Vietnam Beauty Overview: A Young, Beauty-Obsessed Market

Vietnam is one of Southeast Asia's most compelling beauty markets — and one that remains underappreciated by Western lash brands. With a population of 100 million, a median age of just 31, and a beauty and personal care market valued at approximately $2.5 billion and growing at 9% CAGR, Vietnam consistently ranks among the region's fastest-expanding consumer beauty economies. To put the demographic advantage in perspective: 70% of Vietnam's population is under the age of 35. These are digital-native consumers who spend hours daily on social media, follow beauty trends obsessively, and allocate a rising share of disposable income to cosmetics and personal care. The country's urbanization rate — now exceeding 40% and rising — concentrates beauty consumption in Ho Chi Minh City (9 million), Hanoi (8.5 million), and rapidly growing secondary cities like Da Nang, Can Tho, and Hai Phong.

Social media penetration in Vietnam stands at 73%, and TikTok Vietnam alone has over 50 million active users — one of the highest per-capita TikTok adoption rates globally. The platform is not just entertainment in Vietnam; it is the engine of beauty commerce. Facebook remains strong among the 25-45 demographic with approximately 70 million users, while Zalo — Vietnam's homegrown messaging super-app — has over 75 million users and serves as the primary channel for customer service, community building, and direct-to-consumer sales through Zalo Official Accounts. K-beauty influence dominates the beauty landscape, driven by the immense popularity of Korean dramas (K-dramas) and K-pop among Vietnamese youth. When a K-drama actress wears a particular lash style, Vietnamese consumers notice — and they search for it. For lash brands, this means Vietnam's consumer preferences are shaped early by Asian beauty trends rather than Western ones, creating a distinct and predictable product-demand profile.

Despite this consumer dynamism, domestic beauty production in Vietnam covers only approximately 30% of total consumption. The remaining 70% is imported — and China is the #1 source of imported cosmetics, including false eyelashes. This is the core insight: Vietnam is primarily a consumer market for lashes, not a manufacturing competitor. The opportunity is selling into Vietnam, not sourcing from it. The question is not whether Vietnamese factories will displace Qingdao — they will not, not at scale, for the foreseeable future — but how Qingdao factories can best serve Vietnam's 100 million beauty consumers and the rising generation of Vietnamese beauty entrepreneurs building brands for them.

Vietnam Is Not Replacing China for Lash Manufacturing — Here Is Why

Every few years, Western beauty trade publications run articles suggesting Vietnam is "the next China" for beauty manufacturing. This narrative is appealing because it maps neatly onto the broader "China+1" supply chain story that has reshaped electronics, apparel, and footwear sourcing over the past decade. For false eyelashes, however, the narrative is misleading — and acting on it can lead brands to make costly sourcing decisions based on a manufacturing transition that is not happening at meaningful scale.

Vietnam's lash manufacturing base is growing — several Korean-owned and Chinese-owned factories have been established since 2018 — but the total production capacity is tiny compared to Qingdao. At best, Vietnam's lash output represents approximately 5% of China's capacity. The lash-making workforce in Vietnam is still developing; complex hand-made techniques like 3D volume fans, colored mink, pre-glued clusters, and ultra-fine band construction (under 0.3mm) remain challenging to produce consistently at export scale. The specialized fiber materials — PBT, faux mink, silk blend — are manufactured predominantly in China and Korea; Vietnamese factories import these raw materials, adding supply chain cost and transit time. The same applies to lash adhesives, packaging materials, and production equipment like lash-curling machines and tray-sealing systems. The ecosystem that makes Qingdao the world's lash capital — the fiber mills, the adhesive chemists, the packaging printers, the trading companies with multilingual sales teams, the logistics networks built over 20+ years of serving global beauty brands — does not exist in Vietnam at comparable depth and will not emerge quickly.

What Vietnam does have — and has in abundance — is 100 million consumers who buy lashes. Vietnamese women wear false eyelashes for daily work and study, weekend socializing, weddings, engagement ceremonies, Tet (Lunar New Year) celebrations, and social media content creation. The country's beauty retailers — from Hasaki.vn's 500+ physical stores to TikTok Shop's explosive live-shopping ecosystem — are moving product at volumes that rival or exceed many European national markets. The strategic framing should be: Vietnam is a market to sell into, not a factory to buy from. The Qingdao factory that recognizes this distinction, studies Vietnamese consumer preferences, and builds direct relationships with Vietnamese beauty brands and distributors will capture value that competitors fixated on a "China+1" sourcing fantasy will miss entirely.

Vietnamese Consumer Profile: Who Is Buying Lashes in Vietnam?

Vietnamese beauty consumers have a nuanced and consistent profile that directly shapes product demand, price tolerance, purchase channels, and brand loyalty dynamics. Understanding these characteristics in detail is essential for any lash brand entering the market — because what sells in Los Angeles or London may sit unsold on a shelf in Ho Chi Minh City or Hanoi.

Digital-First and Highly Engaged

Vietnam ranks among the top 10 countries globally for TikTok usage measured by both daily active users and average time spent, and beauty content is among the most-consumed categories on the platform. Vietnamese consumers spend an average of 2+ hours daily on social media, and beauty purchase decisions are overwhelmingly influenced by what they see on TikTok, Facebook, and Zalo. The influencer marketing ecosystem is mature and sophisticated: Key Opinion Leaders (KOLs) with 100,000 to 2 million followers drive mass awareness, while Key Opinion Consumers (KOCs) — micro-influencers with 5,000 to 50,000 followers who share authentic product experiences — drive conversion. A single positive review from a trusted Vietnamese beauty creator posted at the right time (typically 7-9 PM local time, peak social media engagement window) can move thousands of lash boxes within 48-72 hours.

K-Beauty Obsessed

Korean beauty standards — natural, radiant, "glass skin" aesthetics, subtle enhancement — define the Vietnamese beauty ideal. K-drama actresses and K-pop idols are the primary trendsetters for makeup and lash styles. When BLACKPINK's Jennie or a popular K-drama lead wears a particular lash look, Vietnamese beauty TikTok lights up with tutorials, reviews, and "where to buy" content. This means the lashes that sell in Vietnam tend toward the natural and refined end of the spectrum: soft volume, wispy cat-eye shapes with gradual tapering, brown or clear bands for invisible lash-line integration, and subtle enhancement rather than bold transformation. The dramatic 25mm mega-volume lashes that sell briskly in certain US markets have genuinely limited demand in Vietnam — not zero, but confined to a niche of drag performers, stage makeup artists, and a small subculture of maximalist beauty enthusiasts. A lash brand entering Vietnam with an American-centric product assortment built around 20mm+ drama will struggle; one that curates a K-beauty-aligned collection with 8-14mm natural volume in brown and soft-black bands will find immediate consumer resonance.

