10 THINGS TO KNOW BEFORE MOVING TO VIETNAM WITH CHILDREN: 2026 RELOCATION GUIDE
You're Moving to Vietnam. Here's What Nobody Tells You.
The decision is made. Vietnam is the next chapter.
Job offer accepted. Departure date set. Excitement building.
Then reality hits: What about the kids?
Schools. Language. Healthcare. Friends. Routines. Identity.
Suddenly, the move feels enormous.
After helping hundreds of expat families settle into HCMC at Spark English Center Vietnam in Thao Dien, we've seen what works and what blindsides families. This guide covers the 10 things you actually need to know before moving to Vietnam with children.
No generic relocation advice. Real, specific, practical guidance.
1. School Decisions Drive Everything Else
The biggest mistake families make: Treating school selection as one decision among many.
Reality: Your school choice determines:
- Where you'll live (proximity matters)
- Daily schedule (start times, pickups)
- Social network (friends through school)
- Educational pathway (curriculum continuity)
- Annual budget (massive variation)
Decide schools FIRST, then everything else follows.
School Categories in HCMC
Premium International Schools (600-800M VND/year):
- BIS HCMC, ISHCMC, AIS, EIS, Renaissance, SSIS
- Full English immersion
- Native-speaking teachers
- International curricula (IB, British, American)
Mid-Tier International (300-500M VND/year):
- Smaller international schools
- Quality varies
- Research carefully
Premium Bilingual (250-450M VND/year):
- BVIS, premium Vinschool campuses, Wellspring
- 50/50 English-Vietnamese
- Strong cultural integration
Standard Bilingual (100-250M VND/year):
- EMASI, standard Vinschool, Royal School
- Good value option
- May need supplementary English support
Critical Timeline
6-12 months before moving: Research and apply
3-6 months before: Visit (if possible) or video tours
Application deadlines: Often January-March for September start
Waitlists: Top schools (BIS, ISHCMC) have significant waitlists
Don't wait until you arrive to choose schools. Best options will be unavailable.
See: Top 10 International Schools in HCMC
2. Where You Live Matters More Than You Think
The expat hubs in HCMC:
Thao Dien (District 2) — The Top Expat Choice
Why Thao Dien:
- Heart of international expat community
- BIS, ISHCMC, AIS Early Years, EIS within 15 minutes
- Western restaurants, supermarkets, cafes
- Walkable streets (rare in Saigon)
- Modern apartments and villas
- Active expat community
- International medical clinics nearby
Budget: 30-80M VND/month for family-suitable housing
Best for: Families wanting easy expat life, school proximity, Western amenities
An Phu (District 2) — Quieter Family Area
Why An Phu:
- Adjacent to Thao Dien with lower density
- Many international families
- BIS HCMC located here
- Quieter, more residential
- Better for families wanting space
Budget: 35-70M VND/month for family housing
Best for: Families wanting quieter family-focused community
Phu My Hung (District 7) — The Other Major Expat Hub
Why Phu My Hung:
- Korean and Japanese community concentrated here
- Renaissance, SSIS, BVIS located here
- Modern, planned community
- Wide streets, parks
- Korean restaurants, supermarkets
- Less traffic than central areas
Budget: 25-60M VND/month for family housing
Best for: Korean/Japanese families, those preferring planned community feel
Thu Thiem (District 2) — The New Expat Frontier
Why Thu Thiem:
- Newest development area
- AIS and EIS campuses here
- Modern infrastructure
- Less established but growing
- Often newer apartments
Budget: 25-55M VND/month
Best for: Families with kids at AIS or EIS, those wanting newer development
Avoid These Mistakes
❌ Don't choose location based on neighborhood alone: Verify school commute time
❌ Don't underestimate traffic: A 5km distance can mean 45-minute commute
❌ Don't sign long leases before arriving: Visit, then commit
❌ Don't ignore community fit: Expat or local communities matter
3. Healthcare Is Better Than You Think (If You Plan)
Vietnam's healthcare for expats is solid, but requires planning.
