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Vietnam to implement cigarette excise tax from 2027, gradual hike to follow

Vietnam to implement cigarette excise tax from 2027, gradual hike to follow
14 Jan 2026 09:05

HANOI (REUTERS)

Vietnam will introduce an absolute excise tax on cigarettes starting in 2027, with rates increasing incrementally to 10,000 dong ($0.38) per pack by 2031 as part of a campaign to curb smoking, state media reported late on Tuesday.

The amended Special Consumption Tax law, passed last year, will adopt a mixed ​tax regime starting from 2027, combining the existing 75% base rate ‌with an absolute levy starting at 2,000 dong per pack ​and rising over the following four ⁠years.

"The tax ‌on tobacco for the 2012-2025 period is very low and had no impact on reducing consumption, while Vietnam's per capita income has steadily increased every year," Phan Thi Hai, deputy director ⁠of the Tobacco Harm Prevention Fund, was quoted as ⁠saying by Suc Khoe Doi Song, the official newspaper of the health ministry.

Vietnam has raised tobacco taxes twice since 2013, but officials ​say the increases have had little impact on smoking.

The health ministry reported that the current tax burden on tobacco represents only 36.8% of retail prices, well below the 70-75% level recommended by the World Health Organisation, and also ​much lower than the rates ‍seen in neighbouring ASEAN countries, including Thailand at 78.6% and Singapore at 67.1%.

The health ministry on Tuesday proposed further changes to the Tobacco Harm Prevention Law, including ‍the expansion of smoke-free areas, the tightening of retail ⁠restrictions, the enlarging of health warnings ​to cover 85% of cigarette packets, and imposing advertising and marketing bans to restrict youth access.

Vietnam ​health officials estimate that approximately 100,000 deaths occur annually as ‍a direct or indirect result of smoking.

The health ministry last year said Vietnam had more than 15 million smokers in 2024, ranking it among the world's top tobacco-consuming countries.

The ministry warned that the affordability of cigarettes remained a significant ‌barrier to reducing tobacco use, particularly among men.

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