Value-Conscious but Quality-Aware

Vietnamese consumers are price-sensitive — GDP per capita is approximately $4,500 (2026 estimate), significantly lower than the US or Western Europe — but they are not the kind of bargain-hunters who sacrifice quality for the absolute lowest price. They seek value: good quality at a fair and transparent price. A lash pair positioned at 80,000-150,000 VND ($3.15-5.90) at retail that delivers consistent curl retention, comfortable lightweight wear, and a reusable lifespan of 5-10 wears will earn strong repeat purchases and positive word-of-mouth. Below 50,000 VND ($2.00), consumers become skeptical of quality; above 250,000 VND ($9.80), the product enters a premium segment that requires significant brand equity to justify. Importantly, Vietnamese consumers are remarkably brand-loyal once trust is established — more so than consumers in many Western markets where promotional switching is common. The cost of acquiring a Vietnamese beauty customer may be low (thanks to efficient social media reach and relatively low CPMs on TikTok Vietnam compared to the US or UK), but the lifetime value of a loyal customer rivals that of customers in higher-income markets because of high repurchase frequency and strong word-of-mouth referral behavior.

Regional Nuances: North vs South Vietnam

Vietnam's 1,600-kilometer north-south geography creates meaningful regional differences in beauty consumption. Ho Chi Minh City and the southern region (Mekong Delta) are earlier adopters of new beauty trends, more influenced by Southeast Asian and Western beauty culture, and more comfortable with bolder experimentation. Hanoi and the northern region tend toward more conservative, refined, K-beauty-aligned aesthetics and place higher value on brand heritage and product authenticity. For a lash brand launching in Vietnam, starting in Ho Chi Minh City — where consumer openness to new brands is highest and the concentration of TikTok creators and beauty KOLs is densest — and expanding northward once brand awareness is established is the most common and effective geographic rollout strategy.

Lash Style Preferences in Vietnam: What Actually Sells

The Vietnamese lash market has a clear and consistent preference profile that has remained relatively stable over the past 3-5 years — unlike the rapid trend cycling seen in China or the US. Brands that align their product assortment with these preferences will see faster sell-through, lower return rates, and stronger organic social-media traction. Brands that simply repackage their US or Middle East catalog for Vietnam without adaptation will underperform, accumulate inventory, and struggle to build repeat customers.

Style CategoryVietnam (What Sells)United States (What Sells)China Domestic (What Sells)
Length preference8-14mm — natural volume, daily-wear appropriate; longer lengths reserved for events, bridal, and Tet celebrations; 10-12mm is the daily-wear sweet spot12-20mm — dramatic volume dominates shelf space; 25mm mega-volume is a recognized and well-stocked category; natural styles exist but represent a smaller segment of total lash sales10-16mm — moderate volume; style diversity is enormous across tier-1 to tier-4 cities; Douyin (TikTok China) trends can shift preference within 2-3 weeks, creating both opportunity and inventory risk
Band preferenceBrown/soft black bands — invisible integration with the natural lash line is the goal; thin, flexible cotton or PBT bands under 0.5mm thickness; clear/transparent bands are gaining share rapidly as a premium featureBlack bands are standard and widely accepted — a visible lash line is often expected as part of the "full glam" aesthetic; thicker bands (0.8mm+) provide structure for heavy volume stylesTransparent/"invisible" bands gaining share rapidly, especially among younger consumers; black bands still dominant in mass-market price tiers; clear bands positioned as premium innovation differentiating higher-priced SKUs
Style shapesWispy, cat-eye, natural volume — gradual flare from inner to outer corner with a natural gradient; "open eye" styles that lift at the center are popular for round-eye enhancement; individual cluster lashes for DIY application are a major and structurally distinct subcategoryDoll-eye (longest at center for wide-eye effect), full volume, dramatic cat-eye with an abrupt flare; pre-made fans (3D-10D) and mega-volume lash trays are core professional-use SKUsNatural dolly, wispy, "manga lash" style inspired by anime and manhua art; Korean-inspired "idol lash" designs; segmented/cluster styles for DIY home application are a fast-growing channel
Top-selling subcategoriesIndividual cluster lashes (DIY home application, applied under natural lashes — the "Korean method"), natural strip lashes (8-12mm daily wear), soft volume lash trays (for professional lash technicians), brown-hued lashes for warm skin-tone matching3D faux mink volume, pre-made fans (trays of 500+ fans for lash artists), 25mm mega volume, colored accent lashes, magnetic lashes (growing awareness and improving product quality but still a niche category relative to adhesive lashes)Hand-made volume, faux mink strip lashes, individual cluster sets, anime/manga-inspired stylized lashes, "pure desire" aesthetic lashes characterized by wispy, innocent, soft-gaze styling
What does NOT sell well20mm+ dramatic styles (too heavy for Vietnamese facial features and beauty norms), heavy thick bands (visible on the eyelid, considered unrefined), colored lashes — blue, purple, pink (perceived as costume makeup), magnetic lashes (consumer awareness remains very low; the category has not had its viral moment in Vietnam yet), glitter-accent and crystal-embellished lashesUltra-natural 6-8mm styles (too subtle for US consumer expectation of what lashes should deliver), brown bands (sometimes perceived as "incomplete" by consumers accustomed to black bands), individual clusters (DIY lash culture is less developed in the US than in Asia; professional application is more common)Overtly Western-style drama volume (too heavy for Chinese beauty ideals that emphasize natural enhancement), heavy glitter lashes, magnetic lashes (domestic alternatives preferred at lower price points), styles that clash with the "natural beauty" or "pure desire" aesthetic that currently dominates Douyin beauty content

The individual cluster lash category deserves special and extended attention for any brand entering the Vietnam market. Vietnamese women are highly skilled at DIY lash application — individual clusters applied under the natural lashes using bond-and-seal adhesive (the "Korean style" or "idol lash" method) are one of the single biggest beauty trends on Vietnamese TikTok, with tutorial videos routinely generating millions of views. This is not a fringe technique practiced by beauty enthusiasts; it is a mainstream daily routine for a large segment of urban Vietnamese women aged 18-35. Brands that offer complete cluster lash kits — individual clusters in multiple lengths (8-12-14mm mix packs), application tweezers, bond adhesive, seal adhesive, and a mirror compact — packaged together in Vietnamese-language retail boxes with photo instructions, have a clear and immediate product-market fit. This category is significantly more developed and commercially mature in Vietnam than in the US, where strip lashes remain the default format and cluster application is still an "advanced technique" rather than a mass-market behavior.

