The Vietnam Hotel Investment Guide 2025 indicates that repositioning and operational standardisation are becoming core strategies for investors to maintain competitiveness and capture the tourism growth momentum.
As competition intensifies amid shifting traveller behaviour, existing hospitality assets in Viet Nam are entering a pivotal transition. Tourism demand continues to post impressive growth, while new hotel supply has slowed significantly compared with previous periods. According to Savills Hotels Vietnam Hotel Investment Guide 2025, this shift creates a decisive turning point, where well-located existing projects with underutilised potential are likely to become investment hotspots in 2026.
Mauro Gasparotti, Senior Director, Savills Hotels Southeast Asia, notes that the greatest opportunities no longer lie in expanding room count, but in upgrading assets to enhance competitive advantages: “Viet Nam has a large number of hotels whose operational efficiency has not been maximised. As new supply slows, especially in HCMC and Ha Noi, and travellers increasingly prioritise quality, upgrading and repositioning will deliver the greatest long-term value for investors during 2026 to 2030.”
Savills Hotels data shows that over 68% of the current supply is self-operated by owners, and many properties have not applied international operating practices or invested adequately in customer experience. This creates a significant “value-repositioning pool” in which performance can be materially improved through asset refurbishment, operational benchmarking, or partnerships with international brands.

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