Vietnam Plans Big Minimum Wage Boost in 2026
By Reuters | 13 Nov, 2025
Vietnam's growing importance as a manufacturing hub for foreign companies supports a 7%+ minimum wage increase.
Vietnam will raise the minimum wage for contracted workers by over 7% from next year, according to a government document reviewed by Reuters, in a move that could potentially increase labour costs for companies.
The new minimum wage will range from 3.7 million dong to 5.31 million dong ($141-$202) per month, depending on the region, according to a document signed by Deputy Prime Minister Ho Duc Phoc on Monday. The decision will take effect on January 1, 2026.
The minimum wage is the basis for employers to negotiate salaries with their workers, and is applicable for people working under employment contracts, according to the document.
The Southeast Asian country, a regional manufacturing hub with cheap labour costs that attract foreign investors, last raised its minimum wage a year and a half ago.
According to the document, the minimum wage per hour will increase to 17,800 dong-25,500 dong.
($1 = 26,344 dong)
(Reporting by Khanh Vu; Editing by David Stanway)
Articles
- Top 5 Date Turn-Offs for Women and Men
- Demand Builds for Affordable Chinese EVs Among American Carbuyers
- OpenAI Bumps Up Minimum Return to 17.5% in Competition with Anthropic for Private Equity
- China's Open-Source AI Dominates Global Downloads, Threatens US Leadership
- Alphabet's Wing to Begin Drone Deliveries in San Francisco Bay Area
- Strikes Paused on Talks Denied by Iran
- ICE Agents Deployed to 14 Major Airports Amid Rising TSA Absences
- How Daiso Became Japan’s Dollar Tree
- How Charles and Sara Liang Survived One Scandal After Another to Build a $20-Billion AI Giant
- SpaceX, Tesla to Build AI Chip Factories in Austin