Seasonal Demand Patterns and Purchase Triggers

Understanding when Vietnamese consumers buy lashes — and why — is essential for inventory planning, marketing calendar alignment, and promotional strategy. Vietnam's beauty consumption follows predictable seasonal rhythms that differ from Western markets.

Regulatory Framework: Vietnam's FDA (DAV) and Cosmetic Declaration

Vietnam's cosmetics regulatory system is among the more accessible and predictable in Southeast Asia — but it is not deregulated, and attempting to enter the market without proper documentation will result in customs rejection, product seizure, or regulatory penalties. False eyelashes, classified as cosmetic products under Vietnamese law, are regulated by the Drug Administration of Vietnam (DAV) under the Ministry of Health (MOH). Before any cosmetic product — including false eyelashes — can be legally imported, distributed, and sold in Vietnam, it must undergo a Cosmetic Product Declaration (CPD) with the DAV and receive a CPD registration number. This number must appear on the product label.

ASEAN Cosmetic Directive: The Harmonized Framework

Vietnam is a signatory to the ASEAN Cosmetic Directive (ACD), which harmonizes cosmetic regulations across the 10 ASEAN member states — Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam. The ACD is intentionally aligned with the EU Cosmetics Regulation (EC No. 1223/2009), making it one of the more structured, transparent, and internationally compatible regulatory frameworks in emerging Asia. A key practical benefit of this harmonization: a cosmetic product declared and approved in one ASEAN country under the ACD framework is recognized in other ASEAN member states, though local declaration and registration is still required in each individual market. This means that once your lash product receives CPD approval in Vietnam, the core documentation package — CFS, GMP certificate, product formula disclosure, finished product specification, safety assessment — can be largely reused for regulatory submissions in Thailand, Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, and other ASEAN markets. This is a significant time-to-market and cost efficiency for brands planning a multi-country Southeast Asia rollout. Complete one CPD in Vietnam, and you are approximately 70% of the way to regulatory clearance in five additional ASEAN markets.

CPD Process: Timeline, Costs, and Practical Steps

The Vietnam CPD process for a cosmetic product like false eyelashes typically takes 4-8 weeks from submission to approval, assuming complete and accurate documentation. The submission is made through the DAV's online cosmetic declaration portal. Key practical steps and considerations:

  1. Engage a Vietnamese regulatory consultant or responsible entity: Foreign manufacturers cannot submit a CPD directly. You need either a Vietnamese legal entity (your subsidiary, distributor, or authorized representative) or a licensed Vietnamese regulatory consulting firm that acts as the responsible entity. Regulatory consulting firms in Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi are widely available, English-proficient, and charge approximately $300-800 per product declaration depending on product complexity and documentation readiness.
  2. Prepare the documentation package: Assemble all required documents — CFS, GMP certificate, product formula, finished product specifications, safety assessment, and labeling drafts — ensuring all documents are either in English or Vietnamese (or accompanied by certified Vietnamese translations). The most common cause of CPD rejection or delay is incomplete or inconsistent documentation — for example, the manufacturer name on the CFS not matching the manufacturer name on the GMP certificate, or ingredient lists that do not use exact INCI nomenclature.
  3. Submit through the DAV online portal: Your Vietnamese responsible entity submits the declaration electronically. The DAV reviews the submission and may issue queries (request for additional information) within 2-3 weeks. Responding to queries promptly with the requested documentation keeps the process on track.
  4. Receive CPD registration number: Upon approval, the DAV issues a CPD registration number valid for 5 years. This number must be printed on the product label for all units sold in Vietnam. The approval is product-specific — each SKU (each lash style and variant) requires its own CPD, though related products with identical formulations but different packaging may sometimes be grouped under a single declaration (consult your regulatory advisor on grouping rules).

Required Documentation for CPD Submission

ASEAN Harmonization Is Your Multi-Market Shortcut: The ASEAN Cosmetic Directive's mutual recognition principle is one of the most underutilized advantages in international beauty regulation. A lash product declared in Vietnam creates a documentation package — CFS, GMP certificate (ISO 22716), product formula disclosed by INCI, finished product specification, and safety assessment — that directly supports regulatory submissions in Indonesia (BPOM), Thailand (Thai FDA), the Philippines (FDA-PH), Malaysia (NPRA), Singapore (HSA), and other ASEAN markets. If you are planning a Southeast Asia regional launch, the strategic sequence is: start with Vietnam — the regulatory process is well-documented, English-proficient regulatory consultants are readily available in Ho Chi Minh City, and a successful Vietnam CPD creates a regulatory asset that accelerates every subsequent ASEAN market entry. For Qingdao factories serving multiple ASEAN brand clients, maintaining an up-to-date ASEAN-ready documentation package (CFS renewed every 24 months, GMP certificate maintained, formula and spec sheets kept current with production changes) is a high-value service that materially reduces your brand customers' time-to-market and regulatory cost across the entire ASEAN region.

Vietnam's Distribution Channels: Where Lashes Are Sold

Vietnam's beauty distribution landscape is distinctly hybrid — an explosive e-commerce growth story layered on top of traditional retail channels that are still relevant and in many categories dominant. A successful route-to-market strategy in Vietnam almost always requires a multi-channel approach. Understanding the mix, the platform economics, and the consumer behavior within each channel is essential for go-to-market planning.

1. TikTok Shop — The Dominant Beauty Channel

TikTok Shop is the single most important e-commerce channel for beauty products in Vietnam, period. Live shopping is a cultural phenomenon with a scale and intensity that surprises brands accustomed to Western e-commerce: Vietnamese beauty creators routinely host 4-8 hour live streams dedicated entirely to demonstrating and selling cosmetics, including false eyelashes. The top beauty live-streamers on TikTok Vietnam can generate $50,000-200,000 in gross merchandise value from a single multi-hour session. The format is deeply experiential — hosts demonstrate lash application in real time on themselves or a model, show the before-and-after transformation from multiple angles and lighting conditions, answer viewer questions about fit, comfort, and durability on the spot, and create urgency through limited-time pricing and stock-count pressure. Affiliate commission structures for beauty products typically range from 10-20%, with top-performing KOLs commanding higher splits or fixed fees for dedicated brand sessions. For lash brands entering Vietnam, a TikTok Shop strategy — opening a TikTok Shop storefront, seeding product to beauty KOLs and KOCs for affiliate content, and running live-shopping events — is not an optional marketing tactic. It is the primary customer acquisition and revenue channel for beauty in Vietnam in 2026.

