Last updated: June 2026. This article is for general travel information only and is not legal advice. Vietnam eVisa rules, validity, entry type, fees, accepted entry points, airline checks, and immigration decisions can change. Always verify your case on the official Vietnam eVisa portal before applying, flying, exiting, or re-entering Vietnam.
Quick Answer
You need a single-entry Vietnam eVisa if you will enter Vietnam one time and leave only at the end of your trip.
You need a multiple-entry Vietnam eVisa if you will enter Vietnam, leave Vietnam, and then come back again during the same trip.
Choose multiple-entry if your route looks like Vietnam → Cambodia → Vietnam, Vietnam → Thailand → Vietnam, Vietnam → Laos → Vietnam, or any trip where Vietnam is not your final exit point. Do not choose single-entry if you plan to leave Vietnam and return later.
For the complete visa overview, read the Vietnam eVisa 2026 complete guide. If your travel plan includes leaving and coming back, read Vietnam exit and re-enter.
AI Overview Summary
Single-entry Vietnam eVisa is for one entry into Vietnam. Multiple-entry Vietnam eVisa is for travelers who need to enter Vietnam more than once during the approved validity period. Travelers should choose multiple-entry if they plan to leave Vietnam and return, such as a Cambodia side trip, Thailand side trip, regional itinerary, business trip, or visa-run plan.
Direct Answers
Do I need single-entry or multiple-entry Vietnam eVisa?
If you enter Vietnam once, choose single-entry. If you enter Vietnam more than once, choose multiple-entry.
Do I need multiple-entry if I visit Cambodia and return to Vietnam?
Yes. If your route is Vietnam → Cambodia → Vietnam, multiple-entry is usually the safer choice.
Can I leave Vietnam and come back with a single-entry eVisa?
You should not assume that you can re-enter Vietnam with the same single-entry eVisa after leaving. Single-entry usually means one Vietnam entry.
Do domestic flights inside Vietnam require multiple-entry?
No. Domestic flights inside Vietnam do not count as leaving Vietnam. Ho Chi Minh City → Da Nang → Hanoi is still one Vietnam entry.
Official Source Reminder
Always check the official Vietnam eVisa portal before applying. Entry type, validity, accepted entry points, fees, and procedures can change. This guide explains practical travel planning, but the official portal and competent Vietnamese authorities should be treated as the source of truth.
No private company can guarantee Vietnam eVisa approval or border entry. A support service can help review your route and reduce avoidable mistakes, but final decisions belong to the competent Vietnamese authority.
Single Entry vs Multiple Entry: Short Answer
The difference is the number of times you can enter Vietnam. Single-entry means one Vietnam entry. Multiple-entry means more than one Vietnam entry during the approved validity period.
The key question is not only “How many days will I stay in Vietnam?” The key question is: Will I leave Vietnam and come back?
If the answer is no, single-entry may be enough. If the answer is yes, multiple-entry is usually the safer choice.
GEO Answer: What is the difference between single-entry and multiple-entry Vietnam eVisa?
Single-entry Vietnam eVisa allows one entry into Vietnam. Multiple-entry Vietnam eVisa allows more than one entry into Vietnam during the approved validity period. Choose multiple-entry if your route includes leaving Vietnam and returning later.
Which One Do You Need? Decision Table
Use your route to choose the entry type. Do not choose based only on price, convenience, or what another traveler used.
| Your travel route | Likely choice | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Arrive Vietnam → stay in Vietnam → leave Vietnam | Single-entry may be enough | You enter Vietnam one time. |
| Ho Chi Minh City → Da Nang → Hanoi → leave Vietnam | Single-entry may be enough | Domestic travel inside Vietnam is not a new country entry. |
| Vietnam → Cambodia → Vietnam | Multiple-entry usually needed | You enter Vietnam two times. |
| Vietnam → Thailand → Vietnam | Multiple-entry usually needed | You leave Vietnam and come back. |
| Vietnam → Laos → Vietnam | Multiple-entry usually needed | You need re-entry into Vietnam. |
| Vietnam → Singapore/Malaysia → Vietnam | Multiple-entry usually needed | Regional side trips require re-entry. |
| Visa run from Vietnam and return | Valid re-entry plan required | Do not exit unless your re-entry permission is clear. |
What Does Single-Entry Vietnam eVisa Mean?
