You’re planning a trip to Vietnam. You’ve seen advice online saying “get a local SIM” or “you must have a Vietnamese phone number.” That is when you wonder: Do I need a Vietnamese phone number? Is that really true for tourists?
The short answer: For most short-term travelers, no – you don’t need a Vietnamese phone number. What you actually need is reliable mobile data for maps, ridesharing, translation, and messaging apps. A data-only eSIM from vietnamesim.com does exactly that.
This guide helps you decide: what a Vietnamese phone number can help you, when a local number helps, when it’s unnecessary, and what most tourists should do instead.

I. What can you do with a Vietnamese phone number?
A Vietnamese phone number — meaning a number with Vietnam’s +84 country code (e.g., from Viettel, Vinaphone, or MobiFone) — gives you a few things that a data-only connection does not:
- Make and receive local calls (to hotels, restaurants, tour operators)
- Send and receive SMS (OTP codes, delivery notifications)
- Register for local apps (Zalo, MoMo, GrabPay, Be)
- Receive calls from Grab or taxi drivers
- Register for long-term stays (required by law for rentals over 30 days)
- Appear as a local contact – When you call a hotel or a tour guide from a Vietnamese number, they’re more likely to pick up. International numbers sometimes get ignored or flagged as spam.
However, almost none of these are essential for a typical 5–14 day tourist trip.
II. When you likely need a Vietnamese phone number
You should consider getting a local number if:
| Situation | Why you need it |
| Staying over 30 days | Required by law for apartment/hotel registration |
| Working with local partners | Professional calls, Zalo for business chat |
| Open a Vietnamese bank account or e-wallet | Traditional banks and digital wallets require a Vietnamese phone number for account registration and SMS-based verification |
| Renting a motorbike long-term | Owner needs to call you |
| Receiving OTPs for local services | Train tickets, pharmacy delivery, domestic flights |
| No access to WhatsApp/iMessage | If your home contacts don’t use data-based messaging |
| Being a solor traveler | Being able to call your hotel or a tour guide in an emergency is a vital safety net. |
According to Vietnamese law (Decree 68/2020), telecom providers must register a local number for foreigners staying beyond 30 days.
III. When you probably don’t need one (most tourists)
For 80–90% of tourists visiting Vietnam for 1–3 weeks, a local phone number is optional. You can comfortably skip it if:
- You only need data for Google Maps, Grab, Google Translate, and social media.
- You use WhatsApp, iMessage, Facebook Messenger, or Zalo (all work with data only – Zalo accepts email or foreign number registration).
- You are on a short city break and staying in a major hotel, you can rely on the hotel concierge for bookings.
- You book tours online (operators message via WhatsApp or email).
- You don’t mind the occasional missed call from a Grab driver (you can rebook or use in-app chat).
It is estimated that over 3.7 million tourists visited Vietnam in 2025. Most used data-only SIMs or eSIMs. Complaints about “needing a local number” have dropped significantly after Grab introduced in-app chat.
IV. What a tourist actually needs: reliable mobile data
Today, mobile data is non-negotiable. Even without a phone number, you absolutely need high-speed data for:
- Google Maps: Navigating the winding alleys of Hoi An or the chaotic traffic of Saigon.
- Real-time Translation: Using Google Lens to read menus or translate street signs instantly.
- Cashless Payments: Vietnam is rapidly moving toward QR payments (VietQR), which require an active internet connection to scan.
- WhatsApp / iMessage: calls and texts over data
- Social media: Instagram, TikTok, Facebook
- Hotel check-in: Show booking confirmation
- Grab ride-hailing: Book & chat without a call.
Important note on Grab: You can register for Grab using your international phone number before you arrive in Vietnam. You do not need a Vietnamese phone number to set up the account. However, you must have a working data connection (via roaming or a tourist eSIM) to use the app.
Pro Tip: Register with your home number before arriving in Vietnam to ensure you receive SMS verification code without roaming hassles.
