Vietnam continues to refine its intellectual property framework to align with the 2025 amendments to the Law on Intellectual Property (IP Law). On March 31, 2026, the government issued Decree 100/2026/ND-CP (Decree 100), which substantially amends Decree 65/2023/ND-CP detailing the implementation of the IP Law (Decree 65). On the same day, the Ministry of Science and Technology released Circular 10/2026/TT-BKHCN (Circular 10), providing detailed procedural guidance and new forms. Both instruments took effect on April 1, 2026, along with the amended IP Law.
While the updates touch on every IP right, trademark owners and brand strategists will find several practical and forward-looking changes that directly affect filing strategy, examination timelines, portfolio management, and enforcement readiness.
1. Fast-Track Substantive Examination for Eligible Applications
One of the most business-friendly innovations is the new fast-track substantive examination pathway for applications meeting specified eligibility criteria. Successful fast-track applications enjoy a shortened substantive examination period of three months. This offers a significant competitive edge for tech-driven or regulated-sector brands.
If the mark is identical or similar to a mark in another person’s trademark application with an earlier filing date in the case of a priority application that has not yet been processed, the fast-track process will return to the ordinary process. However, the law does not touch on cases where marks under fast-track examination face office action due to other reasons (i.e. lack of distinctiveness, confusingly similar to others’ copyright, trade name, industrial design, etc.)
2. AI-Generated Trademarks Receive Clear Protection Pathway
Decree 100 explicitly addresses the use of artificial intelligence (AI) in IP creation, amending Article 10a of Decree 65 to confirm that trademarks created with AI systems are fully protectable, provided they meet the standard requirements of registration. Trademarks face no additional “human authorship” hurdle (unlike patents or industrial designs). Brand owners using generative-AI tools, however, are encouraged to document their own role in selecting, refining, and finalizing the mark to strengthen enforcement if challenged.
3. Digital-First Procedures, Streamlined Formality Examination, Shorter Response Deadlines
The new regulations confirm that electronic filing is now the default with equivalent legal weight to paper. All official communications (examination reports, oppositions, decisions) are issued electronically unless paper is requested, making a digital IP ecosystem.
An important change under Circular 10 is the shorter examination and response deadlines, namely:
4. Enhanced Transparency of Trademark Application
Circular 10 significantly enhances transparency and efficiency in the trademark application process through several key improvements.
5. Enhancing Transparency and Detailing Trademark Examination
Circular 10 also provides clearer guidance on distinctiveness, similarity/confusion tests, descriptiveness, and well-known recognition, including details on cases in which marks, including sound marks, are not distinctive. If a sound mark contains linguistic content, that linguistic content is assessed for distinctiveness in a similar manner to a word mark. Other criteria for assessing the likelihood of confusion for sound marks are also clearly defined.
Elements meaning “Vietnam” (including “Việt”, “Viet”, “Việt Nam”, “Vietnam”, etc.) are unprotectable as ordinary trademarks, except in certification or collective marks or where they have acquired secondary meaning.
6. Opposition, Cancellation, and Bad Faith
Opposition is reduced to three months from publication, and third-party observations are streamlined. Notably, there is significant update on bad-faith cancellation, in which “bad faith” is now clearly defined as either of two main cases:
7. New Provisions on Trademark Use to Prevent Non-Use Cancellation
Circular 10 clarifies the standards for “genuine use” and the evidence required to defend against a non-use cancellation request. It emphasizes that use must be continuous, commercial in nature, and publicly visible in the Vietnamese market for the registered goods/services within the five-year period preceding the cancellation request. Mere token use, internal use, or use that does not reach consumers will generally not suffice.
8. Updated Rules on Certificates, Duplicates, and Recordals
The issuance and management of certificates is streamlined, with stronger emphasis on electronic certificates while maintaining the option for paper versions upon request. Clearer rules and requirements for requesting and obtaining certified duplicates or copies of certificates make the process faster and less burdensome, while the recordal system is modernized, with more flexible and detailed guidance on recording changes such as assignment, licensing, name/address updates, or other amendments to the certificate, with simplified supporting documents in many cases.
Outlook
The 2026 updates to Vietnam’s IP regime reflect a strong commitment to modernization, administrative simplification, faster timelines, and global alignment. These changes create real opportunities for more predictable and efficient trademark protection while introducing nuanced compliance requirements that demand prompter action from brand owners.
Businesses with significant Vietnamese brand exposure should review portfolios for fast-track eligibility, priority claims, and compliance with the new formality rules and shortened deadlines.