2. Shopee Vietnam — #1 E-Commerce Marketplace

Shopee is Vietnam's largest general e-commerce marketplace by both monthly active users and gross merchandise volume, and beauty is consistently its top-performing or second-ranked category. Shopee Mall — the platform's authorized-brand storefront program — provides verified-brand status, enhanced search visibility, and consumer trust signals (a "Mall" badge that Vietnamese shoppers actively filter for to avoid counterfeit products). Shopee's integrated logistics arm (Shopee Xpress) handles last-mile delivery nationwide with coverage extending to tier-2 and tier-3 cities and even rural districts — reach that international brands would struggle to achieve independently. The platform's promotional mechanics — coin cashback, flash sales (sale sốc), bundle deals, and free-shipping vouchers — are highly effective for beauty customer acquisition and repeat purchase behavior. A well-managed Shopee Mall store with Vietnamese-language product listings, high-quality product photography, customer review volume (100+ reviews with 4.8+ star rating is the consumer trust threshold), and competitive pricing is table stakes for the Vietnamese beauty e-commerce market.

3. Lazada Vietnam — #2 Platform, Premium Positioning

Lazada, backed by Alibaba Group, is Vietnam's second-largest e-commerce platform with particular strength in the beauty and fashion categories. LazMall — Lazada's equivalent of Shopee Mall — is positioned for premium and international beauty brands, offering brand-store page customization, seller analytics dashboards, sponsored-product advertising tools, and integration with Lazada's logistics network (Lazada Logistics / LEX). Lazada's shopper demographic skews slightly higher-income and more urban than Shopee's broader base, making it a strategically relevant channel for lash brands positioning at mid-to-premium price points (150,000-300,000+ VND). Maintaining an active presence on both Shopee and Lazada — with platform-appropriate pricing, promotion, and content strategies — is the standard multi-platform approach for established beauty brands in Vietnam.

4. Hasaki.vn — Vietnam's Homegrown Beauty Retail Giant

Hasaki.vn is Vietnam's largest beauty and personal care retail chain, with over 500 physical stores spanning all 63 provinces — a footprint that, relative to Vietnam's population and geography, is comparable to what Ulta Beauty or Watsons represents in larger markets. Hasaki carries both mass-market and premium international beauty brands alongside a growing portfolio of Vietnamese indie brands, and physical shelf placement at Hasaki provides instant nationwide retail credibility. The chain's private-label beauty program is a development worth monitoring closely: Hasaki has been systematically expanding its own-brand cosmetics and personal care product ranges, creating both a competitive threat (if Hasaki enters the lash category with its own brand) and an OEM opportunity (if Hasaki seeks a factory partner for private-label lash production). Getting listed at Hasaki typically requires a Vietnamese distributor relationship — the chain does not generally source directly from foreign factories — and product must carry full CPD registration and Vietnamese-language labeling.

5. Guardian and Watsons — International Drugstore Chains

Both Guardian (operated by Dairy Farm International) and Watsons (A.S. Watson Group, part of CK Hutchison Holdings) operate stores concentrated in Vietnam's major metropolitan areas — Ho Chi Minh City, Hanoi, Da Nang, and other provincial capitals. These chains are deeply trusted by Vietnamese consumers specifically for the authenticity and quality assurance of their beauty products — a significant trust factor in a market where counterfeit cosmetics are a recognized consumer concern. Shelf space is competitive and listing requirements include full CPD regulatory compliance, Vietnamese-language packaging, and often a demonstrated sales history in other Vietnamese channels before the chain will commit shelf space. For an international lash brand seeking credibility and mainstream consumer trust, a Watsons or Guardian listing is a strong quality signal that communicates "this is a real brand, not a marketplace reseller."

6. Traditional Markets and Independent Beauty Shops

Despite the e-commerce transformation, traditional markets (chợ) and small independent beauty shops (cửa hàng mỹ phẩm) remain a significant channel — particularly for consumers outside the urban professional class and for the 35+ demographic that is less digitally native. In these channels, the personal relationship between the shop owner and the customer drives recommendations, trial, and repeat purchases. A shop owner who personally vouches for a lash product's quality can drive more volume for that single SKU in her neighborhood than a generic marketplace listing drives nationwide. This channel is challenging for international brands to penetrate directly — it requires Vietnamese-language sales capability, local distribution relationships, and consignment or net-payment terms that international suppliers may find unfamiliar. However, it can be reached efficiently through a Vietnamese beauty wholesale distributor who already supplies these independent retailers. For lash factories, identifying and partnering with one or two established Vietnamese beauty distributors — rather than attempting to reach thousands of independent shops directly — is the practical route into this traditional-but-still-significant channel.

Vietnam's Beauty Entrepreneurs: A Rising Wave

A generation of young Vietnamese entrepreneurs — predominantly women in their mid-20s to mid-30s, digitally native, globally aware, and ambitiously brand-minded — is launching independent beauty brands at a pace and with a level of sophistication that mirrors what happened in China 5 to 10 years ago.

During that period, a wave of digitally savvy DTC founders built brands like Perfect Diary, Florasis, and Judydoll that challenged and in some categories displaced the multinational incumbents. The same pattern is now unfolding in Vietnam, with a specifically Vietnamese character. These Vietnamese founders are not simply reselling generic imported products under a logo; they are creating brands with distinct visual identities, narrative positioning, and community-building strategies rooted in Vietnamese culture and aesthetics.

They understand that their competitive advantage over international mass brands is cultural authenticity — they know what Vietnamese women want, how they talk about beauty, what makes them feel confident, and what they find aspirational, because they are Vietnamese women themselves. What they lack — and what determines whether their brands succeed or fail — is access to quality manufacturing at entrepreneur-friendly terms: MOQs that allow market testing before capital commitment, packaging that speaks Vietnamese fluently, logistics that deliver product fast enough for TikTok-driven demand cycles, and visual content assets that power social commerce.

What these entrepreneurs need from a lash factory partner:

The strategic significance of this entrepreneur segment extends beyond the immediate order value. As this generation of Vietnamese beauty founders succeeds — as some of them will, building brands that scale to millions of dollars in annual revenue — their factory relationships will scale with them. The 100-box trial order placed in 2026 is the 10,000-box monthly reorder in 2029. The factory that earns trust, delivers quality, and provides genuine partnership during the fragile early stages of a founder's journey builds a relationship asset that compounds over time. The factory that treats small-brand inquiries as not worth the sales team's time cedes this entire segment — and the future market share it represents — to competitors.

