‘Switches’ in our DNA that affect gene activity in cells could be crucial to understanding and possibly treating Alzheimer’s disease, with researchers identifying more than 150 control signals in specialized brain cells called…
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Signs at Brooklyn and Manhattan Wegmans stores say biometric data kept to increase security
ByEyewitness NewsMonday, January 5, 2026 4:34AM
NEW YORK (WABC) — There are new details on what Wegmans does with its biometric data of shoppers.
Signs at the Brooklyn and Manhattan stores say facial recognition, eye scans and voiceprints are kept to increase security.
When Wegmans originally launched a pilot program, management said any data of shoppers would be deleted.
Some customers complain the policy makes them feel uneasy.
Legislation in the City Council to block biometric storage has stalled for years.
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Cold, dry weather expected in most parts of country – RADIO PAKISTAN
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My Favorite CES Product Might Be This Ingenious Wireless Smart Lock
If you’re like me, you use a wireless smart lock because you live in an apartment or condo and can’t run wiring to your front door. And you know what a pain battery replacement can be. I’m lucky if I can go a few months before needing to…
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Vietnam’s Administrative Penalties for Tax and Invoice Violations
The introduction of Decree No. 310/2025/ND-CP by the Vietnamese government marks a significant overhaul of the administrative penalties for tax and invoice violations, effective from January 16, 2025.
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On December 2, 2025, the Government of Vietnam promulgated Decree No. 310/2025/ND-CP (“Decree 310”), which amends and supplements several provisions of Decree No. 125/2020/ND-CP on governing administrative penalties for tax and invoice violations. Effective from January 16, 2025, the new decree strengthens the legal framework for tax enforcement, clarifies sanctioning principles, introduces new compliance tools, and expands definitions of taxable administrative violations.
This article explains the key amendments under Decree 310, assesses their implications for businesses operating in Vietnam, and outlines the current tax enforcement landscape that enterprises must navigate in the coming year.
Expanded scope of administrative tax violations
A foundational change under Decree 310 is the expansion and clarification of the scope of administrative tax violations. The amended definition covers acts by organizations or individuals that breach tax administration laws, tax laws, or other revenue laws managed by tax authorities, but do not constitute criminal offenses. These acts include violations related to:
- Land use fees;
- Land and water surface rental fees;
- Fees for the granting of mineral exploitation rights;
- Fees for the granting of water resource exploitation rights;
- Remaining after-tax profits after the allocation to funds of enterprises wholly owned by the State;
- Dividends and distributed profits attributable to the State’s invested capital in joint-stock companies and limited liability companies with two or more members; and
- Other revenues in accordance with the laws on the management and investment of State capital in enterprises.
This broader scope aims to consolidate the types of state budget revenues subject to tax compliance and bring a wider array of revenue streams under administrative penalty provisions, reinforcing the tax authority’s oversight role.
Explore vital economic, geographic, and regulatory insights for business investors, managers, or expats to navigate Vietnam’s business landscape. Our Online Business Guides offer explainer articles, news, useful tools, and videos from on-the-ground advisors who contribute to the Doing Business in Vietnam knowledge.
Start exploringBroader force majeure exemptions
Decree 310 also introduces explicit force majeure provisions for the first time in the context of tax and invoice penalties. Cases such as natural disasters, epidemics, fires, wars, strikes, riots, and other unforeseen events may now be considered for exemption from penalties if taxpayers show that they could not comply despite taking all possible preventive measures.
This change aligns administrative penalty practice with force majeure principles found in other areas of Vietnamese law and modern regulatory frameworks.
New sanctioned subjects and third-party liability
Traditionally, tax administration penalties focused directly on the taxpayer responsible for the tax declaration and payment. Under Decree 310, this is expanded to include third parties acting on behalf of taxpayers:
- Authorized agents who perform tax obligations on behalf of a taxpayer will be held directly responsible for violations committed in the course of that authority.
- Organizations or individuals legally obligated to register, declare, or pay tax on behalf of others are subject to sanctions if they commit violations.