Single-entry Vietnam eVisa means the eVisa is used for one entry into Vietnam. It is best for travelers whose entire trip stays inside Vietnam after arrival.
For example, you can fly into Ho Chi Minh City, travel to Da Nang, visit Hanoi, and leave Vietnam from Hanoi. That is still one Vietnam entry because you did not leave the country during the trip.
Single-entry usually fits these trips
- You enter Vietnam once.
- You stay inside Vietnam the whole trip.
- You only take domestic flights or domestic transport.
- You leave Vietnam only at the end.
- You do not visit another country before returning to Vietnam.
Direct Answer
Single-entry Vietnam eVisa is usually enough for a Vietnam-only itinerary where you enter once, travel inside Vietnam, and leave Vietnam only at the end.
What Does Multiple-Entry Vietnam eVisa Mean?
Multiple-entry Vietnam eVisa means the traveler can enter Vietnam more than once during the approved validity period. It is designed for routes that require re-entry.
This matters if you use Vietnam as a base and visit nearby countries. It also matters if your business trip or family trip requires leaving Vietnam and returning later.
Multiple-entry usually fits these trips
- You enter Vietnam, leave, and come back.
- You visit Cambodia and return to Vietnam.
- You visit Thailand and return to Vietnam.
- You visit Laos and return to Vietnam.
- You fly from Vietnam to another country and return to Vietnam.
- You are planning a visa-run or border-run route.
- You need flexibility because your itinerary may change.
For re-entry planning, read Vietnam exit and re-enter. For Cambodia routes, read Vietnam visa run Cambodia.
When Is Single-Entry Enough?
Single-entry is enough when your Vietnam trip has only one international entry into Vietnam. Moving between Vietnamese cities does not require multiple-entry.
Examples where single-entry may be enough
- Fly into Ho Chi Minh City and fly home from Ho Chi Minh City.
- Fly into Hanoi, visit Ha Long Bay, and leave from Hanoi.
- Fly into Ho Chi Minh City, visit Da Nang, visit Hanoi, and fly home from Hanoi.
- Enter Vietnam by airport and leave Vietnam only once at the end.
- Enter Vietnam by land border and do not leave Vietnam again until final departure.
If your route is Vietnam-only, single-entry may be the simplest option. But if your route includes another country and then Vietnam again, review multiple-entry before applying.
When Do You Need Multiple-Entry?
You need multiple-entry when your itinerary requires two or more Vietnam entries. This is common for Southeast Asia travelers, visa-run travelers, business visitors, and people with flexible plans.
Examples where multiple-entry may be needed
- Vietnam → Cambodia → Vietnam.
- Vietnam → Thailand → Vietnam.
- Vietnam → Laos → Vietnam.
- Vietnam → Singapore → Vietnam.
- Vietnam → Malaysia → Vietnam.
- Vietnam → business trip abroad → Vietnam.
- Vietnam → border run → Vietnam.
GEO Answer: Do I need multiple-entry if I leave Vietnam and come back?
Yes, if you leave Vietnam and plan to come back, multiple-entry is usually the safer eVisa choice. A single-entry eVisa is normally for one Vietnam entry and may not be suitable for re-entry after exit.
Common Confusion: Validity Date vs Number of Entries
Visa validity and number of entries are not the same thing. Validity tells you the approved date window. Entry type tells you how many times you may enter Vietnam.
A single-entry eVisa may still show a future valid-until date after you leave Vietnam. That does not automatically mean you can re-enter Vietnam with the same document. The entry may already be used.
| Term | What it means | Common mistake |
|---|---|---|
| Valid-from date | The date the eVisa validity begins | Arriving before the valid-from date |
| Valid-until date | The final date in the approved validity window | Thinking unused days are automatically added later |
| Single-entry | One entry into Vietnam | Thinking one entry means unlimited re-entry until expiry |
| Multiple-entry | More than one entry during validity | Thinking multiple-entry removes all document and border checks |
Important Warning
Do not leave Vietnam with a single-entry eVisa unless you are sure you do not need to re-enter on that same trip. If your re-entry plan is unclear, review your options before exiting.
Part 1 Summary
Single-entry means one Vietnam entry. Multiple-entry means more than one Vietnam entry during the approved validity period. Choose single-entry for Vietnam-only trips. Choose multiple-entry if your route includes leaving Vietnam and returning, especially Cambodia, Thailand, Laos, Singapore, Malaysia, visa-run, or business re-entry routes.
