Wednesday, April 22, 2026

🎓 From March 30, 2026: Want to Be Called a "University" in Vietnam? You'll Need 60% PhD Faculty — and That's Just the Beginning! 🔬📚

📖 Etymology Corner: What Makes a "Doctor" a Doctor?

Before we unpack Vietnam's rigorous new university standards, a quick word history that's surprisingly relevant! 🧠

The word "doctor" comes from Latin docere — meaning "to teach." A doctorate (PhD) was originally not about research at all — it was a licence to teach at a university. The highest academic qualification literally meant: "this person is qualified to transmit knowledge to others." 🏛️

And "university"? We covered this last time — Latin universitas, meaning a community of scholars. But here's the thing: a community of scholars implies that the people in it are actually scholars. 📜

Vietnam just decided to take that definition seriously. ⚖️🎓



🌌 In a Nutshell: The New "University" Bar Just Got Much Higher

Decree 91/2026/NĐ-CP, which took effect on March 30, 2026, doesn't just regulate what universities can call themselves (that was Article 3, which we covered previously 👉). It also sets precise, quantifiable standards for what an institution must actually be before it earns the title.

Article 4 lays out the full conditions for official recognition as a "đại học" (university) — and the requirements are comprehensive, measurable, and demanding.

The headline? At least 60% of your full-time faculty must hold PhDs. 🎓

But that's just the entry fee. The full checklist covers faculty qualifications, international composition, student scale, postgraduate ratios, research output, financial transparency — and you must sustain all of it for a minimum of 3 continuous years before you can even apply.

This is Vietnam's academic quality control system, and it just got significantly more rigorous. 📊⚖️


📊 INFOGRAPHIC: The 6-Category University Recognition Checklist



🔍 Part 1: Breaking Down All Six Requirements

🎓 Requirement 1 — Faculty Qualifications: The 60% PhD Rule

The standard: At least 60% of full-time (cơ hữu) faculty members must hold a doctoral degree (tiến sĩ — PhD or equivalent).

Why this matters: Full-time faculty are the academic backbone of any institution. A 60% PhD threshold ensures that the majority of the teaching and research workforce has reached the highest level of academic qualification — and is therefore genuinely equipped to train future researchers, professionals, and scholars.

What "full-time" (cơ hữu) means: These are faculty members formally employed by the institution — not visiting lecturers, adjuncts, or part-time instructors. The 60% threshold applies to this core group.

🏠 Real-life example: If a university has 200 full-time faculty members, at least 120 of them must hold PhDs. An institution with only 80 PhD-holding faculty out of 200 fails this standard — regardless of how many brilliant practitioners or industry experts it has in the part-time roster.


⚖️ Requirement 2 — Legal Approval: Different Rules for Public and Private

Public institutions (cơ sở công lập): Must receive formal approval from their direct supervisory government authority (the ministry or provincial authority that oversees them).

Private institutions (cơ sở tư thục): Must receive the consent of investors representing at least 75% of total contributed capital. This supermajority requirement ensures that upgrading to university status has genuine institutional buy-in — not just a decision pushed through by a minority of shareholders.

🚗 Real-life analogy: Think of it like a homeowners' association vote. For a major structural change to the building, you can't just get 51% — you need 75%. The standard reflects the seriousness of the commitment. 🏗️


🌍 Requirement 3 — International Faculty: Minimum 5%

The standard: At least 5% of full-time faculty must be international — defined as either:

  • Vietnamese nationals currently based overseas (Việt kiều faculty), OR
  • Foreign nationals

Why this matters: Internationalisation of academic staff brings diverse research perspectives, global networks, and cross-border academic credibility. A 5% floor is modest but meaningful — it signals a genuine commitment to operating beyond purely domestic academic circles.

🎓 Real-life example: In that same 200-faculty institution, at least 10 of the 200 full-time faculty must be international. Given the global competition for academic talent, this requires active international recruitment strategies — not just the occasional visiting professor.


🏛️ Requirement 4 — Organisation and Scale: Five Sub-requirements

This is the most complex category — five separate quantitative thresholds that must all be met:

4a. At least 3 affiliated schools (trường trực thuộc) A university must have at least three constituent faculties or schools organised as sub-units — not just departments. This reflects the multi-disciplinary nature expected of a true university.

4b. 25 active training programmes at each level At least 25 programmes must be actively running at each academic level (bachelor's, master's, doctorate). This demonstrates genuine breadth of academic offering.

4c. Minimum 15,000 full-time enrolled students (quy mô đào tạo chính quy) Scale matters. A university must be educating a meaningful number of students — not operating as a boutique institution of a few hundred learners.

4d. At least 20% postgraduate students Of those 15,000+ students, at least 3,000 must be studying at master's or doctoral level. This ensures the institution is genuinely engaged in advanced knowledge production — not just undergraduate teaching.

4e. Minimum 3% international students Of the student body, at least 3% must be international students. This complements the international faculty requirement — a truly international academic environment involves both.