Top International Medical Facilities
Family Medical Practice
- Multiple HCMC locations
- International doctors
- English-speaking staff
- Comprehensive services
FV Hospital (Phu My Hung)
- Major international hospital
- Surgery, specialist care
- High standards
Vinmec International
- Multiple HCMC locations
- Modern facilities
- Comprehensive care
- Linked to Vinschool/Vingroup
Columbia Asia Saigon
- Established international hospital
- Wide range of specialists
- Good emergency care
Health Insurance Critical
Don't move without comprehensive international health insurance.
Local insurance limited. International policies (Cigna, Bupa, AXA) cover:
- International hospital care
- Specialist consultations
- Emergency evacuation if needed
- Mental health services
Budget: 80-200M VND/year for family of four
What to Pack/Arrange Before Moving
✅ Vaccination records up to date
✅ Prescription medications (3-6 month supply)
✅ Medical records translated
✅ Insurance cards and contacts
✅ Emergency contact information
✅ Pediatrician contact (research before arrival)
Common Health Considerations
Air quality: HCMC AQI varies. Air purifiers recommended. Some days require masks outdoors.
Tropical illnesses: Dengue fever exists. Mosquito protection important.
Food safety: Quality varies. Stick to reputable restaurants and supermarkets initially.
Tap water: Don't drink. Use bottled or filtered water.
4. The English Skills Reality Check
Many parents assume: "Our child speaks English at home, so school will be easy."
Reality is more complex:
What Most Parents Don't Realize
International schools assume students arrive with strong academic English (not just conversational fluency).
This includes:
- Advanced reading fluency (grade-level WPM)
- Academic vocabulary (analyze, evaluate, demonstrate)
- Writing organization (paragraphs, essays)
- Comprehension of complex texts
- Listening to academic lectures
Common Scenarios
Scenario A: The "Bilingual Child"
Your child speaks English at home but attended school in another language. Conversational English strong. Academic English potentially weak.
Result at international school: Initial struggles with reading and writing despite seeming fluent.
Scenario B: The Native English Speaker from Different System
Coming from US, UK, Australia, or other native English country, but with reading or writing gaps from previous school.
Result: Existing gaps follow your child to Vietnam. International school in Vietnam doesn't fix what wasn't fixed before.
Scenario C: The ESL Family
English isn't first language. Child speaks some English but has never studied in English-medium environment.
Result: Significant adjustment period needed. Often requires intensive English support to access curriculum.
What Smart Families Do
Before moving: Assess child's current English skills realistically
On arrival: Get diagnostic assessment to identify specific gaps
During first semester: Add specialized English support as needed
Don't wait for problems: Proactive support prevents struggle
Where to Get Diagnostic Assessment in HCMC
Spark English Center Vietnam in Thao Dien offers free comprehensive English assessment for new arrivals.
Specialists with experience supporting expat children adjusting to international schools.
Book free assessment before or shortly after arrival.
5. The First 90 Days Are Critical
How you spend the first three months in Vietnam shapes your family's entire experience.
Days 1-30: Survival Mode
Priorities:
- Settle into temporary or permanent housing
- Get phone numbers (Vietnamese SIM cards)
- Open bank accounts
- Register at embassy
- Set up basic utilities
- Find pediatrician
- Get child enrolled and attending school
What to avoid:
- Major decisions you can defer
- Long-term commitments before assessing situation
- Trying to do too much
Days 31-60: Establishing Patterns
Priorities:
- Daily routines solidifying
- School pick-up/drop-off rhythm
- Finding favorite restaurants and shops
- Connecting with other expat families
- Establishing exercise/activity routines
- Beginning to explore weekends
What to avoid:
- Panicking if homesick (normal at this stage)
- Major school changes (give it time)
- Excessive comparison to home country
Days 61-90: Settling In
Priorities:
- Identifying ongoing challenges
- Adding extracurricular activities
- Building social networks
- Addressing any English skill gaps with specialized support
- Planning for longer term
Common issues that emerge:
- English skill gaps becoming clear
- Social connections needed
- Activities for after-school
- Specific school challenges visible
This is when many families seek out Spark English Center Vietnam for English skill support that emerges as a need.
