How Electricity and Water Bills Work in Vietnam

How electricity and water bills work in Vietnam for expats

When renting an apartment in Vietnam, many foreigners focus on monthly rent first. But the real monthly cost is usually decided by utility bills: electricity, water, internet, parking, and building management fees.

Electricity bills can rise quickly during hot months, especially when air conditioners are used every day. Water bills are usually smaller, but the rate may differ depending on whether you pay the official utility provider, building management, or landlord.

Quick Summary
Before signing a lease in Vietnam, foreign tenants should confirm electricity rate, water rate, management fee, billing cycle, and who receives the payment.

Why Utility Bills Matter in Vietnam

Vietnam has a hot and humid climate, so air conditioner use can be one of the largest monthly household expenses for foreign residents. In serviced apartments, electricity may be charged at a fixed building rate, while in condominiums it may be based on the official meter reading.

This is why two apartments with the same rent can have very different total monthly costs. A lower rent may not be cheaper if electricity, water, parking, internet, and management fees are all charged separately.

Practical point for expats
Do not ask only “How much is the rent?” Ask “How are electricity and water calculated, and who do I pay?”

Recent Electricity Price Context in Vietnam

Vietnam Electricity (EVN) announced that the average retail electricity price increased by 4.8% in May 2025. EVN said the average price rose from 2,103.12 VND per kWh to 2,204.064 VND per kWh, excluding VAT.

Reuters also reported that heatwaves have placed pressure on Vietnam’s power grid, with high temperatures increasing evening electricity demand. For residents, this means summer electricity bills can rise not only because of tariff changes, but also because air conditioners run longer during hot periods.

News Extract Summary
✔ EVN announced a 4.8% average retail electricity price increase in May 2025
✔ The average price rose to 2,204.064 VND/kWh before VAT
✔ Heatwaves can increase air conditioner use and household electricity demand
✔ Foreign tenants should check whether their apartment uses official meter rates or landlord/building rates

How Electricity Bills Are Usually Charged

Housing Type How It Is Charged What to Check
Condominium Usually based on meter reading Ask if EVN rate or building rate applies
Serviced apartment Often charged by fixed per-kWh rate Confirm the exact VND/kWh rate
Private house May be official bill or landlord collection Ask to see actual bill or meter
Shared apartment Split among tenants Confirm split rule in advance

How Water Bills Usually Work

Water bills in Vietnam are usually much lower than electricity bills. However, foreigners should still check whether water is billed by the city utility, building management, or landlord.

In some apartments, water is included in management fees. In others, tenants pay a monthly water bill based on meter reading. For serviced apartments, water may be included in the rent or charged separately as a fixed monthly fee.

Bill Type Common Practice Tenant Checkpoint
Electricity Meter-based or fixed building rate Ask exact VND/kWh rate
Water Meter-based, included, or fixed charge Ask if included in rent
Internet Included or separate subscription Check speed and provider
Management fee Separate in many condominiums Confirm monthly amount
Parking Often separate Check motorbike/car fees

Utility Bill Check Flow Before Signing

STEP 1
Ask exact
electric rate
STEP 2
Check water
billing method
STEP 3
Confirm other
monthly fees
STEP 4
Write it in
the lease

Practical Questions to Ask the Landlord

1. What is the electricity rate per kWh?
Ask for the exact number, not just “normal rate.” In serviced apartments, the building may apply its own fixed rate.

2. Is water included in the rent?
Water can be included, billed by meter, or charged at a fixed monthly amount.

3. Who sends the monthly bill?
It may be EVN, the water company, building management, or landlord.

4. Can I see the meter reading?
Take a photo of electricity and water meters when you move in.

5. Are management fee, parking, and internet separate?
These can change the real monthly cost significantly.

6. What happens if bills are delayed or unpaid?
Ask whether payment delays cause service interruption, late fees, or building access issues.

Estimated Monthly Utility Cost for Expats

Actual costs vary widely by city, apartment size, air conditioner use, and building policy. As a rough practical range, Vietnam Airlines’ cost-of-living guide estimates monthly electricity around VND 1,000,000–2,500,000 and water around VND 50,000–150,000 in Ho Chi Minh City, depending on usage and apartment conditions.

Item Typical Range Main Driver
Electricity VND 1,000,000–2,500,000/month Air conditioner use
Water VND 50,000–150,000/month Household size
Internet VND 300,000–500,000/month Speed and provider
Management fee Varies by building Amenities and location

How to Avoid Utility Bill Disputes

✔ Take photos of meter readings on move-in day
✔ Ask for the exact electricity and water rates in writing
✔ Keep monthly payment receipts or bank transfer records
✔ Compare bills during the first two months
✔ Include utility rules in the lease contract
✔ Ask whether bills are based on official invoices or landlord calculation

When Bills Look Too High

If your bill suddenly increases, first compare usage with the previous month. Then check whether the meter reading is correct, whether the air conditioner was used more often, or whether the building applies a higher fixed rate than the official utility rate.

For electricity, summer heat is usually the biggest reason for higher bills. For water, unusual increases may be caused by leaks, toilet tank problems, or meter reading errors.

Electricity bill check
Compare kWh usage, not only total amount. A higher bill may come from higher consumption, rate change, or both.

Water bill check
If the amount is unusually high, ask building management to check leaks or meter reading.

Lease check
If the landlord applies a fixed rate, confirm whether the rate was written in the lease before move-in.

Official and News Reference Links

Reference Extract Summary
✔ EVN announced a 4.8% average retail electricity price increase in May 2025
✔ Vietnam News reported the same 4.8% electricity price increase amid higher generation costs
✔ Reuters reported that heatwaves are putting pressure on Vietnam’s power grid
✔ EVN publishes official electricity tariff information for customer groups
✔ Vietnam Airlines’ city guide gives a practical monthly utility cost range for Ho Chi Minh City

Final Note

Electricity and water bills in Vietnam are usually manageable, but they can surprise foreign tenants if the billing method is unclear. The safest approach is to confirm the rates, meter readings, and payment method before signing the lease.

A few questions before move-in can prevent many disputes later. For long-term residents, it is worth keeping monthly utility records just like rent receipts.

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