🔬 Requirement 5 — Research Output: One Publication Per Faculty Per Year

The standard: Every full-time faculty member must produce at least one qualifying scientific output per year, from:

  • Papers indexed in Web of Science or Scopus (the two globally recognised academic database standards)
  • Published books (academic/scholarly)
  • Patents

The revenue standard: Total income from research and innovation activities must equal at least 20% of the institution's total revenue.

This is arguably the most demanding requirement. It means:

  • Research must be embedded in institutional culture — not optional
  • The institution must be generating meaningful external research funding
  • Faculty are expected to be active researchers, not just teachers

🔬 Real-life example: For a 200-faculty institution — 200 qualifying publications, patents, or books per year. Minimum. Every single year. This is the standard of a research university, not a teaching college.


💰 Requirement 6 — Financial Stability and Transparency

The standards:

  • Maintain legal and stable financial resources sufficient to support operations
  • Implement public financial transparency (publish financial information as required by law)
  • Maintain all of the above conditions continuously for at least 3 years before submitting a recognition application

That last point is critical. You can't sprint to meet these standards in the final months before applying. The decree requires sustained compliance across all categories over a multi-year period — meaning institutions must build genuine, durable capacity, not temporary statistical manipulation.


🤔 DID YOU KNOW? Academic Trivia That Will Impress at Your Next PhD Defence

🤔 Did you know that the world's first university — the University of Bologna, founded in 1088 — initially had no faculty at all? Students hired their own teachers and could fire them for being late or teaching material out of sequence. The faculty-focused model came later. Vietnam's 60% PhD requirement would have seemed very futuristic to those medieval Bolognese students! 🇮🇹🏛️

🤔 Did you know that Web of Science (now owned by Clarivate) has been indexing scientific literature since 1960, making it one of the oldest scientific citation databases in the world? Vietnam's requirement to publish in WoS or Scopus directly connects its universities to the global research community's quality standards. 🌍

🤔 Did you know that Vietnam currently has around 240 higher education institutions — but the number that could pass all six of Article 4's requirements simultaneously is significantly smaller? The decree effectively creates a formal distinction between institutions that are called universities and those that function as universities. 📊

🤔 Did you know that the 3-year continuous compliance window before application mirrors similar international accreditation practices? The UK's Quality Assurance Agency (QAA) also requires evidence of sustained standards over time — not point-in-time snapshots — before granting university title. Vietnam's approach is aligned with global best practice. 🇬🇧✅

🤔 Did you know that the 20% research revenue threshold is a meaningful benchmark? Many top global research universities derive 30–50% of revenue from research grants and contracts. Setting 20% as the floor signals Vietnam's intent to build genuinely research-intensive institutions — not just credential factories. 💰🔬


💡 TIPS: What Do Institutions Need to Do?

For institutions aspiring to university recognition:

1. 📋 Run a full compliance gap analysis immediately. Map your current position against all six requirement categories. How many full-time faculty hold PhDs? What percentage are international? What is your current research publication rate? Your postgraduate enrolment ratio?

2. 👩‍🔬 Start PhD faculty development now — it takes years. Hiring PhDs or supporting current faculty through doctoral programmes is a multi-year process. If you're at 40% PhD faculty today, reaching 60% won't happen overnight. Start the pipeline immediately.

3. 🌍 Build an international faculty recruitment strategy. The 5% international faculty threshold requires active outreach to Vietnamese diaspora academics and foreign researchers. Start attending international academic job fairs and building bilateral university relationships.

4. 📚 Institutionalise research culture — systematically. The one-publication-per-faculty-per-year requirement means research must be a formal part of every faculty member's workload, performance review, and professional development. Build the infrastructure: research time allocation, publication support, grant writing assistance.

5. 💰 Work toward the 20% research revenue target. This requires building research funding capacity — applying for government research grants, industry partnerships, international collaboration funds. This doesn't happen by accident; it requires a dedicated research commercialisation strategy.

6. 📅 The 3-year clock starts with genuine compliance. Don't wait until everything is perfect before starting — but understand that the 3-year countdown begins only when you're actually meeting all requirements. Premature applications will be rejected, and you lose time.

7. ⚖️ Legal advice on the application process is essential. The approval pathway differs for public and private institutions, and the 75% investor consent requirement for private schools has significant corporate governance implications. Thầy Điệp & Associates Law Firm can guide you through the legal dimensions of the recognition process.

For students choosing where to study:

8. 🔍 Use these criteria as a quality checklist. Ask prospective institutions: What percentage of your faculty hold PhDs? What is your postgraduate enrolment? What is your Scopus/WoS publication rate? These are now legally significant metrics — institutions that genuinely meet them have demonstrated durable academic quality.