Import Trends: Vietnam's Growing Appetite for Imported Cosmetics

Vietnam's cosmetic imports are on a sustained and structurally supported upward trajectory. With domestic beauty production covering only about 30% of total consumption by value, the remaining 70% — representing well over $1.7 billion in annual imports — is supplied by international manufacturers. The import dependency is even higher in categories requiring specialized production capability, such as false eyelashes, where domestic manufacturing is minimal and Qingdao's global production dominance means virtually all lashes sold in Vietnam originate from China. The three-tier import source hierarchy is stable and well-established: China is the #1 source of imported cosmetics, a position built on competitive pricing, massive manufacturing scale, and the integrated Guangzhou-Yiwu-Qingdao beauty product supply chain; South Korea is the #2 source, driven by the brand equity and consumer demand generated by K-beauty's cultural dominance (Innisfree, Laneige, Sulwhasoo, and dozens of Korean indie brands with dedicated Vietnamese followings); Japan is the #3 source, particularly strong in skincare, sun care, and premium cosmetic categories where Japanese quality perception commands price premiums.

For false eyelashes specifically, China's import dominance is nearly absolute. Qingdao alone produces approximately 60%+ of the world's false eyelashes, and Vietnam's lash imports — whether sold through TikTok Shop, Shopee, Hasaki stores, or traditional market stalls — overwhelmingly originate from Chinese factories. The trade flow is well-established and efficient: Vietnamese beauty wholesalers, distributors, e-commerce sellers, and retail chains regularly source lash products from Chinese suppliers, historically through trading companies based in Guangzhou and Yiwu but increasingly through direct factory relationships facilitated by Alibaba, 1688.com (accessed via Vietnamese buying agents who bridge the language and payment gap), and trade shows. This shift from trading-company-mediated sourcing to factory-direct relationships is the structural trend creating opportunity for Qingdao factories willing to invest in Vietnamese market development.

Key import cost components to factor into Vietnam market pricing and margin models:

Logistics to Vietnam: Qingdao to Ho Chi Minh City

Vietnam's logistics infrastructure for cosmetic imports is well-developed, transit times from Qingdao are among the shortest for any major export market outside of Northeast Asia, and customs clearance for properly documented cosmetics shipments is relatively efficient by regional standards. The two primary sea ports of entry are Cat Lai Port in Ho Chi Minh City (serving the southern economic region, including the Mekong Delta provinces) and Hai Phong Port serving Hanoi and the northern region. For beauty and cosmetics products, Ho Chi Minh City is the recommended primary entry point: it is Vietnam's commercial and consumer capital, home to the largest concentration of beauty distributors, e-commerce fulfillment centers, and TikTok/Shopee/Lazada seller communities, and the port with the deepest pool of customs brokerage firms experienced specifically in cosmetics clearance. Secondary entry through Hai Phong or Da Nang may be appropriate for brands with a specific northern or central Vietnam distribution focus, but the infrastructure concentration in HCMC makes it the default choice for market entry.

Logistics ModeTransit TimeApproximate Cost RangeBest For
Sea Freight — LCL (Less than Container Load)7-10 days port-to-port (Qingdao to Cat Lai, HCMC or Hai Phong, Hanoi) plus 3-5 days customs clearance and local delivery$80-150 per cubic meter (CBM), with minimum charges typically applying for shipments under 1 CBM; consolidated container shared with other shippersSmall-to-medium production orders (50-500 boxes) where air freight is cost-prohibitive but FCL minimum volumes are not yet reached; brands testing the market with initial inventory; restocking orders where lead time is not critical
Sea Freight — FCL (Full Container Load)7-10 days port-to-port plus 3-5 days clearance and delivery; total door-to-door approximately 12-18 days$1,200-2,000 per 20-foot container; $1,800-2,800 per 40-foot container, depending on carrier, season (rates rise in Q3-Q4 peak shipping season), and fuel surchargesProduction orders of 1,000+ boxes; brands with established sell-through and predictable inventory demand; the most cost-effective per-unit logistics for volume shipments
Air Freight2-3 days airport-to-airport (Qingdao Liuting TAO to Tan Son Nhat SGN, HCMC or Noi Bai HAN, Hanoi) plus 1-2 days customs clearance and local delivery$3.50-5.50 per kg depending on volume commitment, carrier, and season; minimum charges typically apply for shipments under 45 kg chargeable weightSample orders and quality evaluation shipments (20-100 boxes); urgent restocking for TikTok Shop viral-product moments or stockout situations; new product launches with hard marketing calendar deadlines; time-sensitive seasonal inventory (Tet, wedding season)
Express Courier (DHL / FedEx / UPS)2-4 days door-to-door including customs clearance (courier handles clearance as part of the service)$6.00-10.00 per kg for shipments under 30 kg; rates decrease for higher volumes but remain significantly above air freight for shipments over 30 kgVery small sample shipments (under 5-10 kg, typically 10-50 individual lash boxes); time-critical single-SKU restocks where the cost of a stockout exceeds the shipping premium; shipments with declared value under approximately $40 (simplified customs treatment for very-low-value express shipments)
Land Border — Lang Son / Huu Nghi Crossing3-5 days from Qingdao/Guangzhou through the Guangxi-Hanoi corridor via the Huu Nghi (Friendship) border gate at Lang SonHighly variable — generally lower per-kg cost than air freight and comparable to LCL sea freight for small-to-medium volumes; however, pricing is less transparent and more negotiation-dependentFaster than sea freight but cheaper than air freight for shipments that fit the "middle zone" between sea and air economics; however, higher variability in customs clearance consistency, more documentation scrutiny at the border, and heavier reliance on the specific border clearance agent — higher operational risk than sea or air for first-time importers

Vietnam customs clearance for cosmetics is relatively efficient — typically 3-5 working days from submission of a complete and accurate customs declaration to release. Delays most commonly arise not from customs processing speed but from documentation gaps: a CFS that does not exactly match the manufacturer name on the commercial invoice, a GMP certificate that has expired or lacks ISO 22716 designation, ingredient declarations that use trade names rather than INCI names, or packaging photographs that show labeling without the required Vietnamese-language elements. The root cause of most customs clearance problems is addressable before the shipment leaves the factory: meticulous documentation preparation, alignment between all documents, and a pre-shipment review by the Vietnamese customs broker who will handle the clearance. Working with a Vietnamese customs broker experienced specifically in cosmetics and beauty product clearance — not a generalist freight forwarder — is strongly recommended for first-time importers and remains cost-effective for ongoing shipments.