6. Daily Life Logistics That Matter
Transportation
Options:
- Grab/taxi: Easy, affordable for daily use (50-200K VND per ride)
- Personal motorbike: Common but learning curve and safety considerations
- Personal car with driver: 25-40M VND/month including driver
- Walking: Limited in most areas but possible in Thao Dien
For families with kids: Driver is most common solution. Saves stress, ensures safety.
Schools and Schedules
Typical international school day:
- Start: 7:30-8:30am
- End: 2:30-3:30pm
- Plus: After-school activities, sports, clubs
Plan for:
- Morning rush hour (leave 15-30 minutes earlier than expected)
- Afternoon activities (often back at school until 5pm)
- Homework time (evening routine)
- Family dinner time
- English support sessions (typically 4:00-7:30pm)
Shopping and Daily Needs
Where to shop:
Supermarkets:
- An Nam Gourmet (premium, imported goods)
- Annam Gourmet Market (Western products)
- Vinmart, CoopMart (local chains)
- Annam Gourmet (Thao Dien location convenient)
Online options:
- Annam delivery
- Grab delivery for restaurants
- Lazada, Shopee for general goods
Helpers and Domestic Support
Many expat families employ:
- Helper (live-out): 8-15M VND/month for cooking, cleaning
- Live-in helper: 12-20M VND/month full service
- Driver: 18-25M VND/month
- Tutors: Varies widely by skill needed
Banking and Money
Recommended approach:
- Maintain home country accounts
- Open Vietnamese account for daily expenses
- Use international cards where possible
- ATMs widely available
- Cash still important for many transactions
7. Building Community and Friendships
For Children
Quick connection methods:
Through school: Most natural pathway. Encourage participation in activities.
Through neighborhood: Thao Dien especially has playground culture, weekend community
Through extracurriculars:
- Saigon Heat youth basketball
- BIS, AIS sports teams
- Art classes
- Music programs
- Spark English Center small group programs (kids often become friends)
For Parents
Expat communities:
Facebook groups:
- "International Mums HCMC"
- "Expats in Saigon"
- "Thao Dien Mums"
- School-specific parent groups
Activities:
- Weekly markets (Thao Dien Saturday market)
- Brunch culture
- Yoga and fitness studios
- Book clubs
- Volunteer organizations
Through children:
- School parent associations
- Class WhatsApp groups
- Birthday party circuits
- After-school activity parents
Community-Specific Resources
Korean community: Phu My Hung concentration, Korean schools and centers
Japanese community: District 7 mostly, Japanese-specific resources
International community: Thao Dien centered, diverse Western/global expats
8. The Cultural Adjustment Curve
What to Expect
Honeymoon phase (Weeks 1-6): Excitement, exploration, novelty. Everything is interesting.
Frustration phase (Weeks 6-16): Reality of daily challenges. Language barriers. Different systems. Missing home.
Adjustment phase (Months 4-9): Patterns established. Friendships developing. Less daily stress.
Adaptation phase (Months 9+): Vietnam feels like home. Confident in daily life.
How to Help Children Adjust
1. Acknowledge feelings: "It's hard to start over. You're allowed to miss home and friends."
2. Maintain some home country connections: Video calls with grandparents, friends. Keep some traditions.
3. Build new traditions: Friday family movie night. Saturday markets. Sunday brunch spots.
4. Celebrate progress: First Vietnamese phrase. New friend made. Spelling test improved. Adjustment milestones matter.
5. Be patient: Some kids adjust in 3 months. Others take 12+ months. Both are normal.
6. Get help if needed: School counselors. Family Medical Practice has child psychologists. Don't ignore prolonged adjustment difficulties.
