Electronic labor contracts in Vietnam is becoming an inevitable trend in the context of strong digital transformation at enterprises. Aiming to create a unified legal corridor for signing online labor contracts, the Government has issued Decree 337/2025/ND-CP, officially setting standards for electronic labor contracts applicable from 2026. This Decree not only clarifies the legal validity of signing a digital employment contract online but also specifies the forms, conditions for execution, and responsibilities of parties when concluding contracts in the digital environment.
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According to Clause 1, Article 14 of the Labor Code 2019, labor contracts are no longer limited by traditional paper forms but can be legally executed in a digital environment.
Accordingly, a labor contract concluded via electronic means in the form of a data message in accordance with the law on electronic transactions has the same validity as a written labor contract.
To concretize and unify practical application, Clause 1, Article 3 of Decree 337/2025/ND-CP continues to clarify the concept and legal validity of electronic labor contracts:
“An electronic labor contract is a labor contract concluded and established in the form of a data message in accordance with labor laws and laws on electronic transactions, having the same legal validity as a written paper labor contract.”
This regulation creates a full legal basis for enterprises and employees to confidently sign labor contracts online, while promoting the digital transformation process in human resource management.
The information system serving electronic transactions in concluding and performing electronic labor contracts (hereinafter referred to as eContract) is linked to the Electronic Labor Contract Platform to allow employees and employers to create, digitally sign, store, retrieve, and manage electronic labor contracts, as well as report on labor usage and authenticate electronic labor contracts.
According to Clause 1, Article 6 of Decree 337/2025/ND-CP, the conclusion of electronic labor contracts via eContract must ensure the following conditions:
Meeting these conditions fully is not only a mandatory legal compliance requirement but also the “key” for enterprises to successfully implement HR digital transformation.
This new eContract system establishes a maximum safety corridor by tightening identification and data integrity, helping to minimize labor dispute risks. Simultaneously, API connectivity and reporting automation will help HR departments significantly cut operation time and costs compared to traditional signing methods.
However, it should be noted that according to Clause 4, Article 6 of Decree 337/2025/ND-CP, electronic labor contracts must not only be signed and stored on the system of the enterprise or service provider but must also be sent to the Electronic Labor Contract Platform to be assigned an identification code (ID) in accordance with the regulations of the Ministry of Home Affairs.
Within 24 hours from the time the last party digitally signs, the eContract provider is responsible for transferring the completed contract to this platform.
Requirements for identification and identity authentication of employees and employers
According to Clause 2, Article 6 of Decree 337/2025/ND-CP, employers and employees must ensure the following conditions:
Identity authentication is performed through valid documents such as citizen identification cards, electronic identification, level 2 electronic identification accounts, or valid passports.
For employees who are foreign nationals, the system must also check the visa status; or documents proving visa exemption.
For agencies or organizations, signing electronic labor contracts requires full legal files proving legal status along with identification papers and the digital signature of the legal representative.
This is the point where enterprises are most prone to risks if they do not carefully review signing authority, especially in corporations, branches, or enterprises with multiple management levels participating in signing contracts.
Authenticating the correct subject from the beginning not only helps the contract have solid legal validity but also limits disputes related to signing authority, contract validity, and legal liability of the parties.
Decree 337/2025/ND-CP specifically regulates the effective time of electronic labor contracts, helping to eliminate previous disputes related to the time rights and obligations of parties arise.
According to Article 7 of Decree 337/2025/ND-CP, an electronic labor contract takes effect from the time the last party digitally signs, accompanied by a timestamp and data message authentication by the eContract provider, unless the parties have another agreement.
Not stopping at initial validity, the Decree also allows the amendment, supplementation, suspension ; or termination of electronic labor contracts to be performed entirely electronically.
For contracts previously signed in paper form, enterprises can convert to electronic contracts to continue managing and adjusting according to the digital process, provided they meet all conditions according to regulations.
The signing of a contract is not “sending files back and forth via email” but is done through a secure link:
Electronic contracts have value equal to paper versions according to Clause 1, Article 3 of Decree 337/2025/ND-CP. According to this:
Decree 337/2025/ND-CP (Article 6.2.c) requires a Digital Signature and Timestamp. Accordingly, accepted types of digital signatures include:
From July 1, 2026, the electronic labor contract platform eContract will officially go into operation.
From this time, the conclusion and performance of electronic labor contracts will be implemented synchronously nationwide, marking an important transformation in labor management and administrative digitization.
When labor contracts are standardized, authenticated, and centrally managed, not only do enterprises reduce administrative costs and increase transparency, but employee rights are also more clearly guaranteed, limiting disputes.
For HR administrators, this is not just a change in signing tools, but a turning point liberating HR from manual administrative tasks, creating a premise to build a professional, safe, and lean digital employee experience.
The above is an update on regulations under Electronic Labor Contracts in Vietnam: New Standards under Decree 337/2025. If customers have questions or need advice on concluding electronic labor contracts, please contact Viet An Law for the best advice and support!