Most travelers don’t need any visa for Phu Quoc: the island has a special 30-day visa exemption that applies to all nationalities — as long as you fly in from another country with Phu Quoc as your final destination. It’s one of the easiest entries in Asia, but it comes with fine print that catches people at check-in desks every week. Here are the exact rules in 2026, in plain English.

The 30-Day Phu Quoc Exemption: Who Qualifies
You enter visa-free for up to 30 days if all of these are true:
- You arrive from outside Vietnam with Phu Quoc as your final destination — on a direct international flight, or via an international transit that connects you straight through to Phu Quoc.
- Your passport has 6+ months validity remaining on arrival.
- You can show an onward/return ticket leaving Phu Quoc for a destination outside Vietnam within 30 days.
- You stay on Phu Quoc — the exemption covers the island only.
This applies to every nationality — including passports that normally need a visa for mainland Vietnam. That’s what makes Phu Quoc special.
The Transit Trap (Read This Twice)
This is where travelers get burned. If you connect through Ho Chi Minh City or Hanoi on the way to Phu Quoc:
- ✅ Airside transit is fine: if your bags are checked through and you stay inside the international transit area, boarding a connecting flight to Phu Quoc, the exemption holds.
- ❌ Self-transfer breaks it: if you must collect your bags at SGN/HAN, pass immigration, and re-check onto a separate domestic flight — you are entering mainland Vietnam, and you need a visa (or your nationality’s own mainland exemption) at that first airport.
Practical rule: book Phu Quoc on a single ticket with bags checked through, or arrive on one of the growing number of direct international routes. When in doubt, the $25 e-visa (below) removes all risk.
Want the Mainland Too? Get the 90-Day E-Visa
If your trip includes Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, Da Nang — anywhere beyond the island — or you want more than 30 days, Vietnam’s e-visa is cheap and fully online:
- Validity: up to 90 days
- Cost: $25 single entry / $50 multiple entry
- Where: the official government e-visa portal (evisa.gov.vn — beware lookalike agent sites charging triple)
- Processing: typically a few working days; apply at least a week before flying
Multiple entry is the long-stayer’s friend: you can hop to Bangkok or Kuala Lumpur and return without new paperwork.
Common Scenarios, Answered
- “Two weeks on Phu Quoc, nothing else” → exemption. No paperwork. Bring your onward ticket confirmation.
- “A month on the island” → exemption covers exactly 30 days — count your dates carefully (arrival day counts). Our long-stay guide is built around this.
- “Phu Quoc first, then Saigon” → e-visa before you fly. The exemption cannot be converted island-side into mainland permission in any reliable way.
- “Phu Quoc then Cambodia by air” → exemption works; your onward ticket exits Vietnam. ✔
- “Longer than 30 days on the island” → e-visa (90 days), or plan a visa run. Don’t overstay — fines and exit complications aren’t worth it.
At the Airport: What They Actually Check
- At departure check-in (this is where most problems happen): airlines verify your Phu Quoc final destination and onward ticket before boarding. Have your exit-flight confirmation ready to show.
- On arrival at PQC: immigration stamps you for 30 days. No forms, no fee, usually quick — big international arrivals can queue for a while in peak season.
FAQ
Does the exemption work for every passport?
Yes — the Phu Quoc exemption is nationality-blind. (Mainland Vietnam separately exempts certain passports for their own durations, but you don’t need that for an island-only trip.)
Can I extend the 30 days on the island?
Not reliably — extensions of the island exemption aren’t a service you can count on. Plan around 30 days, or arrive on a 90-day e-visa if you might stay longer.
Do children need anything different?
Same rules: valid passport (6+ months), included in the onward booking.
I found a site selling “Phu Quoc visas” — is it legit?
You don’t need to buy anything for an island-only trip under 30 days. For e-visas, use only the official government portal — agent sites resell the same $25 visa with heavy markups.
Could the rules change?
Yes — Vietnam has been steadily loosening visa policy, but details evolve. This page reflects the rules as of July 2026; do a 2-minute check of official sources close to your travel date. If something here is outdated, tell us and we’ll fix it same-week.
Bottom Line
Island-only trip under 30 days: fly in (direct or checked-through transit), carry 6 months of passport validity and an onward ticket, and the stamp is free. Anything involving the mainland or a longer stay: $25 e-visa from the official portal, sorted online in days. It’s genuinely one of the easiest beach entries in Asia — just don’t let a self-transfer in Saigon ambush you.