🌿 COMPLIANCE & NATURE: The Unusual Parallel

Nature 🌿 University Recognition Standards ⚖️
An ecosystem requires biodiversity to be classified as healthy 🌳🦋🐛 A university requires breadth — 25 programmes, 3 schools, mixed student/faculty composition
A reef's health is measured over years — not a single snapshot 🐠 3-year continuous compliance before applying — sustained performance, not a sprint
Only 1% of scientific papers survive long-term citation — quality self-selects 📄 Scopus/WoS indexing as the quality filter for academic publications
Trees with deeper root systems withstand storms better 🌲 Institutions with genuinely qualified faculty and research revenue are more resilient
A forest fire clears weak undergrowth and reveals what's genuinely healthy 🔥🌿 Strict recognition standards separate teaching colleges from genuine research universities

The lesson: Nature doesn't give "forest" status to a cluster of saplings. Vietnam's decree takes the same view — university is not a label you self-assign after a few good semesters. It's a status you earn through years of demonstrated, measurable, sustained academic excellence. 🌲🎓


📝 QUIZ: Can Your Institution Pass the Article 4 Test?

Let's find out if you know Vietnam's new university recognition bar! 🧐

Question 1: What minimum percentage of full-time faculty must hold PhDs for a university to qualify under Article 4?

  • A) 40%
  • B) 50%
  • C) 60%
  • D) 75%

Question 2: For a private university to obtain recognition, what investor approval threshold is required?

  • A) Simple majority (51%) of investors
  • B) Two-thirds (67%) of investors
  • C) At least 75% of total contributed capital
  • D) Unanimous investor consent

Question 3: Which of the following satisfies the research output requirement for a full-time faculty member?

  • A) Teaching a popular undergraduate course
  • B) Serving on three university committees
  • C) Publishing one Scopus-indexed paper per year
  • D) Supervising five master's theses annually

Question 4: What is the minimum scale requirement for student enrolment?

  • A) 5,000 full-time students
  • B) 10,000 full-time students
  • C) 15,000 full-time students
  • D) 20,000 full-time students

Question 5: How long must an institution continuously meet ALL recognition conditions before submitting its application?

  • A) 6 months
  • B) 1 year
  • C) At least 3 years
  • D) 5 years

Question 6: What percentage of total institutional revenue must come from research and innovation activities?

  • A) 5%
  • B) 10%
  • C) 20%
  • D) 30%

Question 7: What percentage of full-time students must be at postgraduate level?

  • A) 10%
  • B) 20%
  • C) 30%
  • D) 15%

Score:

  • 7/7 ✅ → University accreditation consultant material! 🏆🎓
  • 5–6/7 ✅ → Strong — review the scale and research requirements!
  • 3–4/7 ✅ → Re-read Part 1 — each requirement has a specific number! 📖
  • 0–2/7 ✅ → Start from the beginning and take notes. These numbers matter! 🍵😄

🗣️ CALL TO ACTION

Are you a university administrator, faculty member, or student in Vietnam's higher education system? 🎓

👇 Drop your reactions, "our institution is starting this journey!" updates, or questions in the comments!

💼 Share this with university leadership teams, academic councils, and education policy professionals — because the bar has been officially raised, and every institution needs to know exactly where it now stands.

📩 Need legal guidance on the university recognition application process, or support with the corporate governance requirements for private institutions? Thầy Điệp & Associates Law Firm is ready to help. For notarisation of institutional documents in the application process, Thu Thiem Notary Office has you covered. ⚖️


🏷️ HASHTAGS

#Vietnam #HigherEducation #UniversityStandards #Decree91_2026 #PhDRequirement #EducationLaw #VietnamLaw #NgocPrinny #deluluVN #AcademicQuality #UniversityVietnam #ResearchVietnam #EducationPolicy #ScopusWoS #PhDFaculty #StudyVietnam #HigherEdVietnam



🚨 Fun But Serious: A Brief Legal Disclaimer 🚨

Hey there, legal explorer! 🕵️

Before you go...

This article explains the general framework of Article 4 of Decree 91/2026 — but each institution's specific situation (current faculty ratios, student enrolment, research output data, governance structure) requires individual assessment!

For institutions considering the university recognition pathway, professional legal and strategic advice is essential ⚖️ — may we suggest Lawyer Lê Thị Kim Dung & Lawyer Nguyễn Văn Điệp at Thầy Điệp & Associates Law Firm? For document notarisation in the application process, Thu Thiem Notary Office is here to help. 📋

Remember: Reading this article doesn't make you a higher education accreditation expert, just like reading a PhD thesis doesn't give you the doctorate! 🎓😄

📄 Full disclaimer here

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


💝 Support Your Legal Ninja's Wellness Fund! 🍵

Enjoyed Ngọc Prinny's witty legal wisdom? Keep this ninja fuelled! ⚖️

👉 Buy Ngọc Prinny a green tea here ☕

Because great legal content deserves great fuel — and academic quality standards deserve great tea! 🍵🌱


🌸 A Little Wish Just for You...

If you're reading this in the evening 🌙 — wishing you restful sleep, undisturbed by PhD recruitment nightmares or Scopus publication deadlines. The research will still be there tomorrow. 😴✨

If you're reading this in the morning ☀️ — wishing you clear academic metrics, cooperative investors, and faculty who genuinely want to publish in indexed journals this year!