This shift recognizes the practical realities of outsourcing tax compliance and places a greater onus on appointed representatives to observe proper tax and invoicing practices.
Notably, Decree 310 also clarifies the entities subject to administrative penalties in connection with the implementation of the Global Minimum Tax under the global anti–base erosion (GloBE) rules. These include:
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- Constituent entities that are required to register for tax, file tax returns, and pay supplementary corporate income tax; and
- Constituent entities designated by the Group to submit notifications identifying the constituent entity responsible for tax declaration and the list of constituent entities subject to Resolution No. 107/2023/QH15.
Where these entities commit administrative violations as prescribed in the Decree, they shall be subject to penalties in accordance with its provisions.
Revised penalties for invoice and documentation violations
Decree 310 introduces tiered, detailed penalty structures for invoice-related violations that were previously less granular.
Under the new regime, penalties for issuing invoices at the incorrect time or failing to issue an invoice will be determined based on the number of invoices involved and whether they relate to sales or internal uses such as promotions, gifts, or employee remuneration. Fines vary from warnings and small penalties for minor violations to a lump sum of up to VND 80 million (US$3,000), based on the nature and extent of the breach.
Decree 310 also amends penalties for destroying invoices beyond prescribed time limits, failing to destroy invoices as required, and violations related to the provision of e-invoice services and systems, further tightening compliance expectations around invoice management.
Penalties for Issuing Invoices at the Incorrect Time
Violation scope
Penalty (VND)
Penalty (US$)
01 invoice (promotions, samples, gifts, internal consumption, lending/borrowing/returns)
Warning
—
02–<10 invoices (same cases) or 01 invoice for sale of goods/services
500,000 – 1,500,000
US$19 – US$57
10–<50 invoices (same cases) or 02–<10 invoices for sale of goods/services
2,000,000 – 5,000,000
US$76 – US$190
50–<100 invoices (same cases) or 10–<20 invoices for sale of goods/services
5,000,000 – 15,000,000
US$190 – US$570
≥100 invoices (same cases) or 20–<50 invoices for sale of goods/services
15,000,000 – 30,000,000
US$570 – US$1,141
50–<100 invoices for sale of goods/services
30,000,000 – 50,000,000
US$1
Penalties for Failure to Issue Invoices
Violation scope
Penalty (VND)
Penalty (US$)
01 invoice (promotions, samples, gifts, internal consumption, lending/borrowing/returns)
Warning
—
02–<10 invoices (same cases) or 01 invoice for sale of goods/services
1,000,000 – 2,000,000
US$38 – US$76
10–<50 invoices (same cases) or 02–<10 invoices for sale of goods/services
2,000,000 – 10,000,000
US$76 – US$380
50–<100 invoices (same cases) or 10–<20 invoices for sale of goods/services
10,000,000 – 30,000,000
US$380 – US$1,141
≥100 invoices (same cases) or 20–<50 invoices for sale of goods/services
30,000,000 – 50,000,000
US$1,141 – US$1,901
≥50 invoices for sale of goods/services
60,000,000 – 80,000,000
US$2,282 – US$3,042
Procedural changes: single penalty rule and enforcement authorities
Another significant amendment under Decree 310 concerns how repeated violations of the same type are treated administratively.
Rather than penalizing each individual act separately, the decree introduces a principle of a single penalty for behaviors such as issuing invoices at the incorrect time or failing to issue invoices, where multiple violations of the same nature may occur within the statute of limitations. The fine applied will reflect the number of invoices involved rather than each discrete act.
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This change reduces the administrative burden of multi-count penalties and introduces a degree of predictability for businesses in managing compliance exposures.
The decree also strengthens the authority of tax officials and hierarchical enforcement powers. Tax officers on duty, heads of grassroots tax agencies, and directors of provincial tax offices are granted explicit powers to impose warnings and monetary fines, up to specified limits, for defined categories of violations.
Implications for compliance and internal controls
For businesses operating in Vietnam, the amendments under Decree 310 strengthen the need for robust tax and invoice compliance systems. Key implications include:
- Enhanced internal review mechanisms to ensure that all invoicing and tax declaration activities are timely, accurate, and aligned with legal requirements.