When Adjustment Affects Schoolwork
Sometimes cultural adjustment manifests as academic struggle:
- Reading difficulties despite previous strength
- Writing avoidance
- Withdrawal from class participation
- Declining grades
Response options:
✅ Conversation with school teacher and counselor
✅ Diagnostic assessment to identify if academic gaps are real or adjustment-related
✅ Targeted support if gaps exist (Spark English Center Vietnam specializes in this)
✅ Patience and consistency
9. Cost of Living Reality
Monthly Expenses for Family of Four (Approximate)
Housing (rent): 25-80M VND
Utilities: 3-8M VND
Internet/phones: 2-3M VND
Food/groceries: 25-40M VND
Transportation: 5-30M VND
School fees: 50-70M VND/month (annual divided)
Healthcare: 5-15M VND
Entertainment/dining: 15-30M VND
Helper/services: 10-25M VND
English support (if needed): 2-3M VND/month for Spark programs
Total range: 140-300M VND/month for comfortable family living
Where the Money Goes Surprisingly
Higher than expected:
- International school fees
- Imported groceries
- Private healthcare
- Helper services
- International schools' extracurriculars
Lower than expected:
- Local food and transport
- Domestic services
- Local entertainment
- Local healthcare for minor issues
- Gas, utilities
Financial Planning Tips
✅ Negotiate schooling in expat package if possible
✅ Understand tax obligations (Vietnam taxes, home country taxes)
✅ Maintain home country savings/investments
✅ Budget for bigger annual expenses (school fees, insurance, travel)
✅ Plan for gradual cost increases over time
10. The English Support Question (Don't Skip This)
After everything else, this is what we see most families underestimate:
The need for specialized English support.
Why This Matters
Even at premium international schools, many students need additional English support to thrive. This is especially true for:
Returning expat families with English skill gaps from previous schools
Non-native English speaking families (Korean, Japanese, Vietnamese)
Bilingual children with conversational but not academic English
Children transferring from non-English education systems
What Goes Wrong Without Support
Year 1: Child seems okay. Adjusting to new school. Some struggles attributed to transition.
Year 2: Reading and writing gaps becoming clear. Homework taking longer. Confidence dropping.
Year 3: Significant gaps now affecting all subjects. Specialized intervention needed but harder due to entrenched patterns.
The pattern: Problems compound when not addressed early.
Smart Families Get Ahead of It
Within first 1-3 months of arrival: Diagnostic assessment
If gaps identified: Begin targeted intervention
Result: Strong foundation, smooth international school experience, confidence high
Where to Get Specialized Support in HCMC
Spark English Center Vietnam in Thao Dien specializes in:
✅ Diagnostic assessment for new arrivals
✅ Reading fluency intervention
✅ Phonics remediation
✅ Academic writing development
✅ IELTS preparation
✅ Comprehensive literacy programs
Located in: Heart of expat community (walking distance from many international school families' homes)
Maximum 6 students per group: True specialized attention
Free assessment: Begin with comprehensive evaluation at no cost
What to Do
If you haven't moved yet: Plan to assess your child's English within first month of arrival
If you've recently moved: Book free assessment now
If you've been here a while: Don't wait if struggles are emerging
The Complete Pre-Move Checklist
6-12 Months Before Moving
- Research schools (apply early!)
- Verify visa/work permit pathway
- Plan international moving company
- Update vaccinations
- Research housing options
- Connect with expat communities online
3-6 Months Before
- Confirm school enrollment
- Arrange healthcare insurance
- Plan financial setup
- Research neighborhoods seriously
- Consider visit if possible
- Begin Vietnamese language basics
1-3 Months Before
- Confirm housing or temporary arrangement
- Pack important documents
- Arrange pet relocation if applicable
- Notify financial institutions
- Plan first 30 days in detail
- Pre-book Spark English Center assessment for after arrival if needed
First 30 Days After Arrival
- Settle into housing
- Register with embassy
- Get Vietnamese SIM cards
- Open bank account
- Establish daily routines
- Begin school
- Book diagnostic assessments (English support if needed)
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does it typically take families to feel settled in HCMC?
