut? A. 198 B. 142 C. 156 D. 70

  2. Which micro-enterprises must still file annual financial statements within 90 days of fiscal year-end? A. Those paying CIT as a % of revenue B. Those paying CIT on taxable income C. All micro-enterprises D. None

  3. How many working days does standard business registration now take in Hanoi? A. 1 B. 2 C. 4 D. 7

  4. True or false: businesses using machines with strict safety requirements no longer need to declare anything to any authority.

  5. How many high-tech fields are on the new priority investment list? A. 56 B. 70 C. 100 D. 142

Answer key: 1-B · 2-B · 3-B (4 days only for termination/dissolution cases) · 4-False (declaration to Sở Nội vụ is still required, just no certificate wait) · 5-B 🎉


💡 Practical tips for businesses navigating these five changes

  • Re-check your sector against the new 142-line list. A condition you've been compliance-planning around might simply not exist anymore.
  • Confirm your CIT calculation method before skipping financial statements. The exemption rides on how you pay CIT, not on how small you feel.
  • If you're registering in Hanoi, build your launch timeline around the new 2-day (or 4-day, for closures) windows — it changes how fast you can realistically go to market.
  • If your business touches AI, biotech, semiconductors, or similar fields, study the 70-item list closely — it's your roadmap to potential tax, land, and credit incentives.
  • If you've already passed a fire-safety design appraisal, don't assume you automatically need a second acceptance round — check whether your case now qualifies for the streamlined path.

🌿 A quick detour into nature's version of this rule

Evolution runs a similar audit, just on a much longer timescale. Vestigial traits — structures that once served a purpose but no longer carry their evolutionary weight — tend to shrink or disappear over generations, because maintaining unnecessary structures costs energy for no survival benefit. Regulatory pruning works the same way: conditions and procedures that no longer serve their original protective purpose eventually get trimmed, because maintaining them costs businesses time and resources for no real public benefit. Both systems are, in their own way, optimizing for "no unnecessary weight." 🦎


🗣️ Over to you

Of these five changes, which one actually moves the needle for your business — the sector cuts, the lighter micro-enterprise filing, Hanoi's faster registration, the high-tech incentive list, or the simplified fire/labor-safety procedures? Drop your answer in the comments — and if you've already felt the effect of one of these changes firsthand, tell us how it went. Know a founder who needs this roundup? Tag them. 📣


#VietnamLaw #BusinessReform2026 #DoingBusinessInVietnam #SmallBusinessVietnam #HanoiBusiness #HighTechVietnam #CorporateCompliance #DeluluVN #NgocPrinny #LegalEducation



🚨 Fun but serious: a brief legal disclaimer 🚨

Hey there, legal explorer! 🕵️‍♀️ Before you close this tab —

  • This article is a map, not a teleporter 🗺️ — it'll orient you, but it won't file your paperwork for you.
  • Every business's journey is its own unicorn 🦄 — your eligibility for any of these five boons depends on your specific facts.
  • For real-world quests, summon a professional legal wizard 🧙‍♀️ — may we suggest Thầy Điệp & Associates Law Firm, the firm that reviews what gets published here.
  • Reading this doesn't make you a lawyer, the same way watching Top Gun doesn't make you a pilot. ✈️😉

Full disclaimer details: ngocprinny.blogspot.com/2024/08/disclaimer.html

#LegalInfo #delulu.vn #NotLegalAdvice #ConsultAPro #NgocPrinny


💝 Support your legal ninja's wellness fund! 🍵

Enjoyed this roundup of good news (a rare genre in legal writing, we know)? Every article like this one runs on:

  • Hours of digging through resolutions, circulars, and decisions 📚
  • 10+ years of hands-on legal expertise ⚖️
  • A questionable amount of pun-crafting 📝
  • And an even more questionable amount of herbal tea 🍵

If this post saved you some research time, consider treating this ninja to a green tea →. It keeps the puns flowing, the research thorough, and the ninja caffeinated enough for the next regulatory deep dive. 🌱


More about the author and the DELULU world: delulu.vn/about-2/

Author: Nguyễn Lê Bảo Ngọc (Ngọc Prinny) Reviewed by: Lawyer Lê Thị Kim Dung and Lawyer Nguyễn Văn Điệp, Thầy Điệp & Associates Law Firm


And a little closing wish, sized to whenever you're reading this:

🇬🇧 Whatever time zone you're in — may your next registration dossier sail through in record time. 

🇯🇵 いつ読んでいても、心穏やかな一日を。 

🇫🇷 Et où que vous soyez, que la bureaucratie vous soit légère. ☘️

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