If you're a university vice-rector reading this with a spreadsheet open 📊 — you're already doing the right thing. Run the numbers, close the gaps, and give your institution the three-year head start it needs. The standard is high but it's achievable. 💪

If you're a PhD student wondering if this makes your degree more valuable 🔬 — yes. Yes it does. Every institution in Vietnam now has a regulatory reason to want you on faculty. Well-timed. 🥷🎓


Article authored by: Nguyễn Lê Bảo Ngọc (Ngọc Prinny) 

Consulted by: Lawyer Lê Thị Kim Dung & Lawyer Nguyễn Văn Điệp — Thầy Điệp & Associates Law Firm

© 2026 delulu.vn | All rights reserved | Legal content for informational purposes only

Saturday, April 18, 2026

🎓 From March 30, 2026: Vietnamese Universities Can No Longer Casually Slap "National," "International," or "Vietnam" Into Their Names — The Upgrade They Didn't Ask For! 😂

📖 Etymology Corner: The Prestige Problem Hiding in a Name

Before we get into the delicious drama of university naming regulations, a quick linguistic detour! 🧠

The word "university" comes from Latin universitas magistrorum et scholarium — meaning "a community of teachers and scholars." Note what's not in there: no mention of "national," "international," or country names. The original concept was just... a gathering of people who want to learn things together. 📚

And "prestigious"? From Latin praestigium — originally meaning "illusion" or "conjuring trick." 🎩✨

So when a university slaps "International" onto its name without actually teaching internationally or having international accreditation, they're being etymologically accurate — it really is a prestige illusion! 😂

The government noticed. Decree 91/2026 is the response. ⚖️



🌌 In a Nutshell: What Just Happened?

On March 30, 2026, Decree 91/2026/NĐ-CP took effect — the government's detailed implementation rules for the Higher Education Law.

Buried inside this sweeping decree is Article 3, which contains a deceptively simple but legally significant rule:

Vietnamese universities can no longer freely attach the words "national" (quốc gia), "international" (quốc tế), or "Vietnam" (Việt Nam) to their names if doing so could mislead anyone about their legal status, operational scope, or state backing.

Think of it as Vietnam's government saying: "You need to earn that name." 🎓⚖️

For years, some institutions have added grand-sounding terms to their names to project prestige, attract students, and command higher fees — without the substance to back it up. Decree 91/2026 draws a firm line in the academic sand. 🏖️


📊 INFOGRAPHIC: Who Can Use What — The Three Protected Terms


 



🔍 Part 1: What Does Article 3 of Decree 91/2026 Actually Prohibit?

The decree targets two categories of problematic naming:

❌ Category 1 — Misleading Prestige Terms

Universities, academies, and higher education institutions may NOT use the following words arbitrarily (tùy tiện) if doing so could create confusion about:

  • Their legal status (are they a state institution or not?)
  • Their scope of operations (do they operate nationally or internationally?)
  • Whether they have state sponsorship or backing

The three protected terms are:

Term Vietnamese Risk if misused
"National" Quốc gia Implies government national-level status
"International" Quốc tế Implies international accreditation or operations
"Vietnam" Việt Nam Implies official state or national representation

❌ Category 2 — Confusing Rankings, Symbols, and Titles

Institutions also may NOT adopt names, titles, rankings, or symbols that:

  • Duplicate or closely resemble state agencies
  • Could be confused with armed forces
  • Mimic political or social organisations
  • Could be mistaken for other educational institutions — whether domestic or foreign

This is the "don't pretend to be Oxford" clause, effectively. 😅


✅ Part 2: The Three Permitted Special Cases

The decree is not a blanket ban — it provides clear criteria for legitimate use of each protected term.

🏛️ "National" (Quốc Gia) — Exclusively for National Universities

Who qualifies: Only institutions formally designated as National Universities (Đại học Quốc gia) by the state. Currently in Vietnam, this means Vietnam National University, Hanoi and Vietnam National University, Ho Chi Minh City — and any future institutions the government formally establishes at this level.

Everyone else: No matter how large, how old, or how academically respected — if you're not a formally designated National University, you cannot call yourself one. 🚫


🌐 "International" (Quốc Tế) — Three Qualifying Pathways

Who qualifies: Institutions that meet at least one of the following:

  1. All programmes are taught entirely in a foreign language — not just a few elective courses or an "English stream," but all formal degree programmes
  2. 100% foreign investment — the institution is entirely foreign-owned
  3. Established under an international agreement — a bilateral or multilateral treaty between Vietnam and one or more foreign governments

The "we have some English courses" schools: Not qualifying. Back of the line. 📚



🇻🇳 "Vietnam" (Việt Nam) — For Foreign-Invested Institutions Operating Here

Who qualifies: Institutions that meet one of the following:

  1. 100% foreign-owned institutions operating in Vietnam
  2. Established under an international agreement

This may seem counterintuitive — why can a foreign institution use "Vietnam" but not all domestic ones? The logic is that these institutions represent a formal bilateral or investment presence in Vietnam — they're labelling their geographic location, not claiming national representation.


