Vietnam's e‑Visa is often the most practical route for short trips, but the outcome depends on details: choosing the correct port of entry, keeping a consistent itinerary, and completing the official online application accurately.
Select a visa type to learn more about specific requirements, application process, and important information
Up to 90 days. Official fee US$25 (non‑refundable if refused).
Up to 90 days. Official fee US$50 (non‑refundable if refused).
For permitted business visits when eligible; fee depends on entry type (US$25/US$50).
Longer stays for employment; sponsor-based. Fees depend on route and permits.
For study; requires school acceptance/sponsorship. Fees vary by route.
Transit rules depend on whether you pass border control and on your itinerary.
Need help choosing the right visa type? Our expert consultants are here to guide you.
Vietnam is one of the more "flexible" Asian destinations for Georgian citizens: Hanoi–Ha Long Bay, Ho Chi Minh City, Da Nang/Hoi An, and multi‑region travel using domestic flights. In practice, the most common route is the e‑Visa — an online application, an electronic result, and entry via specific border checkpoints.
For Georgian citizens, a visa is required before travel because Vietnam's 45‑day visa exemption applies to nationals of only 13 countries (the list is published on a Vietnam MOFA diplomatic mission page) — and Georgia is not on that list. Official list: Resolution No. 128/NQ-CP — visa exemption (13 countries).
According to Vietnam's official Immigration e‑Visa portal, the e‑Visa is valid for up to 90 days and can be single‑entry or multiple‑entry. Official source: Vietnam eVisa — National portal on Immigration.
The official portal also notes that from 11 November 2024, the e‑Visa system operates on new domains — evisa.gov.vn and thithucdientu.gov.vn. Submitting applications and checking status is recommended via those addresses.
In GetVisa.ge's practice, Vietnam e‑Visa is generally straightforward — but when issues happen, the cause is usually not "strict country requirements" but simple application errors: choosing the wrong entry point, a typo in name/passport number, or inconsistent dates/itinerary. That's why we first verify the correct ports, the exact passport data, and that your application looks logically consistent.
For Vietnam, the first decision is whether you need single‑entry or multiple‑entry and how long you plan to stay. The official Immigration portal states e‑Visa can be single or multiple entry and is valid for up to 90 days.
If your travel style is "I'll enter and decide later", Vietnam's approach is similar to Indonesia, where eligibility/category clarity from day one determines the route. For a more document‑heavy, purpose‑driven process, see Japan.
Practical advice: if your itinerary includes crossing borders (e.g., Laos/Cambodia/Thailand and returning), it's often better to consider multiple entry from the start. With a single‑entry visa, leaving the country — even briefly — can make your visa unusable. Your choice must match your real route.
Vietnam's e‑Visa is often considered "easy", but success depends on small details: the correct entry/exit port, exact passport data, and a consistent travel plan. GetVisa.ge streamlines these steps and reduces the risk of technical mistakes.
If you want to plan correctly from the start and avoid losing time fixing mistakes, begin with a consultation or see our visa services.
Check off items as you gather them
Clarify tourism vs short business, and whether you need single or multiple entry (based on your real itinerary).
Use the official domains the system indicates: https://evisa.gov.vn/ or https://thithucdientu.gov.vn/
Select a border checkpoint that is on the allowed e‑Visa list. Mistakes here can block the process.
Name, passport number, and dates must match your passport exactly. Even a small typo can cause issues.
Upload photo and bio page scan at the required quality and pay the official fee. Note: the official portal states the fee is non‑refundable even if refused.
Download your e‑Visa, keep a digital copy, and print if you prefer. Present it when requested on arrival.
Tips for a successful application
Paid electronically on the official portal. The official portal notes it is non‑refundable even if refused. Confirm the exact amount and single vs multiple differences during the application flow.