My vietnamese girlfriend cannot stay at my house in vietnam overnight
And my vietnamese girlfriend cannot stay at my house overnight,or i have to pay at least 10millionVND!
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When you rent a house, you have all the right written in the contract, including the right to control who can entering your house, i think.
Don't worry !

they enforce mainly to us as we are the extra pocket money for the local police, I was living not even 2 days with my wife in new house few month ago and had the local police already knocking on the door. Pity for them, no money as we are married.This is the People Republic of Vietnam! And that (unmarried men and women can NOT share a room) is the law. It is called population control.
For real, in Vietnam, when you have people other than those already registered on your household book (So Ho Khau) staying over, you are required to notify the ward police and get them documented. Fight it? That is like asking to get thrown out of Vietnam.
Cops in the States can only collect your properties, pending court approvals. Cops in Vietnam can confiscate them, in the name of the People's Party...
enigma1981 wrote:My girlfriend have paid tea money to him already,Amazing Vietnam
She paid the asking price?

You can live with whoever the hell you want. Just make sure all people living together are registered in the house book. If not registered then YES you can get in trouble for that.
Will the police give you trouble, ask for a bribe for not being married.....sure probably, they want that tea money!! Do you have to PAY?? NOOO!!! A person who is smart enough to look up the law and confront them or if need be consult a lawyer you will not have to pay the police for this. Will they still give you a hard time and harass you. Who knows...probably but it is NOT illegal.
http://family.jrank.org/pages/1744/Viet … -2000.html
"On June 9, 2000, the Vietnamese National Assembly adopted the Marriage and Family Law of 2000. Consisting of thirteen chapters and 110 articles, the law revised the marriage and family code of 1986. Striving to preserve traditional values within progressive reforms, the new law recognized that a woman could have a child without a husband, forbade marriage between a foreigner and Vietnamese for mercenary reasons, and declared wife-beating and child abuse illegal. Prior to 2000, the law on these categories was either nonexistent or vague.
Article II addressed the emerging phenomenon of cohabitation. Under the 1986 statue, such living arrangements were illegal. However, the 2000 reforms stipulated that although cohabitation between unmarried couples was no longer considered a criminal act, neither would such arrangements be recognized as equal to marriage between a husband and wife. Other provisions of Article II clarify divorce procedures, encourage gender equity within marriage (including treatment of sons and daughters), and emphasize the equal treatment of children born within and out of wedlock."
So for those of you that say there is a law against it..... show me this law. I would like to see it.
Vietnamese law prohibits people, men and women, from living together. When you go to register a guest (man or woman) to your household, you will be asked about your relationships. If you are unrelated, and your household is a residential, the cops will give you flakes. At best, your dwelling is commercial (like a hotel), the length of stay will be limited. That is just among Vietnamese.
You throw a foreigner, of the opposite sex, in there and things get a lot dicier. They have a different room, complete with higher ranking officers, for such cases.
Good luck to you!
though there is a law saying if you stay in a hostel/hotel, if woman and man want to stay in the same room, they need to show the marriage certificate. Some hotels will ask this, some don't. I guess it depends on how they "take care" the local ward police.
Also under law, if anyone stays at another one's place, the house resident has to register and that's all it. And yes the policement has right to check your house.
Link in Vietnamese.
luatphamdanh.net/modules.php?name=News&op=viewst&sid=222
Having said that, it is the standard practice of hotels to do so since it is a common misunderstanding. It does not hinder though the proliferation of "by-the-hour" hotels in big cities