🏠🚗 Real-Life Examples: The Name Game in Practice

🎓 Example 1 — The Legitimate Case: The British University Vietnam (BUV) — 100% UK-owned, operating in Vietnam under formal investment registration. ✅ The name reflects its origin (British), its entity type (University), and its location (Vietnam). Every element is accurate and meets the legal criteria. Clean, transparent, compliant.

🎓 Example 2 — The "Aspirational" Case: Imagine a private Vietnamese institution with 2,000 students, a few exchange agreements with regional universities, and courses taught primarily in Vietnamese — that decides to call itself "International University of Science and Technology Vietnam." 🚫 Under Decree 91/2026, this would be scrutinised: is it truly international? Does "Vietnam" imply state backing it doesn't have? The name suggests prestige the institution hasn't demonstrated.

🎓 Example 3 — The Confusion Problem: Suppose a new private college names itself something very similar to Vietnam National University — using both "Vietnam" and "National." 🚫 Students, parents, and employers could reasonably assume this institution has government national-level status. It doesn't. The decree exists precisely to prevent this confusion.

🚗 The Car Analogy: Imagine if any car manufacturer could print "Formula 1 Racing Edition" on any vehicle they sold. Your hatchback with a spoiler bolted on is not an F1 car, but the label makes buyers think it is. Vietnam's university naming rules are essentially: you have to have actually raced in Formula 1 before you get to say so on the tin. 🏎️


🤔 DID YOU KNOW? Fun Legal and Academic Trivia!

🤔 Did you know that the problem of misleading university names is global? In the UK, the Further and Higher Education Act 1992 restricted the use of the word "university" — previously, any institution could claim it. The legislation forced dozens of polytechnics to genuinely qualify before being permitted to use the title. Vietnam is following a well-trodden international path. 🇬🇧

🤔 Did you know that Vietnam currently has two official National UniversitiesVietnam National University, Hanoi (VNU-HN) and Vietnam National University, Ho Chi Minh City (VNU-HCM)? These are the only two institutions legally permitted to use "Quốc Gia" (National) in their names under the new rules. All others must rebrand or requalify.

🤔 Did you know that the United States has no federal naming restrictions for universities? This is why American institutions can name themselves almost anything — which is partly why degree mill fraud is more common there than in more tightly regulated systems. Vietnam's approach is actually more protective of students. 🇺🇸

🤔 Did you know that degree mills — fake universities that sell credentials without legitimate education — often deliberately use "National," "International," or country names to sound credible? Decree 91/2026 directly targets this vector of fraud by requiring those terms to actually mean something. 🎓🚫

🤔 Did you know that the word "academy" (học viện) is also covered by these rules? It's not just universities (trường đại học) — any higher education institution, including academies and similar entities, must comply with Article 3's naming requirements from March 30, 2026 onward.


💡 TIPS: What Do Affected Institutions Need to Do?

For currently operating institutions:

1. 📋 Audit your current name immediately. Does it contain "quốc gia," "quốc tế," or "Việt Nam"? If yes — do you legally qualify under one of the permitted pathways? If not, planning for compliance is urgent.

2. 📅 Check transitional provisions. Decree 91/2026 may include transitional timeframes for renaming existing institutions — verify whether your institution has a grace period or must comply immediately from March 30, 2026.

3. 📑 Document your qualifying criteria. If you DO legitimately qualify — for example, as a 100% foreign-invested institution — ensure your investment registration, establishment documents, and academic programme language records clearly support this. You may need to demonstrate compliance.

4. 🔗 The renaming process requires government approval. Changing a university's name is not a simple administrative form. It involves the Ministry of Education and Training and must follow the procedures in Article 3. Don't attempt to simply rebrand marketing materials — the legal name must be formally changed through proper channels.

5. 🎓 For "international" claims — audit your programme languages. If you're claiming "International" status based on teaching in a foreign language, every formally registered degree programme must be conducted in that foreign language — not just some courses or an optional international stream.

6. ⚖️ Get legal advice before any name change. The legal, marketing, branding, accreditation, and student communication implications of a university renaming are complex. Thầy Điệp & Associates Law Firm can help assess your institution's specific situation.

For students and parents:

7. 🔍 Use the name rules as a quality check. From March 30, 2026, if an institution uses "National," "International," or "Vietnam" in its name, it should — in theory — legally qualify for that term. This gives you a simple filter: does this institution's name make legally verifiable claims? If it sounds too grand to be true, it now has to prove it.


