Hybrid policies in Ho Chi Minh City have compressed total demand but increased per-sqft quality requirements — the surviving demand is institutional Class A, not Class B.

  • Hybrid is a permanent design constraint, not a phase.
  • Density assumptions have moved from ~120 sqft/seat to ~150–180 sqft/seat in most Class A programmes.
  • Meeting-room intensity has roughly doubled vs pre-2020 baselines.
  • The 'office as destination' model is now the default brief.

Ho Chi Minh City hybrid work and office demand

Hybrid policies in Ho Chi Minh City have compressed total demand but increased per-sqft quality requirements — the surviving demand is institutional Class A, not Class B.

TL;DR

  • Hybrid is a permanent design constraint, not a phase.
  • Density assumptions have moved from ~120 sqft/seat to ~150–180 sqft/seat in most Class A programmes.
  • Meeting-room intensity has roughly doubled vs pre-2020 baselines.
  • The 'office as destination' model is now the default brief.

What hybrid means for size

Most Class A occupiers in Ho Chi Minh City now plan for 60–80% peak in-office occupancy. Sizing on peak (not average) is the only way to avoid permanent spillover. Use the Office Space Calculator with hybrid-mode density.

What hybrid means for design

Meeting-room intensity has roughly doubled. Phone-booth count has tripled. Hot-desking is the rule for under-50% in-office days; assigned desks for higher attendance bands. Hospitality-grade amenity is now table stakes.

Key facts

cityHo Chi Minh City
countryVietnam
regionAPAC
classARentLocal1500000 VND/sqft/yr
classARentUsd$59/sqft/yr
vacancy7.4%
typicalLeaseYears3
typicalRentFreeMonths4
submarkets5
primeYieldPct6.4%

Frequently asked questions

How should I size a Ho Chi Minh City office for hybrid?
Plan for 60–80% peak occupancy. Use 150–180 sqft/seat for hybrid Class A (vs 120 sqft pre-2020). The Office Space Calculator handles both modes.

Editorial provenance

Reviewed by Kenji Watanabe — APAC contributing editor. Last updated 2026-04-15. See our methodology and editorial standards.

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