One-stop service models are becoming increasingly important for foreign investors entering Vietnam. While many companies initially focus on incorporation costs, the real financial impact often appears later during ongoing operations.
When investors plan market entry, the focus is usually on visible, one-time expenses. How much does the license cost? What are the legal fees? These costs are easy to compare across providers.
However, the real question emerges after the licenses are issued: what does it actually cost to stay compliant year after year?
For many FDIs, the answer is an unpleasant surprise. Hiring separate firms for tax, payroll, legal, and HR may seem efficient, but it often results in compliance costs that are far higher than expected.
This is rarely because individual vendors overcharge. Instead, fragmentation itself creates hidden costs that a one-stop service model is designed to eliminate.
The Illusion of Control: Why Multi-Vendor Setups Feel Efficient

It is easy to understand why foreign investors initially gravitate toward multiple specialist providers. A dedicated tax firm offers deep expertise in corporate income tax. A payroll company promises precision in salary processing and social insurance. A legal practice provides comfort on licensing and contracts. On paper, this looks like building a team of experts .
However, this structure overlooks a fundamental reality of Vietnam’s regulatory environment: compliance obligations are interconnected, but vendor scopes are not. Tax declarations depend on payroll data. Payroll accuracy depends on HR contract structures. Legal entity changes affect tax reporting requirements. When these functions are split across providers, someone must ensure they connect properly. In a fragmented model, that someone is usually you—or more precisely, your internal management team, whose time is not free .
This is where the true cost comparison begins.
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Direct Professional Fees: The Obvious Starting Point
Let’s start with the most visible cost layer: fees paid to external advisors. A typical fragmented compliance setup for a mid-sized FDI in Vietnam might include:
- Accounting firm: Monthly bookkeeping, VAT declarations, quarterly CIT filings, annual financial statements
- Payroll provider: Monthly salary processing, PIT calculations/declarations, social insurance administration
- Legal advisor: Contract reviews, licensing renewals, ad hoc opinions
- HR consultant: Labor contracts, policy development, employee support
- Audit firm: Annual statutory audit
These providers charge separately, each with its own engagement letter, billing cycle, and scope. Individually, fees seem reasonable, but aggregated, they often exceed what an integrated one-stop service charges for equivalent—or more comprehensive—work that closes provider gaps.
Crucially, fragmented fees involve duplicated effort: accounting and payroll firms may re-enter employee data; legal and HR advisors may duplicate contract reviews; tax teams may seek data already compiled by accountants. In a one-stop service model, redundancies vanish as one team shares data and coordinates internally.
The Hidden Layer: Coordination Costs and Management Time
Beyond direct professional fees lies a less obvious but often larger cost: internal management time to coordinate multiple vendors. This hidden expense rarely appears in budgets but drains executive attention.
With separate providers, internal staff must:
- Onboard vendors, repeating business explanations
- Handle multiple channels and overlapping requests
- Clarify blurred scopes or deadlines
- Resolve conflicting advice
- Ensure complete information sharing
- Track lost deliverables in handoffs
For small and mid-sized FDIs lacking large teams, this falls on senior leaders—who should prioritize sales, partnerships, and growth. Their time holds real value; hours managing vendors detract from revenue activities.
A one-stop service removes this coordination entirely. You deal with one relationship manager for internal handling, build a single contextual relationship, and get integrated reporting across all compliance functions.
Penalty Exposure: The Cost of Getting It Wrong
The most significant cost differential between fragmented and integrated compliance lies not in fees or time, but in exposure to regulatory penalties. Vietnam enforces strict deadlines across multiple obligations, and non-compliance consequences are severe.
| Obligation | Deadline | Potential Penalty |
|---|---|---|
| Monthly VAT | 20th of following month | Late declaration: VND 2–5 million for 1–30 days delay. Late payment: 0.03% per day interest on the overdue amount |
| Social insurance registration | Within 30 days of hiring | 12–15% of the unpaid premium amount at the time of violation, up to VND 75 million. For evasion (e.g., non-registration beyond 60 days after deadline): Additional 0.03% per day on overdue amounts, plus potential higher administrative penalties or criminal liability |
| Charter capital contribution | Within 90 days of license | VND 30–50 million, plus forced adjustment of capital/members and potential license revocation in severe cases |
| Annual financial statements | March 31 | Late filing: VND 8–25 million, plus potential audit escalations and additional interest on any tax adjustments |
In a fragmented model, responsibility disperses: accounting handles VAT, payroll oversees PIT and social insurance, legal manages renewals. Vendors own tasks, but gaps go unowned.
Deadlines in gaps spark issues—payroll assumes accounting finalized PIT; accounting thinks payroll did. New rules like PDPL add unclear obligations.
The enterprise stays fully liable; authorities reject vendor blame. Penalties, audits, and reputational harm hit the company.