🌿 COMPLIANCE & NATURE: The Unusual Parallel

Nature 🌿 University Naming Rules ⚖️
Only actual lions can lead a pride — a hyena can't claim the title 🦁 Only actual National Universities can use "National" in their name
Migratory birds must genuinely travel internationally to be called migratory 🦅 Only genuinely international institutions can use "International"
A plant labelled "native species" must actually be native 🌿 "Vietnam" in a name must reflect actual geographic/investment reality
Evolution: species adapt their features honestly — peacocks can't fake their feathers 🦚 Institutions must earn their naming terms through actual qualifying characteristics
Counterfeit honey — looks like honey, tastes like honey, but contains no actual bee work 🍯 A university with "National" in its name but no national designation — same problem

The lesson: Nature doesn't permit false advertising. A bird that can't migrate doesn't get called migratory. A university that isn't genuinely national, international, or a formal Vietnamese institution shouldn't get to claim those words — because students, employers, and accreditation bodies around the world rely on those words to mean something. 🦁📋


📝 QUIZ: Test Your Decree 91/2026 Knowledge!

Let's see if you'd pass the university naming compliance exam! 🧐

Question 1: From what date are the new university naming rules under Decree 91/2026/NĐ-CP effective?

  • A) January 1, 2026
  • B) January 1, 2027
  • C) March 30, 2026
  • D) September 1, 2026 (new academic year)

Question 2: Which institutions are PERMITTED to use "National" (Quốc Gia) in their name?

  • A) Any university established before 2000
  • B) Any state-funded university
  • C) Only formally designated National Universities (Đại học Quốc gia)
  • D) Any university in the top 100 of a domestic ranking

Question 3: An institution wants to use "International" (Quốc Tế) in its name. Which of the following qualifies it?

  • A) Having at least one international exchange agreement
  • B) Teaching 30% of courses in English
  • C) Teaching ALL programmes entirely in a foreign language
  • D) Having international students make up 10% of enrolment

Question 4: A 100% French-owned higher education institution operates in Ho Chi Minh City. Can it use "Vietnam" in its name?

  • A) No — only Vietnamese institutions can use "Vietnam"
  • B) Only if it teaches Vietnamese language courses
  • C) Yes — 100% foreign-invested institutions operating in Vietnam are permitted to use "Vietnam"
  • D) Only with special approval from the Prime Minister

Question 5: Which of the following is also prohibited under the naming rules?

  • A) Using the institution's founding year in its name
  • B) Using a city or province name
  • C) Using titles or symbols that could be confused with state agencies or armed forces
  • D) Using the name of an academic discipline

Score:

  • 5/5 ✅ → You're ready to advise university branding teams! 🎓🏆
  • 3–4/5 ✅ → Good — review the three permitted special cases!
  • 1–2/5 ✅ → Re-read Part 2 carefully! The criteria are specific! 📖
  • 0/5 ✅ → Time for an intensive compliance revision session — with green tea! 🍵😄

🗣️ CALL TO ACTION

Are you affiliated with a higher education institution in Vietnam? 🎓

👇 Drop your questions, "our university might need to rebrand!" moments, or observations in the comments below!

💼 Share this with university administrators, legal counsel, and education sector professionals — because March 30, 2026 is already here, and compliance isn't optional.

📩 Does your institution need legal guidance on naming compliance or the renaming process? Thầy Điệp & Associates Law Firm can assess your situation. Need document notarisation for official name-change filings? Thu Thiem Notary Office is your go-to. ⚖️


#Vietnam #HigherEducation #UniversityNaming #Decree91_2026 #EducationLaw #VietnamLaw #NgocPrinny #deluluVN #LawInVietnam #UniversityVietnam #EducationPolicy #LegalUpdate #NamingRules #VNUHanoi #VNUHCM #ExpatVietnam #StudyVietnam


🚨 Fun But Serious: A Brief Legal Disclaimer 🚨

Hey there, legal explorer! 🕵️

Before you go...

This article explains the general framework of Decree 91/2026's naming rules — but each institution's specific situation (existing name, qualifying criteria, transitional provisions) requires individual legal assessment!

For institutions potentially affected by these rules, please seek professional legal advice before making any name change decisions ⚖️ — may we suggest Lawyer Lê Thị Kim Dung & Lawyer Nguyễn Văn Điệp at Thầy Điệp & Associates Law Firm? For notarisation of name-change documents, Thu Thiem Notary Office is ready to help. 📋

Remember: Reading this article doesn't make you an education law specialist, just like reading a university prospectus doesn't give you the degree! 🎓😄

📄 Full disclaimer here

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Thursday, April 16, 2026

🏛️➡️📜 HCMC's Notarisation Power Shift: Ward Offices Step Back, Notaries Step Up


By Nguyễn Lê Bảo Ngọc (Ngọc Prinny) · Reviewed by Ls. Lê Thị Kim Dung & Ls. Nguyễn Văn Điệp

📖 Etymology Corner: "Authenticate" — Making Things Real

The word "authenticate" traces to the Greek authentikos — meaning "original, genuine, principal." At its root is autos (self) + hentes (one who acts), giving us the idea of something done by the person themselves, with full legal force. In the context of Vietnamese law, chứng thực (authentication) is the official act that transforms a private agreement into a document the state recognises. When we ask who has the power to authenticate, we're really asking: who has the authority to make private intentions officially real? 🔏

As of 27 April 2026, in Ho Chi Minh City, the answer for six major transaction types just changed.