The Policeman did right not wrong.!
You have to understand that ... in Viet Nam when you move and staying at any where in Viet Nam but out side of your house (House that meant the address in your ID card) you must registering to local police! even locals when they check in the hotel ... must give the ID card for hotel ... and what do you know they need it for what? For do register to police department,,, if not ... the police come at night and the hotel will have troubles.
For Ladies and Gentlemen stay and sleep together ... no problem if they are +18yds and had registered to local police where they stay.
In case ladies just come and visit Gentlemen for a night ... must registering also ... if not, the police come and penalty both you..
Cheers and good luck!
Read this:
http://www.moj.gov.vn/hoidappl/Lists/Da … emID=14839
Not only that it is still in effect, but they are deferring things now. Vietnamese Immigration never had anything to do with this process?
The article you are quoting is not in conflict with what I am saying and quoting.
They all say that unmarried couple can stay in the same household.
What your article is saying in addition is the place to register the "Đăng ký tạm trú" (registration of temporary residence) for the foreign boyfriend is at the Ministry for Foreign Affairs, not the local police ward.
See link for the English version of the relevant regulation, article 15.
http://moj.gov.vn/vbpq/en/Lists/Vn%20bn … ItemID=411
It just seems to me that the author of your article is getting technical about the terms "Đăng ký tạm trú" (and confused about the original question). Of course, you need to go to Ministry for Foreign Affairs to get the temporary/permanent permit, but you also need to register at the local police ward as well.
As the article points out (as mentioned by several comments earlier on this thread), it has nothing to do with the fact that the couple is not married.
Saigonmonkey,
Man, you live in a reservation, OK?

The locals refer to your area as an "exclusion zone." A lot of the things that go on in there are not tolerated elsewhere, in Vietnam.
Jayhawk,
You married a good Vietnamese; she is the type that knows how to go about things in Vietnam. All you have to do is ask your wife what she did to get you registered.
Wild_1 wrote:Anatta,
Do you read Vietnamese at all, man??? Go read it again. The link you provided was an interpretation by a Vietnamese attorney; and we all know how good those guys are. The link I gave you was straight from the MOJ. Hey, don't tell me you went and read their English translation?
Howie
I provide the English link for the readers who cannot read Vietnamese.
The link you gave me only has a Q&A session and further reference to the real law in yet another link (in Vietnamese).
The English version of the link I gave you is entirely different than the one in Vietnamese, isn't it?
Anyway, English or Vietnamese, married or unmarried, the main purpose is to get us "accounted for." They can cut it or circle it however they want.
Some off topics posts have been removed from the thread.
Please could we get back to the initial topic: My vietnamese girlfriend cannot stay at my house in vietnam overnight.
Thank you for your comprehension.
Regards
Karen
Expat.com Team.
The charge is human trafficking. If your wife happens to amongst others hauled up, she will be treated as one of them until you can prove otherwise.
Worse, she will have a police record, though the charges are dropped!
The same applies for getting the official red stamp on your documents at the government offices, the rules or laws are what the person sitting at the counter think they are. When my wife and I got married there were times when we would stand in line to get documents stamped only to be told that we either didn't have everything complete or we did something wrong. We just got back in line for another clerk and had no problems.
Vietnam is a country of ever changing laws and it is very hard for the workers to keep up with the regulations. I think if more things were computerized this problem could be eliminated.
In the second apartment, the same was done when moving in. We had to go to the local police ourselves and register with them (district 12); no problem. Once, at around 1 AM, the door was knocked on...all I had to do was say, "our paperwork is in the office downstairs", "you want to enter, enter at a reasonable time or I will see you after 0800". I shut the door and never heard from them again. Lived there for 3 years with no problems at all!
I recently moved to DaNang...major problems...temp resident card was not reconized by their offices due to no longer working in HCMC...difficult to find a 'foreign house' to rent and many still believe in the old 'law' and ways about living 'together' and not being married. Immigrations in DaNang are very cooperative and reasonable to work with. Many of the 'departments' are great in directing you to another department only to be directed to another with nothing but time being wasted. I'm just glad I don't "have" to work. If I did, I'd have returned back to HCMC where things were much easier and more direct. I've found by keeping a copy of the law handy, stamped with their 'red' seal and in Vietnamese helps a great deal! You shove it in their face and let them know you know the law...
Well i hope u will enjoy my danang and good luck.
P/s: my english is not well. I' m trying to improve it . So please don't laugh at me.
Merci
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