DDP (Delivered Duty Paid) shipping terms are available through Vietnamese logistics service providers and, increasingly, through Chinese freight forwarders with Vietnam-desk capabilities. Under DDP terms, the supplier (factory or trading company) handles the entire door-to-door logistics chain — export customs clearance in China, international freight, import customs clearance in Vietnam including duty and VAT payment, and final delivery to the buyer's warehouse, fulfillment center, or retail location. For Vietnamese beauty entrepreneurs who are first-time importers without existing customs broker relationships, DDP terms remove a significant operational complexity and allow them to focus on marketing, sales, and brand-building. Qingdao factories that can offer DDP terms to Vietnamese buyers — either directly through an in-house logistics team or through a trusted partner forwarder — have a meaningful service-differentiation advantage over factories quoting only FOB or CIF terms and leaving the buyer to navigate Vietnamese import clearance independently.

The China-Vietnam Beauty Trade: An Overlooked Strategic Opportunity

The volume of beauty and cosmetics products flowing from China to Vietnam is enormous — Guangzhou, Yiwu, Shenzhen, and Qingdao collectively supply a very significant share of the cosmetics sold on Vietnamese retail shelves, both physical and digital. Yet the vast majority of this trade flows through a multi-layered intermediary structure: a Chinese manufacturer sells to a Chinese trading company (often based in Guangzhou or Yiwu), which sells to a Vietnamese import wholesaler, which sells to a regional distributor, which supplies retail channels — each layer adding 15-30% margin and each layer reducing the manufacturer's visibility into end-consumer demand, preferences, and feedback. The typical Qingdao lash factory has essentially zero direct visibility into which specific lash styles Vietnamese consumers are buying, at what price points, through which channels, and with what repeat-purchase behavior — because 2-3 intermediary layers sit between the factory and the consumer, and no layer has an incentive to share demand data upstream.

A Qingdao lash factory that builds direct relationships with Vietnamese beauty brands and distributors can structurally eliminate these intermediary layers. The economic value creation is shared across the chain: the factory captures a higher unit price by replacing the trading-company margin with a direct-sales relationship; the Vietnamese brand or distributor gets a lower purchase price by sourcing factory-direct rather than through a multi-tier wholesaler chain, plus direct communication with the manufacturer on product development, quality specifications, packaging design, and production lead times; and the end consumer ultimately receives better product quality and consistency at a more competitive retail price. Direct factory-to-brand relationships in the Vietnam beauty trade are becoming increasingly feasible as Vietnamese beauty entrepreneurs, distributors, and retail buyers become more sophisticated about international sourcing — increasingly using Alibaba, 1688.com (accessed through Vietnamese-language buying agents and proxy services), and international trade shows rather than relying exclusively on domestic wholesalers who source opaquely.

The factory that invests in Vietnamese-language sales capability — whether through hiring a Vietnamese-speaking sales representative, partnering with a Vietnam-based sales agent, or at minimum having Vietnamese-language product catalogs and communication materials — attends Vietnam beauty trade shows (Vietbeauty in Ho Chi Minh City, Cosmobeaute Vietnam in Hanoi, and the growing number of beauty-focused B2B events), and builds a reputation among the Vietnamese beauty founder and distributor community will be positioned to capture a disproportionate share of the market's next growth phase. The structural shift from trading-company-mediated trade to factory-direct trade is already underway; the question is which factories will organize themselves to participate in it directly rather than waiting for it to happen through channels they do not control.

ASEAN Big Three: Vietnam vs Indonesia vs Philippines — Strategic Comparison

For lash brands and manufacturers prioritizing Southeast Asia market entry, the three largest markets — Vietnam, Indonesia, and the Philippines — present meaningfully different opportunity profiles, risk profiles, regulatory pathways, and consumer preference landscapes. Understanding the trade-offs across these dimensions is essential for resource allocation and entry sequencing decisions.