🎬 In a Nutshell

For decades, if you wanted to certify a contract involving your house, your land, your car, your will, or your inheritance in HCMC, you had two options: go to a ward People's Committee (UBND phường/xã/thị trấn), or go to a notary office. Both had the legal authority. Your choice.

From 27 April 2026, that menu shrinks to one item. The Ho Chi Minh City People's Committee has formally transferred six categories of transaction authentication away from ward-level authorities — and handed that power exclusively to notary organisations (tổ chức hành nghề công chứng).

This is not a minor bureaucratic reshuffle. It's a structural shift in how legal transactions are validated at the ground level in Vietnam's largest city. Let's break down exactly what changed, what didn't, and what it means for you.




📋 Section 1: What Got Transferred — The Six Transaction Types

The Decision transfers the authority under specific points of Article 5(1) of Decree 23/2015/NĐ-CP (as amended by Decree 280/2025/NĐ-CP). From 27/04/2026, ward People's Committee Chairpersons in HCMC can no longer authenticate the following:

Point (d) — Movable property transactions 🚗 Contracts and transactions involving động sản (movable assets) — vehicles, machinery, equipment, livestock, goods, or any other asset that is not land or immovable property. If you're selling your car and want the sale agreement officially certified, you now go to a notary office.

Point (đ) — Land use right transactions 🌍 Transactions relating to quyền sử dụng đất under land law — transfers, gifts, contributions of capital, mortgages, leases of land use rights. Given that land transactions are among the most common and highest-stakes legal acts Vietnamese people undertake, this transfer affects a very large slice of daily legal life.

Point (e) — Housing transactions 🏠 Contracts and transactions involving nhà ở under housing law — purchases, gifts, exchanges, mortgages, and leases of residential property. These are separate from land use rights legally (you can own a house but not the land under it), but functionally the two often go together.

Point (g) — Wills 📜 Authentication of di chúc (testamentary documents). Previously, a person could go to their ward office to have their will certified. Now, that role belongs exclusively to notary organisations.

Point (h) — Inheritance disclaimers 🙅 Văn bản từ chối nhận di sản — formal documents in which a person legally renounces their right to receive an inheritance. These are legally sensitive documents with permanent consequences, and they now require a notary.

Point (i) — Estate division agreements ⚖️ Văn bản phân chia di sản involving the asset types above — agreements among heirs dividing movable assets, land use rights, or housing. If a family is splitting a deceased parent's property, the division document now requires notarisation.

FULL DOCUMENT HERE


🤔 Section 2: What Didn't Change — Ward Offices Still Do Plenty (alongside Notary Offices)

This is important: ward People's Committees are not being abolished or stripped of all authentication functions. They retain authority for:

  • Certifying copies from originals (sao y bản chính) — the everyday act of getting a photocopy certified as true
  • Certifying signatures (chứng thực chữ ký) — having your signature on a document officially witnessed
  • Other non-transaction authentication services

The six types listed above are the specific carve-out. For everything else: your ward office still works fine. 👍


🔄 Section 3: The Transitional Rule — Your In-Progress Files Are Safe

Article 3 of the Decision contains a sensible transitional provision. If a file was already validly received by a ward People's Committee Chairperson before 27 April 2026, that office continues to process and complete it — even after the transfer date.

You do not need to restart your application at a notary office. The ward office finishes what it started.

This matters because authentication processes aren't always instant — documents get reviewed, parties get notified, appointments get scheduled. The transitional rule protects everyone who was already mid-process. 🛡️


🏛️ Section 4: The Legal Backbone — What's Being Revoked

The Decision also expressly revokes four earlier decisions that previously governed this area, including HCMC's own Decision 31/2011 and Binh Duong province's 2013–2015 decisions on authentication authority. This housekeeping ensures there's no legal ambiguity about which rules apply going forward.

The new regime rests on:

  • Law on Notarisation 46/2024/QH15
  • Decree 104/2025/NĐ-CP (implementing the Notarisation Law)
  • Decree 23/2015/NĐ-CP as amended by Decree 280/2025/NĐ-CP

🏠🚗 Real-Life Examples

Example 1 — Selling a motorbike: 🏍️ Before 27/04/2026: Go to your ward office to certify the sale contract. After: Head to any licensed notary organisation in HCMC. The notary certifies the transaction and both parties receive authenticated copies.

Example 2 — Writing a will: 📝 Grandmother Lan wants to formally record her wishes for dividing her apartment and savings. Before: Her ward People's Committee could certify the will. After 27/04/2026: She must visit a notary office. The good news — HCMC has hundreds of notary offices, many open extended hours. The Thu Thiem Notary Office is one example.

Example 3 — Family inheritance division: 👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 Three siblings need to formally divide their late father's house and car. Both the house (Art. 5(1)(e)) and the car (Art. 5(1)(d)) fall under the transferred categories. The estate division document (Art. 5(1)(i)) is also transferred. All three aspects now require a notary. One trip, one office, done correctly. ✅

Example 4 — Getting a copy of a birth certificate certified: 📄 This is sao y bản chính — certifying a photocopy. This is NOT in the transferred categories. Ward offices still handle this all day, every day. No change for this common task.