A one-stop service centralizes accountability across the compliance calendar. One team oversees deadlines, filings, and changes, preventing oversights. This cuts penalty risks, shielding against hidden financial impacts.
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The “Zero Revenue” Trap: Paying for Nothing While Risking Everything
Another hidden cost of fragmentation hits during the early operational phase—the period after incorporation when the entity is registered but not yet fully active. No revenue. No significant transactions. It feels like nothing is happening.
In a fragmented model, this quiet period creates real risk.
- The incorporation firm completes its work and steps back.
- The accounting provider may not begin until bank accounts open or invoices issue.
- In the gap between, critical filings go missing—monthly VAT declarations (even for zero activity), notifications to investment authorities.
Vietnam does not suspend filing obligations just because you have no revenue. Even dormant entities must submit certain declarations. When these are missed, penalties accumulate silently—only to be discovered months later when an accountant finally reviews your position.
A one-stop service engaged from the outset maintains continuity across this transition. The same team that handles incorporation ensures post-licensing filings are managed, even during quiet periods.
Cost Comparison: Putting Numbers in Perspective
While specific fees vary based on company size, industry, and transaction volume, a realistic cost comparison for a typical small-to-mid-sized FDI in Vietnam might look something like this:
| Annual Cost Center | Fragmented Model | One-Stop Service Model | Notes |
| Accounting & bookkeeping | $4,000–$6,000 | Included | One-stop consolidates functions |
| Payroll processing | $3,000–$5,000 | Included | Eliminates duplicate data entry |
| Tax compliance & filing | $2,000–$4,000 | Included | Integrated with accounting |
| Legal retainer / ad hoc | $2,000–$5,000 | Included | Proactive rather than reactive |
| HR support / consulting | $1,500–$3,000 | Included | Built into operating framework |
| Internal coordination time | $5,000–$10,000+ | Minimal | Management time value |
| Penalty / correction risk | Variable | Near zero | Centralized accountability |
| Total Estimated Annual Cost | $17,500–$33,000+ | $8,000–$15,000 | Significant savings through integration |
The key insight from this comparison is not simply that a one-stop service costs less in direct fees—though it often does—but that it eliminates the hidden costs that fragmented models inevitably generate. Duplicated work, management time, penalty exposure, and reactive corrections all carry real economic weight. A one-stop service removes these from the equation entirely .
Why Integration Drives Down Cost
The cost advantage of a one-stop service is not magic. It comes from structural efficiencies that fragmented models simply cannot replicate.
First, shared data eliminates redundant work. When accounting, tax, and payroll operate within the same team, information flows seamlessly. Employee data is entered once, records are shared across functions, and regulatory updates are applied consistently. This removes duplicate work and unnecessary data requests.
Second, proactive coordination prevents reactive costs. A one-stop service sees the full compliance picture. When regulatory changes occur—such as new e-invoicing rules, PDPL requirements, or updated tax regulations—the team evaluates the impact across all functions and adjusts early, before issues arise.
Third, clear accountability reduces escalation. In fragmented models, problems often lead to finger-pointing between vendors. In contrast, a one-stop service provides a single accountable team that resolves issues directly, saving both time and management resources.
Choosing the Right One-Stop Service Partner
Of course, not all providers claiming to offer a one-stop service deliver the same level of integration. Some simply bundle services from different teams without true operational coordination. To realize the cost advantages described above, you need a partner with:
- Truly comprehensive coverage: Accounting, tax, payroll, HR, corporate secretarial, and legal advisory under one operating framework, not subcontracted to third parties
- Deep local expertise: Teams based in Vietnam with fluent Vietnamese speakers who engage directly with authorities
- Proven FDI experience: Familiarity with foreign-invested enterprise structures, reporting obligations, and common compliance pitfalls
- Clear accountability: A dedicated relationship manager who coordinates all services and serves as your single point of contact
- Transparent pricing: Fixed-fee structures that clearly define what is included, eliminating surprise add-ons
When these elements are in place, the one-stop service model delivers not only cost savings but also operational clarity, reduced risk, and greater management focus on growth.
Conclusion: Are You Overpaying?
For many foreign investors in Vietnam, the honest answer is yes—they are often overpaying for compliance. Not because vendors charge too much, but because fragmentation itself creates costs that a well-structured one-stop service can eliminate.
The question is not whether specialist providers offer value—they do. The real question is whether that specialization outweighs the hidden costs of coordination, duplication, and compliance risk. For many small and mid-sized FDIs, the answer is clear: an integrated one-stop service often delivers better outcomes at a lower total cost.
If your current compliance setup involves multiple vendors, separate invoices, and internal time spent coordinating between providers, it may be worth asking what that fragmentation is really costing your business.
At InCorp Vietnam, our one-stop service model integrates market entry, accounting, tax, payroll, HR, and compliance into a single framework. This helps foreign investors reduce operational complexity, close compliance gaps, and focus on growing their business in Vietnam.