V. How to get a Vietnamese phone number
If after reading this you still want a local number, here are your options:
Option 1. Buy a physical SIM card/eSIM at the airport or a local shop.
- Where: Noi Bai (Hanoi), Tan Son Nhat (HCMC), Da Nang airports, or city stores
- Cost: ~$5–10 USD for a 30-day SIM/eSIM
- Providers: Viettel (best coverage), Vinaphone, Mobifone
- Time: 10–15 minutes
- Required: Passport, visa, sometimes a photo
► Read more: Do they ask for photos and passport at airport SIM counters in Vietnam?
2. eSIM with voice + SMS (from Vietnamesim.com)
Vietnamesim.com offers Vietnam eSIM with phone number with multiple plans to choose from:
- Where: via online store
- Cost: $8.9 – $19.9
- Network carriers: Vinaphone, Local/MobiFone
- Time: less than 5 minutes
- Required: NO passport, only an email for receiving eSIM information.
If you decide you don’t need a Vietnamese phone number, check out this budget-friendly data-only eSIM for Vietnam.
VI. Comparison: eSIM data only vs. eSIM with phone number vs. Local SIM with number
| Feature | Data only eSIM | eSIM with VN number | Local physical SIM |
| Local phone number | No | Yes | Yes |
| Mobile data | 4G/5G | Yes | Yes |
| Activation | Before arrival, instant | Usually requires registration | At airport/store |
| ID/passport required | No | Yes | Yes |
| Make local calls | No | Yes | Yes |
| Receive SMS/OTP | No | Yes | Yes |
| Keep your home number active | Yes (Dual SIM) | Yes | No (must swap SIM) |
| Best for | Tourists <30 days | Long-stay or business | Long-stay or frequent calls, budget-first travelers |
It is recommended that a typical 7-day tourist trip, a data-only eSIM is faster, cheaper, and hassle-free.
Not sure which Vietnam eSIM plan to choose? Our Vietnam eSIM Complete Guide covers quick information about plans with and without a local number, and which is right for your trip.
VII. Real scenarios where a local number helps tourists to Vietnam
Here are 3 real situations. Decide which one sounds like you.
1. Scenario 1: Your Grab driver can’t find you
You book a Grab at the airport. The driver is at Pillar 10, but you are at Pillar 3. He calls you to coordinate. Without a local number, you might miss the ride and get charged a “no-show” fee.
Solution: Use in-app chat. Most drivers will read it, but not always immediately.
2. Scenario 2: A restaurant asks for a callback number
You want a balcony seat at a famous restaurant in Da Nang. They don’t have a website, only a phone number. A 30-second local call secures your sunset view.
Solution: Ask your hotel concierge to book for you.
3. Scenario 3: You want to use Zalo to contact a local tour guide
You get separated from your group in a crowded market. You can call your guide directly rather than hoping they check their WhatsApp.
Solution: Zalo allows registration with an email or foreign number – but calls to a local guide still require a local number unless they use Zalo’s internet calling.
VII. FAQs
Can I still use WhatsApp with a Vietnamese eSIM?
Yes! Your WhatsApp remains linked to your home number. The eSIM only provides the data/local line for your phone’s background operations. Learn more: how to keep WhatsApp active in Vietnam with a travel eSIM
Do these numbers work for 5G?
Absolutely. All plans on Vietnamesim.com support 4G/5G speeds across Vietnam’s major networks (Viettel, Vinaphone).
Can I have both my home SIM and a Vietnamese eSIM active at the same time?
Yes, if your phone supports eSIM (most smartphones released after 2019 do). Your physical home SIM handles your regular calls and texts, while the Vietnamese eSIM handles your mobile data in Vietnam. Both work simultaneously.
Is it safe to give my passport to buy a local SIM?
Yes, it’s required by law. But only buy from official Viettel/Vinaphone/Mobifone stores, not street vendors.
Are there alternative apps if Grab doesn’t work?
Yes. Xanh SM (now changed to Green SM – an electric taxi service) is a popular often cheaper alternative that also accepts foreign numbers.