Most families feel basic stability within 3 months, comfortable within 6-9 months, and truly at home within 12-18 months. Children's adjustment timeline varies widely.
What's the biggest mistake families make?
Underestimating school decisions and English support needs. Many families discover gaps and challenges in year 2 that could have been addressed in month 2.
Do we need to learn Vietnamese?
Functional Vietnamese helps daily life but isn't essential. English works in expat areas, international schools, and tourist contexts. Local Vietnamese helps with deeper integration.
Is HCMC safe for families?
Generally yes. Standard urban precautions apply. Safer than many major cities. Traffic is biggest daily safety consideration.
What about my child's home country curriculum?
Most international schools follow internationally recognized curricula (IB, British, American). Curriculum continuity often easier than expected. Consult with both old and new schools during transition.
Should we visit before moving?
If possible, yes. A 1-2 week visit lets you assess neighborhoods, schools (if open to visits), and overall fit. Many expat moves succeed without prior visit, but reduces uncertainty.
How do we handle pets?
Possible but requires planning. Several international vets in HCMC. Apartment buildings have varying pet policies. Plan vaccinations and quarantine requirements 6+ months ahead.
What if our child needs significant English support?
Don't panic. HCMC has excellent specialized resources. Spark English Center Vietnam in Thao Dien provides intensive intervention specifically for international school students. Free assessment identifies exact needs and creates intervention plan.
Take Action: Plan Your Family's Vietnam Success
Pre-Move Planning
6-12 months out:
- Research international schools
- Begin school applications
- Plan visit if possible
3-6 months out:
- Confirm school enrollment
- Pre-book English assessment for after arrival
Once you arrive:
- Book free Spark English Center assessment
- Address any identified gaps proactively
Free Spark English Center Assessment for New Arrivals
Specifically designed for relocating families:
- 45-60 minute comprehensive evaluation
- Reading, writing, phonics, vocabulary, oral language
- Compared to international school benchmarks
- Specific recommendations for support
- Parent consultation
- Located in Thao Dien (heart of expat community)
- Zero cost, zero obligation
What you discover:
- Whether your child has English skill gaps
- Specific areas needing support (if any)
- Realistic timeline for any intervention needed
- Best path forward for school success
Book Now: https://www.sparkvn.com/Assessment
Contact:
- Phone: 0398143487
- Email: sparkalcvn@gmail.com
- Location: 204B7/12 Nguyen Van Huong, Thao Dien, HCMC
Final Thoughts
Moving to Vietnam with children is significant. Worth doing carefully.
The families who thrive:
- Decide schools first
- Choose location strategically
- Get healthcare in place
- Address English skill gaps proactively
- Build community intentionally
- Stay patient through adjustment
- Plan finances realistically
- Get help when needed
The families who struggle:
- Underestimate transition challenges
- Wait too long to address problems
- Try to do everything alone
- Ignore early warning signs
- Don't plan financially
- Resist getting specialized support
HCMC is a wonderful city for expat families. International schools are world-class. Communities are welcoming. Quality of life is excellent.
Make the move count by planning thoroughly.
For HCMC families needing specialized English support, Spark English Center Vietnam in Thao Dien is your specialist partner.
Free assessment. Targeted intervention. Small groups. Measurable results.
Welcome to Vietnam. Let's make it your family's success story.
Related Reading:
- Top 10 International Schools in HCMC
- Best English Centers for International Students
- Best Bilingual Schools in HCMC
- International School Success Guide
External Resources:
Spark English Center Vietnam | Thao Dien, HCMC | Specialized Support for Expat Families and International School Students | Welcome to Vietnam, Let's Get You Set Up for Success
Disclaimer: Information current as of early 2026. Verify visa, healthcare, and school details with relevant authorities and providers. Costs are estimates and vary by individual circumstances.

















