DimensionVietnamIndonesiaPhilippines
Population100 million — large market, concentrated in two major urban corridors (HCMC and Hanoi) that simplify distribution280 million — the world's 4th most populous country and the largest consumer market in ASEAN by a wide margin; distributed across 6,000+ inhabited islands creating logistical complexity115 million — slightly larger than Vietnam; population concentrated on Luzon (Manila region accounts for ~30% of consumption) with significant Visayas and Mindanao markets
Beauty Market Size (2026 est.)$2.5 billion, growing at 9% CAGR — one of the fastest growth rates among major ASEAN beauty markets; projected to reach $4-5 billion by 2030$8.5 billion — the largest beauty and personal care market in ASEAN; projected to exceed $12 billion by 2030 driven by rising middle-class consumption and halal beauty category expansion$4.5 billion — strong growth trajectory driven by social media influence, remittance-fueled disposable income, and a beauty-engaged consumer culture with strong Western (particularly US) cultural affinity
Regulatory ComplexityMedium — ASEAN Cosmetic Directive harmonized; CPD process is documented and predictable (4-8 weeks); English-speaking regulatory consultants are widely available; DAV processes are consistentHigh — BPOM (Badan POM) registration is mandatory with a 6-12 month timeline; Halal certification for cosmetics is mandatory per 2026 regulatory framework; ingredient restrictions are more extensive than the ASEAN ACD baseline; labeling and documentation must be in Bahasa IndonesiaMedium — FDA Philippines cosmetic product notification required under ASEAN harmonized framework; processing times typically 3-6 months; documentation requirements are comparable to Vietnam; English is an official language, simplifying all communication
TikTok Shop BeautyHuge — one of TikTok Shop's strongest beauty markets globally on a per-capita basis; live-shopping culture is deeply established as a mainstream consumer behavior; the infrastructure (creators, agencies, fulfillment) is mature#1 globally for TikTok Shop GMV — Indonesia is TikTok Shop's single largest market worldwide; beauty is consistently a top-3 category; the absolute scale is unmatched in ASEAN but competition among brands is intenseGrowing fast — TikTok Shop adoption in the Philippines is accelerating rapidly; beauty is a leading category; the affiliate creator ecosystem is less mature than Vietnam or Indonesia but is developing quickly and attracting significant platform investment
Halal RequirementNo — Vietnam has no mandatory halal certification requirement for any consumer product category; the Muslim population is a small minority (~0.1%) concentrated in the Cham ethnic community in the south-central regionYes — halal certification for cosmetics is mandatory per 2026 BPOM regulatory requirements; Indonesia is the world's largest Muslim-majority country (~87% of population); non-halal-certified cosmetic products cannot be legally sold; halal requirements extend to lash adhesive ingredients and any animal-derived lash materialsNo — halal certification is optional and voluntary for cosmetics; Muslim population is approximately 5-6% nationally, concentrated primarily in Mindanao (BARMM region); halal labeling functions as a niche market differentiator for Muslim consumers rather than a universal market requirement
Lash Style PreferenceNatural/subtle — 8-14mm, wispy and cat-eye shapes, brown/soft-black bands, K-beauty influenced, individual clusters heavily favored for DIY home application; the "Korean under-lash method" is a mainstream consumer behaviorModerate volume — 10-16mm, balanced between natural daily wear and event-level enhancement; hijab-friendly lash styles that emphasize and frame the eye area are a structurally distinct and commercially significant product subcategory; Muslim consumer preferences around adhesive composition and animal-derived materials influence purchase decisionsDramatic — similar to US consumer preference; 12-20mm+ lengths, full volume, bold cat-eye and doll-eye shapes; strong Western (US) beauty influence from historical and cultural ties; colorful, glitter, and fashion-forward styles have higher acceptance than in Vietnam or Indonesia; the US lash catalog often transfers with minimal adaptation
Ease of Market Entry (Overall Assessment)Easier — ASEAN harmonized framework with predictable CPD process, no halal requirement, English widely spoken in business contexts, logistics efficient (7-10 day sea freight from Qingdao), regulatory costs moderate, ecosystem (agencies, KOLs, distributors) is accessibleComplex — halal certification adds a significant compliance and documentation layer; BPOM registration timeline of 6-12 months requires patience and planning; Bahasa Indonesia-language packaging, marketing, and customer support are non-negotiable; the market's absolute size and growth trajectory justify the complexity for committed brandsModerate — FDA-PH process is straightforward but processing times (3-6 months) require planning; English is widely spoken, simplifying all communication and marketing; logistics from China are comparable to Vietnam; the consumer preference alignment with US/global lash catalogs reduces product adaptation cost
Recommended Entry SequenceStart here for ASEAN — test product-market fit with a curated K-beauty-aligned lash collection; build TikTok Shop presence as primary customer acquisition; partner with a Vietnamese distributor for traditional retail and Hasaki/Watsons/Guardian coverage; use the Vietnam CPD documentation package as the foundation for subsequent ASEAN market regulatory submissionsEnter after Vietnam validation — Indonesia's scale demands serious resource commitment; build a halal-compliant product line from formulation through packaging; invest in local brand-building with Bahasa Indonesia content, Indonesian KOL partnerships, and a fully localized Shopee Mall / Tokopedia storefront; plan for 12-18 months from decision to first revenueEnter alongside or shortly after Vietnam — the Philippines' Westernized lash preferences mean minimal product adaptation is needed (a US or global catalog may transfer with mainly packaging and labeling changes); English-language marketing materials can be used effectively; TikTok Shop is the primary customer acquisition channel; logistics from Qingdao are comparable to Vietnam

Competitive Landscape: The Lash Market in Vietnam Today

Understanding who is already selling lashes in Vietnam — and where the competitive gaps are — is essential for positioning and differentiation strategy. The Vietnamese lash market is fragmented across multiple tiers and channels, with no single dominant brand controlling a large market share. This fragmentation is a structural opportunity for new entrants with a clear positioning strategy.

Market Segments and Competitive Dynamics

Pricing and Margin Model: Vietnam Market Entry Economics

A clear pricing model is essential for determining whether the Vietnam market can deliver acceptable margins given the cost structure. Below is a representative unit-economic model for a private-label lash brand importing from Qingdao and selling through TikTok Shop and Shopee in Vietnam.

Cost / Revenue ElementPer-Unit Amount (1 pair in retail box)Notes
FOB Factory Price (Qingdao)$0.753D faux mink, natural volume 10-12mm, custom-branded retail box, MOQ 200 boxes; pricing assumes a mid-range quality tier suitable for the 80,000-150,000 VND retail band
Sea Freight (LCL, amortized per unit)$0.08$120/CBM, ~600 pairs per CBM with retail packaging; assumes consolidated LCL shipment; FCL at higher volumes reduces this to ~$0.03-0.05/pair
Marine Insurance$0.01Standard 0.3-0.5% of CIF value
CIF Value (Customs Declaration Base)$0.84FOB + Freight + Insurance; this is the value on which import duty and VAT are calculated
Import Duty (estimated at 8%)$0.078% of CIF; actual rate depends on HS classification — confirm with Vietnamese customs broker; range is 5-10% for false eyelashes
VAT (10% on CIF + Duty)$0.0910% x ($0.84 + $0.07); standard Vietnamese VAT
Customs Brokerage + Local Delivery (amortized)$0.06Amortized per unit; assumes shipment of ~2,000 pairs; customs broker fee + port-to-warehouse transport in HCMC
Total Landed Cost (per pair, in Vietnam warehouse)$1.07Total of all above: FOB + logistics + duties + VAT + local charges
TikTok Shop / Shopee Platform Fee$0.24~4-5% of retail price (platform commission + payment processing); calculated on ~$5.50 retail
KOL Affiliate Commission (average)$0.75~13-15% of retail price for affiliate-driven sales; not all sales are affiliate-driven — some are organic/direct — but the blended rate across all sales typically falls in this range
Packaging + Fulfillment (local)$0.15Local repackaging if needed, Shopee/TikTok fulfillment center fees, poly-mailer, thank-you card; can be reduced with direct factory-to-platform fulfillment
Total Cost of Goods Sold (COGS, per pair sold)$2.21Landed cost + platform fees + marketing commissions + local fulfillment
Retail Price (VND)140,000 VNDMid-range positioning within the 80,000-150,000 VND sweet spot; approximately $5.50 at current exchange rates
Retail Price (USD equivalent)$5.50Exchange rate: ~25,500 VND per USD (2026 reference rate; subject to fluctuation)
Gross Profit (per pair)$3.29Retail price minus COGS
Gross Margin59.8%Gross profit / retail price; healthy margin that supports brand reinvestment, returns/reserves, and profitability

This model demonstrates that a private-label lash brand can achieve gross margins of approximately 55-65% in the Vietnamese market at the $5-6 retail price point — margins that are comparable to or better than what many brands achieve in higher-cost Western markets. The key drivers of margin performance are: (1) the absence of Section 301-equivalent punitive tariffs (the Vietnam duty burden of ~17% of CIF vs ~31% for the US is the single biggest structural cost advantage); (2) efficient logistics from Qingdao to Vietnam (short transit = lower freight cost per unit and lower working capital tied up in transit inventory); (3) relatively low platform and KOL commission rates compared to US/European influencer marketing costs (Vietnamese KOL affiliate commissions at 12-15% vs US influencer rates that can exceed 25-30% of retail for beauty products). The Vietnam market unit economics support brand profitability at scale — but only with disciplined cost management, efficient logistics, and a marketing strategy that leverages the KOC/KOL ecosystem cost-effectively rather than importing high-cost Western performance-marketing approaches.

