From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Subdivisions of Vietnam
None
None
Vietnam is divided into 28 provinces and 6 cities. It is a unitary state.
Administrative units (from 1 July 2025)
Pursuant to the constitution, there are two levels of administrative divisions in Vietnam: provinces and communes. Depending on the level of urbanisation, each level of administrative division comprises multiple types of administrative units:
- Provincial level: municipality ( or simply ) and province (tỉnh)
- Commune level: ward (phường) in major urban areas, commune (xã) for rural areas, and special zone (đặc khu) for considerable island formations.
| Level | Type | Provincial level | Communal level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Province | |||
| (Tỉnh) | Centrally governed cities | ||
| (Thành phố {{small | trực thuộc trung ương}}) | ||
| Ward | |||
| (Phường) | Commune | ||
| (Xã) | Special zone | ||
| (Đặc khu) | Ward | ||
| (Phường) |
First level
On the first level, there are 6 cities/municipalities and 28 provinces as of 12 June 2025.
Second level
Both municipalities and provinces are subdivided into wards, communes and special administrative regions. As of July 1, 2025, there are 3,321 second-level units with 687 wards, 2,621 communes and 13 special administrative regions.
Before 1 July 2025
Second level
Municipalities are subdivided into district-level cities (municipal cities), urban districts, towns, and rural districts. There is no official capital or seat of the municipality but local authority headquarters are usually located in one or more central urban districts.
Provinces are subdivided into district-level cities (provincial cities), towns, and rural districts. Currently, all provinces have their capitals in a district-level city, although some were previously towns.
As of 1 September 2024, there are 704 second-tier units.
As urbanisation progresses, rural districts may be reclassified as towns, then to provincial cities (or towns and municipal cities in municipalities, and eventually to urban districts if they merge into the central urban area of a municipality). Note that the term
From 1 July 2025, as a result of a constitutional amendment and related legislation, all district-level administrative subdivisions ceased to exist.
Third level
Urban districts are subdivided into wards, while cities and towns are subdivided into (urban) wards and (rural) communes. Rural districts are subdivided into (urban) townships (or townlets) and (rural) communes. Only rural districts have designated capitals, usually in a township.
As of 1 September 2024, there are 10,542 third-level units with 1,775 wards, 618 townships and 8,149 communes.
Townships are known as thị trấn in Vietnamese, but less common type of townships are farm townships (thị trấn nông trường). These were formerly more common during the planned economy era.
A fourth, unofficial tier also exists, with categories translated as hamlets (xóm, ấp), villages (làng, thôn, bản) and neighbourhoods (tổ dân phố, khu phố).
Geographic regions
Main article: Regions of Vietnam
For various administrative, planning, and statistical purposes, the Vietnamese government often groups its cities and municipalities into 3 geographic regions and 8 geographic sub-regions:
| Geographic region | Geographic sub-region |
|---|---|
| **Northern Vietnam** (Bắc Bộ, Miền Bắc) | **Northeast** (Đông Bắc Bộ) |
| **Northwest** (Tây Bắc Bộ) | |
| **Red River Delta** (Đồng bằng sông Hồng) | |
| **Central Vietnam** (Trung Bộ, Miền Trung) | **North Central Coast** (Bắc Trung Bộ) |
| **South Central Coast** (Duyên hải Nam Trung Bộ) | |
| **Central Highlands** (Tây Nguyên) | |
| **Southern Vietnam** (Nam Bộ, Miền Nam) | **Southeast** (Đông Nam Bộ) |
| **Mekong River Delta** (Đồng bằng sông Cửu Long) |
Other subdivisions
Vietnam is also divided into electoral divisions and military regions.
Electoral divisions
Main article: Electoral divisions of Vietnam
For electoral purposes, each province or municipality is divided into electoral units (đơn vị bầu cử) which are further divided into voting zones (khu vực bỏ phiếu). The number of electoral divisions varies from election to election and depends on the population of that province or municipality.
Since the 2011 National Assembly election, there have been 183 electoral units and 89,960 voting zones.
Military regions

Vietnam People's Army is organised into 8 military regions:
- High Command of Capital Hanoi (Bộ Tư lệnh Thủ đô Hà Nội) in Ha Noi
- 1st Military Region (Vietnam People's Army) (Quân khu 1) in Northeast
- 2nd Military Region (Vietnam People's Army) (Quân khu 2) in Northwest
- 3rd Military Region (Vietnam People's Army) (Quân khu 3) in Red River Delta
- 4th Military Region (Vietnam People's Army) (Quân khu 4) in North Central Coast
- 5th Military Region (Vietnam People's Army) (Quân khu 5) in South Central Coast and Central Highland
- 7th Military Region (Vietnam People's Army) (Quân khu 7) in Southeast
- 9th Military Region (Vietnam People's Army) (Quân khu 9) in Mekong Delta
References
References
- ONLINE, TUOI TRE. (2025-06-16). "Quốc hội chính thức thông qua sửa Hiến pháp, kết thúc hoạt động cấp huyện từ 1-7".
- (2025-06-16). "Quốc hội thông qua nghị quyết sửa Hiến pháp, chính thức bỏ cấp huyện".
- (2025-06-12). "Quốc hội thông qua Nghị quyết về việc sắp xếp đơn vị hành chính cấp tỉnh, từ ngày 12/6, cả nước còn 34 tỉnh, thành phố".
- "TỔNG HỢP ĐƠN VỊ HÀNH CHÍNH (2015)".
- VnExpress. "Cấp huyện kết thúc hoạt động từ 1/7 - Báo VnExpress". vnexpress.net.
- "Balk".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Subdivisions of Vietnam — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report