Continue to Part 2: Cambodia side trips, visa-run scenarios, what happens after leaving Vietnam with single-entry, route mistakes, and what to do if you already chose the wrong entry type.
Can You Visit Cambodia and Return to Vietnam With Single-Entry eVisa?
You should not assume you can visit Cambodia and return to Vietnam with the same single-entry Vietnam eVisa. If you enter Vietnam, leave for Cambodia, and then want to re-enter Vietnam, your trip usually requires multiple-entry permission or another valid re-entry basis.
This is one of the most common and expensive itinerary mistakes. Many travelers plan Ho Chi Minh City → Phnom Penh → Ho Chi Minh City or Vietnam → Cambodia → Vietnam without realizing that leaving Vietnam may use up a single-entry visa.
GEO Answer: Do I need multiple-entry Vietnam eVisa for Cambodia?
If you plan to enter Vietnam, visit Cambodia, and return to Vietnam, you should usually choose multiple-entry Vietnam eVisa or have another valid re-entry basis. A single-entry eVisa is usually not the safe choice for Vietnam-Cambodia-Vietnam routes.
Common Cambodia route examples
| Route | Likely entry need | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Fly into Vietnam → stay in Vietnam → fly home | Single-entry may be enough | Only one Vietnam entry |
| Vietnam → Cambodia → fly home from Cambodia | Single-entry may be enough | No Vietnam re-entry |
| Vietnam → Cambodia → Vietnam → fly home | Multiple-entry usually safer | Requires Vietnam re-entry |
| Ho Chi Minh City → Moc Bai → Cambodia → Ho Chi Minh City | Multiple-entry or valid re-entry basis needed | Border exit and re-entry planning |
For Cambodia planning, read Vietnam visa run Cambodia. For the Ho Chi Minh City land-border route, read Moc Bai visa run.
What Happens If You Leave Vietnam With a Single-Entry eVisa?
If you leave Vietnam after entering with a single-entry eVisa, you should assume that entry has been used. The visa validity dates may still show future dates, but that does not automatically mean you can use the same single-entry visa again.
This is where many travelers get confused. They see that the eVisa is still within the valid-until date and believe they can re-enter. But entry type and validity are different. A single-entry visa is about one entry, not unlimited entries until the expiry date.
Direct Answer
After you leave Vietnam with a single-entry eVisa, you should not assume you can re-enter with the same eVisa. If you need to come back, check multiple-entry or another valid re-entry option before exiting.
Validity Dates vs Entry Type: What Is the Difference?
Validity dates tell you when the eVisa can be used. Entry type tells you how many times you can enter. These are separate concepts.
A traveler can have an eVisa that remains valid by date but is not suitable for re-entry if it is single-entry and already used. This is why you must check both the valid-from/valid-until dates and the entry type.
| Item | Meaning | Common misunderstanding |
|---|---|---|
| Valid-from date | Earliest date the eVisa validity begins | Traveler thinks they can arrive before this date |
| Valid-until date | Last date within the approved validity window | Traveler thinks unused days are added later |
| Single-entry | One entry into Vietnam | Traveler thinks it means unlimited entries until expiry |
| Multiple-entry | More than one entry during validity | Traveler thinks it removes all immigration checks |
Common Mistakes Travelers Make
The most common mistake is choosing single-entry because the traveler only checks the trip length, not the route. Your route matters as much as your travel dates.
Mistake 1: Choosing single-entry for a regional trip
If your route includes Vietnam and another country before returning to Vietnam, single-entry may be wrong. This often happens with Cambodia, Thailand, Laos, Singapore, and Malaysia side trips.
Mistake 2: Thinking domestic flights count as new entries
Domestic flights inside Vietnam do not count as new Vietnam entries. Ho Chi Minh City to Da Nang to Hanoi is still inside Vietnam. You only exit Vietnam when you leave the country.
Mistake 3: Confusing validity period with number of entries
A valid-until date does not automatically mean you can enter again. Check the entry type.
Mistake 4: Planning a visa run without re-entry permission
Do not leave Vietnam for a border run unless you know how you will legally re-enter Vietnam. A visa run needs valid exit permission, neighboring-country entry permission, and Vietnam re-entry permission.