🤔 Did You Know?

Vietnam's notarisation (công chứng) and authentication (chứng thực) systems are legally distinct, even though they accomplish similar goals. Notarisation carries stronger evidentiary weight — a notarised document is presumed legally valid unless proven otherwise in court. Authentication (chứng thực) was historically the more accessible, lower-cost alternative, especially at the ward level. By moving key transaction types to notary offices, HCMC is essentially upgrading the baseline legal protection on its most important private transactions — at the cost of some accessibility. Whether that tradeoff is worth it is what practitioners and residents will find out over the coming months. 📊


🌿 Law in Nature — The Specialisation Parallel

This transfer mirrors biological specialisation in evolved ecosystems. Generalist organisms handle many tasks adequately. Specialists handle a narrower range of tasks with much greater precision. Ward offices are generalists — they handle population management, certifications, local governance, complaints, and hundreds of other tasks. Notary offices are specialists — they exist specifically for legal transaction authentication, maintain professional liability, carry insurance, and are subject to strict disciplinary oversight. Moving high-stakes transaction authentication to specialists is the same logic that explains why we have surgeons instead of asking our GP to operate. 🔬

💡 Tips for HCMC Residents and Practitioners

  • Check the date on your file. If your authentication request was received before 27/04/2026 by a ward office, it can still be completed there. If you're starting fresh on or after that date — notary office only for the six types.
  • Find your nearest notary office in advance. HCMC has a dense network of notary offices. The Thu Thiem Notary Office serves District 2 and surrounding areas and can advise on which documents you need to bring.
  • Bring complete documentation. Notary offices operate with stricter document checklists than ward offices historically did. Before your appointment, confirm the full list of required papers for your specific transaction type.
  • Copies and signatures: still go to the ward office. Don't queue at a notary office for a simple photocopy certification — that's still the ward office's domain and usually much faster.
  • Practitioners: Update your client advisory templates. If you have standard instructions telling clients to go to their ward office for contract certification, the six transferred categories now need to say "notary office" instead.

📝 Quick Quiz — Know Your New Authorities!

Question 1: From 27 April 2026, where do you go to certify a house purchase contract in HCMC?

a) Ward People's Committee · b) Notary organisation · c) District People's Committee · d) Ministry of Justice

Question 2: A client submitted their will certification request to the ward office on 25 April 2026. The transfer takes effect 27 April. What happens to their file?

a) The ward office completes it — transitional rule applies · b) They must restart at a notary office · c) The file is automatically transferred · d) It becomes invalid

Question 3: Which of the following is NOT transferred to notary organisations?

a) Wills · b) Land use right transactions · c) Certifying a photocopy of a passport · d) Inheritance disclaimers

Question 4: This HCMC Decision is based on which national legislation?

a) Law on Notarisation 46/2024/QH15 + Decree 23/2015 as amended · b) Civil Code 2015 only · c) Law on Land 2024 only · d) Constitution 2013


🗣️ Call to Action

Are you a resident of HCMC who has dealt with transaction authentication recently — before or after the transfer? Have you noticed the change at your local ward office yet? Or are you a notary or legal practitioner adapting to the new volume? 💬

Share your experience in the comments — Ngọc Prinny wants to know how this is playing out on the ground! And share this post with anyone who might be planning to sell property, write a will, or divide an inheritance in HCMC this year. The earlier they know, the better prepared they'll be. 📤


🚨 Fun But Serious: A Brief Legal Disclaimer 🚨

Hey there, legal explorer! 🕵️‍♂️ Before you go...

  • This article is like a map, not a teleporter 🗺️ — it'll guide you, but won't replace a proper legal consultation!
  • Each legal situation is unique 🦄 — the six categories listed are based on the Decision as published; always verify current requirements with the relevant office.
  • For real-world transactions, seek a professional 🧙‍♂️ — the Thu Thiem Notary Office handles notarisation, or consult Thầy Điệp & Associates Law Firm for legal advice.

Full disclaimer: HERE

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Every article is powered by hours of research, 10+ years of legal expertise, creative storytelling — and truly heroic amounts of herbal tea. If these posts have helped you navigate Vietnam's legal landscape, consider buying me a green tea ☕ Your support keeps the knowledge flowing! 🌱


If you're reading this at night — sweet dreams, and may all your documents be perfectly authenticated! 🌙✨

If you're reading this in the morning — wishing you a smooth day, short queues at the notary, and zero missing documents! ☀️📋

If you're reading this at lunch — enjoy your meal, and may your inheritance divisions always be amicable! 🍱⚖️

Whenever you're reading this — may your transactions be valid, your notarisations be swift, and your ward office visits always be for the right kind of paperwork! 🔏💚


Author: Nguyễn Lê Bảo Ngọc (Ngọc Prinny) | Reviewed by Ls. Lê Thị Kim Dung & Ls. Nguyễn Văn Điệp

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