Can You Convert Your Home Motorbike License to a Vietnamese License as a Tourist? The short answer is no, you generally cannot convert a home license to a Vietnamese one if you are on a standard 30-day or 90-day tourist visa.
Here is the comparison of how the conversion process works and why it excludes most tourists, as of 2026:
- Residency Requirement: To qualify for a license conversion, you must have a residency permit or visa valid for at least 3 months; most tourists enter on shorter E-visas which do not meet this threshold.
- Physical Presence: You must be physically present at the Department of Transport (DoT) office in a city like Hanoi or HCMC to have your photo taken and sign documents; you cannot do this entirely online or from abroad.
- Documentation Needs: The process requires a notarized and translated copy of your home license into Vietnamese, which typically takes 3 to 5 business days to process once submitted.
- License Scope: A converted license will only match the categories you already hold; if you only have a “Class C” car license at home, the Vietnamese conversion will not include the A1 or A2 motorbike endorsement.
- Alternative for Tourists (1968 IDP): Instead of conversion, tourists from countries that signed the 1968 Vienna Convention can drive legally by carrying their original home license along with a 1968 International Driving Permit (IDP).
- Invalid Permits for Tourists: Many popular tourist countries (USA, Australia, Canada, UK) use the 1949 Geneva Convention or IAA permits, neither of which are legally recognized by Vietnamese police.
- ASEAN Exception: If you hold a valid domestic motorbike license from an ASEAN country (e.g., Thailand, Malaysia, Philippines), you can drive legally in Vietnam without conversion or an IDP due to regional agreements.
- Insurance Risk: Driving without a legally recognized permit (either a converted license or a valid 1968 IDP) usually voids your travel insurance, leaving you personally liable for medical or property costs in an accident.