- Contractual safeguards with third-party tax agents, reflecting the new liability framework.
- Documentation and record-keeping, particularly where exemptions may be claimed due to force majeure events or other mitigating circumstances.
- Revised compliance thresholds, including tiered fine structures for invoice-related violations, raising the stakes for systematic errors.
Companies should consider updating internal compliance manuals, training staff on new penalty thresholds and enforcement procedures, and investing in technology solutions for automated invoice reporting and tax filings to avoid amplified penalties.
The evolving tax enforcement landscape in Vietnam
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Decree 310 is introduced as Vietnam’s tax administration increasingly emphasizes digitalization, transparency, and alignment with international standards. Mandatory e-invoicing systems, electronic tax filing, and improved data-sharing capabilities are all strengthening compliance efforts, raising the risk of penalties where controls are weak or outdated.
Vietnam’s tax authorities have also pursued broader reforms in tax dispute resolution, competition law, and cross-border information exchange, signaling a comprehensive approach to modernizing the business tax framework.
While this progress offers long-term benefits in terms of clarity and predictability, the short-term impact is an increased administrative burden on businesses to align operations with evolving regulatory standards.
Outlook and next steps for businesses
As Decree 310 takes effect from January 16, 2026, companies should prioritize compliance readiness. Transitional provisions allow the continued application of previous decree rules to violations that occurred before the effective date, but to violations discovered after, the new rules will apply. Businesses with outstanding tax and invoice issues should assess whether legacy practices need remediation under the updated framework.
For international investors and domestic enterprises alike, understanding these changes is essential to maintain tax compliance, manage risk, and support sustainable growth within Vietnam’s increasingly digitalized regulatory landscape.
See also: Vietnam’s Tax and Accounting Updates for Businesses in 2026
About Us
Vietnam Briefing is one of five regional publications under the Asia Briefing brand. It is supported by Dezan Shira & Associates, a pan-Asia, multi-disciplinary professional services firm that assists foreign investors throughout Asia, including through offices in Hanoi, Ho Chi Minh City, and Da Nang in Vietnam. Dezan Shira & Associates also maintains offices or has alliance partners assisting foreign investors in China, Hong Kong SAR, Indonesia, Singapore, Malaysia, Mongolia, Dubai (UAE), Japan, South Korea, Nepal, The Philippines, Sri Lanka, Thailand, Italy, Germany, Bangladesh, Australia, United States, and United Kingdom and Ireland.
For a complimentary subscription to Vietnam Briefing’s content products, please click here. For support with establishing a business in Vietnam or for assistance in analyzing and entering markets, please contact the firm at vietnam@dezshira.com or visit us at www.dezshira.com
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For the Telenor acquisition to work, PTCL needs to be able to raise prices
Pakistan Telecommunication Company Ltd (PTCL) has finally closed its long-anticipated purchase of Telenor Pakistan – a transaction that has been years in the making and, in many ways, a referendum on whether Pakistan’s telecoms market can move from destructive price wars to something closer to “pricing power”.
In a filing with the Pakistan Stock Exchange, PTCL said it has completed the acquisition of 100% shareholding of Telenor Pakistan (Pvt) Ltd and Orion Towers (Pvt) Ltd on 31 December 2025, with shares transferred into PTCL’s name. The deal was first announced in December 2023, and has created a combined operator that is a much stronger No. 2 in the market.
The purchase has never been framed as a bargain-basement tuck-in. The agreed purchase price to acquire Telenor Pakistan on an enterprise value of Rs108 billion, on a cash-free, debt-free basis. And PTCL arranged up to $400 million of financing with an IFC-led consortium (including the Silk Road Fund and British International Investment), a seven-year facility with quarterly repayments.
That arithmetic dictates the core question for investors: what has to happen for PTCL to earn an adequate return on a heavily leveraged, politically sensitive, regulator-scrutinised telecoms consolidation?
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