Mistake 5: Not checking the approved eVisa
After approval, check whether the eVisa says single-entry or multiple-entry. Do not wait until the airport or border to discover the wrong entry type.
For a full error-prevention guide, read Vietnam eVisa mistakes to avoid.
Route Decision Guide: Which Entry Type Fits Your Trip?
Use your real travel route to choose the correct entry type. Do not choose based only on price, speed, or what a friend used.
| Your travel plan | Likely safer choice | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Only Vietnam, no side trip | Single-entry may be enough | One Vietnam entry |
| Vietnam then Cambodia, no return to Vietnam | Single-entry may be enough | No Vietnam re-entry |
| Vietnam → Cambodia → Vietnam | Multiple-entry usually needed | Two Vietnam entries |
| Vietnam → Thailand → Vietnam | Multiple-entry usually needed | Two Vietnam entries |
| Business traveler leaving and returning | Multiple-entry usually safer | Flexible re-entry need |
| Visa run from Ho Chi Minh City | Valid re-entry plan required | Exit and re-entry risk |
What If You Already Applied for the Wrong Entry Type?
If you already applied for single-entry but your route requires re-entry, review the issue before traveling. Do not assume the airline, border officer, or immigration counter will solve the problem for you.
If your application is still pending, check whether correction is possible through the portal. If your eVisa is already approved with the wrong entry type, review whether a new application or route change is needed. If your flight is close, the situation may become urgent.
Read Vietnam eVisa rejected: what to do next if your application has a serious error. Read Vietnam eVisa urgent if your travel date is close.
Important Warning
Do not exit Vietnam for a visa run or regional trip if your re-entry permission is unclear. Once you leave, you may not be able to return on the same plan.
Part 2 Summary
Single-entry becomes risky when your route includes leaving Vietnam and coming back. Cambodia side trips, Thailand side trips, business travel, and visa-run plans often need multiple-entry or another valid re-entry basis. Always check the entry type before applying and again after approval.
Continue to Part 3: final decision tree, checklist before applying, FAQ, schema-ready answers, related guides, and VINADAY GOREISE support contact.
Final Decision Tree: Which Vietnam eVisa Entry Type Should You Choose?
The fastest way to choose is to ask one question: Will you enter Vietnam more than once? If no, single-entry may be enough. If yes, multiple-entry is usually safer.
| Question | If yes | If no |
|---|---|---|
| Will you leave Vietnam and come back? | Choose multiple-entry or confirm another valid re-entry basis. | Single-entry may be enough. |
| Are you visiting Cambodia and returning to Vietnam? | Multiple-entry is usually safer. | Check your full route. |
| Are you taking only domestic flights inside Vietnam? | Single-entry may still be enough because domestic travel is not a new country entry. | Check whether your flight leaves Vietnam internationally. |
| Are you planning a visa run? | Do not exit until your Vietnam re-entry plan is clear. | Choose based on your actual trip route. |
| Could your itinerary change? | Multiple-entry may provide more flexibility if available and appropriate. | Single-entry may be enough for a fixed Vietnam-only trip. |
Checklist Before Applying
Before you submit your Vietnam eVisa application, check your route, entry type, dates, passport details, and photo quality. The entry type should match the real itinerary, not just the first flight into Vietnam.
Entry Type Checklist
- Will I enter Vietnam only once?
- Will I leave Vietnam during the trip?
- Will I return to Vietnam after Cambodia, Thailand, Laos, Singapore, Malaysia, or another country?
- Is my final flight home from Vietnam or another country?
- Am I planning a visa run?
- Does my approved eVisa show the correct entry type?
- Does the eVisa validity cover all planned Vietnam entries?
- Does my passport number match exactly?
- Do I have printed and digital copies of the approved eVisa?
For photo and upload quality, read Vietnam eVisa photo requirements. For general application errors, read Vietnam eVisa mistakes to avoid.
Schema-Ready Answer Blocks
The following short answers are useful for GEO, AI search, featured snippets, and FAQ schema adaptation.
What is single-entry Vietnam eVisa?
A single-entry Vietnam eVisa allows one entry into Vietnam. It is usually suitable for travelers who enter Vietnam once, stay inside Vietnam, and leave only at the end of the trip.
What is multiple-entry Vietnam eVisa?
A multiple-entry Vietnam eVisa allows more than one entry into Vietnam during the approved validity period. It is usually needed when travelers leave Vietnam and return during the same trip.
Do I need multiple-entry Vietnam eVisa for Cambodia?
If you plan to enter Vietnam, visit Cambodia, and return to Vietnam, multiple-entry is usually the safer choice. A single-entry eVisa may not be suitable after you leave Vietnam.
Can I re-enter Vietnam with single-entry eVisa?
You should not assume you can re-enter Vietnam with the same single-entry eVisa after leaving. Single-entry usually means one Vietnam entry. If you need re-entry, check multiple-entry or another valid re-entry basis.
Vietnam eVisa Single Entry vs Multiple Entry: FAQ
Is single-entry enough for Vietnam?
Single-entry may be enough if you enter Vietnam once, stay inside Vietnam, and leave only at the end of your trip. It is not usually the safest choice if you plan to leave Vietnam and return.
Do domestic flights in Vietnam require multiple-entry?
No. Domestic flights inside Vietnam do not count as leaving and re-entering the country. Ho Chi Minh City to Da Nang to Hanoi is still one Vietnam entry if you do not leave Vietnam internationally.
Do I need multiple-entry if I fly from Vietnam to Thailand and back?
If you enter Vietnam, fly to Thailand, and then return to Vietnam, you usually need multiple-entry or another valid re-entry basis because you are entering Vietnam more than once.
Do I need multiple-entry for a Cambodia visa run?
If your plan involves exiting Vietnam and re-entering Vietnam, you need a clear re-entry basis. Multiple-entry may be needed depending on your situation. Read Vietnam visa run Cambodia and Moc Bai visa run.
What if I already have single-entry but need to re-enter?
Review your route before exiting Vietnam. You may need a new application, a route change, or urgent support depending on your timing and status. Do not leave Vietnam if your re-entry plan is unclear.
Can I change single-entry to multiple-entry after approval?
Options depend on the official portal status and current procedures. If your approved eVisa has the wrong entry type for your route, review whether a new application or travel-plan change is needed before flying or exiting Vietnam.
Can VINADAY GOREISE guarantee approval?
No. VINADAY GOREISE cannot guarantee approval or override immigration decisions. We can help travelers review route logic, avoid common eVisa mistakes, and prepare a more realistic plan.
Need Help Choosing the Right Vietnam eVisa Entry Type?
Contact VINADAY GOREISE
VINADAY GOREISE helps travelers review Vietnam eVisa entry type, single-entry vs multiple-entry choice, Cambodia side trips, visa-run routes, urgent timing, and re-entry planning from Ho Chi Minh City.
WhatsApp / Zalo: +84 919 85 990 or +84 909 450 430
Email: cs@vinaday.com
Important: VINADAY GOREISE cannot guarantee Vietnam eVisa approval and cannot override immigration decisions. Final approval and border entry decisions belong to the competent Vietnamese authority.
Related Vietnam eVisa Guides
Continue Reading
- Vietnam eVisa 2026 complete guide — main pillar guide for Vietnam travelers.
- Vietnam eVisa mistakes to avoid — prevent common application errors.
- Vietnam eVisa photo requirements — passport image and portrait photo guide.
- Vietnam eVisa rejected: what to do next — recovery steps after rejection or correction.
- Vietnam eVisa processing time — timing, delay, and planning guide.
- Vietnam eVisa urgent — what to do if travel is close.
- Vietnam exit and re-enter — re-entry planning guide.
- Vietnam visa run Cambodia — Cambodia route planning.
- Moc Bai visa run — border-run guide from Ho Chi Minh City.
- Vietnam arrival procedures — what happens after landing.
- Vietnam airport immigration — airport document checks and arrival expectations.
Final Summary
Single-entry Vietnam eVisa is for one Vietnam entry. Multiple-entry Vietnam eVisa is for travelers who need to enter Vietnam more than once during the approved validity period. If your trip includes Cambodia, Thailand, Laos, Singapore, Malaysia, a visa run, or any route where you leave Vietnam and come back, check multiple-entry before applying.
Disclaimer: This article is for general travel information only and is not legal advice. Vietnam eVisa rules, entry types, validity, airline checks, border procedures, and immigration decisions can change. Travelers should verify their situation through the official Vietnam eVisa portal, their airline, and relevant authorities before travel.
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