Common Mistakes When Entering the Vietnam Beauty Market

The Vietnam beauty market is accessible, but it is not frictionless. Brands and factories that enter without understanding the market's specific characteristics make predictable mistakes. Avoiding these will save time, money, and reputational damage.

  1. Treating Vietnam as a "smaller China" or "secondary market": Vietnam is a distinct market with its own consumer preferences, regulatory framework, distribution dynamics, and cultural context. Repackaging a product assortment designed for China or the US and expecting it to perform in Vietnam without adaptation is the single most common mistake. Vietnamese consumers know when a brand has made an effort for their market — Vietnamese-language packaging, Vietnam-specific lash styles, partnerships with Vietnamese KOLs — and when a brand is simply dumping excess inventory into a secondary market.
  2. Underinvesting in Vietnamese language: English-only packaging, product pages, and marketing content may work in the Philippines, Singapore, or Malaysia. In Vietnam, they signal "this brand is not for me" to a large segment of consumers. Vietnamese-language investment — packaging, Shopee/Lazada listings, TikTok content, customer service — is not optional. Machine translation is not sufficient; Vietnamese is a tonal language with specific beauty vocabulary that automated translation tools frequently mishandle, sometimes in ways that damage brand perception.
  3. Skipping or rushing regulatory compliance: Attempting to sell lashes in Vietnam without a CPD — or with incomplete documentation — is not a trivial shortcut. Vietnamese customs authorities and the DAV have been strengthening cosmetics enforcement, and products without proper declaration face seizure, destruction, and potential blacklisting of the importer. The CPD process takes 4-8 weeks and costs a few hundred dollars per SKU. Trying to save that time and money by entering without compliance is not a calculated risk — it is a decision to build a business on a regulatory violation that can collapse the entire Vietnam operation when (not if) enforcement catches up.
  4. Overpaying for logistics by not comparing modes: Brands that default to air freight for all shipments (because "it is faster") or sea freight for all shipments (because "it is cheaper") without matching the logistics mode to the specific shipment's purpose are leaving money on the table. Sample orders should go by air freight or express courier (speed matters, volume is low). Initial market-testing inventory should go by air freight (speed to market matters, the cost premium over sea freight for 50-200 boxes is manageable). Volume production orders should go by sea freight (the cost savings are material at 500+ boxes). DDP terms through a Vietnamese logistics partner simplify the process for first-time importers.
  5. Neglecting Zalo as a customer engagement channel: International brands often focus exclusively on TikTok and Shopee while ignoring Zalo — a mistake, because Zalo is where Vietnamese consumers expect to interact directly with brands. A Zalo Official Account that provides Vietnamese-language product information, order status updates, application tips, and responsive customer service builds the direct brand-consumer relationship that platforms like Shopee and TikTok Shop intermediate. The brands that own their customer relationship — with Zalo as the direct communication channel — have higher repeat purchase rates and lower customer acquisition costs over time than brands that rely entirely on platform-mediated interactions.

Vietnam Beauty Trade Shows and Industry Events

For lash factories and brands seeking to build direct relationships in the Vietnamese beauty market, industry trade shows and events are the most efficient path to meeting distributors, retail buyers, KOLs, and potential brand partners in a concentrated format. Vietnam's beauty trade show calendar has matured significantly over the past five years, and several events now provide professional B2B platforms comparable to regional counterparts in Bangkok, Jakarta, and Singapore. For a Qingdao lash factory or international brand, attending — and eventually exhibiting at — these events is the highest-ROI investment in Vietnam market development outside of product quality and regulatory compliance.

For a Qingdao lash factory or international lash brand making a genuine commitment to the Vietnam market, the recommended event sequence is clear and sequenced: attend Vietbeauty as a visitor in Year 1 — walk the show floor, observe which brands and product categories are present and which are absent, meet potential distribution partners and regulatory consultants, collect intelligence on competitive positioning, and evaluate whether exhibiting at the following year's event would generate a positive return. In Year 2, exhibit at Vietbeauty with a professionally prepared Vietnamese-language booth (bilingual English-Vietnamese signage, Vietnamese-language product catalog and sample kit, staffed by at least one Vietnamese-speaking representative), a curated product assortment selected specifically for Vietnamese market preferences, and clear commercial objectives: number of qualified distributor leads, number of brand-founder partnership conversations, number of retail buyer contacts. Supplement Vietbeauty exhibition with attendance at Cosmobeaute Vietnam if the professional-use channel is relevant, and at the TikTok Shop Beauty Summit if TikTok Shop is a primary sales channel. The relationships initiated at these events — with distributors who will place your product in Hasaki and Guardian stores, with KOLs who will feature your lashes in live streams reaching hundreds of thousands of viewers, with brand founders who will build their companies on your manufacturing quality — form the human-relationship foundation on which a successful and durable Vietnam market presence is built.

Why Vietnam, and Why Now: The Strategic Case for Immediate Entry

The converging signals — demographic structure, economic trajectory, digital commerce maturity, regulatory accessibility, and competitive fragmentation — make a clear strategic case for Vietnam as a priority market for lash brands and manufacturers in 2026-2027. The market is large enough to matter (100 million consumers, $2.5 billion beauty economy), growing fast enough to reward early entry (9% CAGR), accessible enough to enter without disproportionate cost or risk (ASEAN-harmonized regulation, efficient logistics, English-proficient business services), and fragmented enough that a well-executed brand can establish meaningful market position before the competitive environment intensifies. The cost of entry — CPD regulatory clearance ($300-800/SKU), initial trial inventory ($2,000-5,000), and market-testing marketing budget ($1,000-3,000) — is measured in thousands of dollars, not tens or hundreds of thousands. The cost of waiting — watching competitors establish the brand positions, distributor relationships, and consumer mindshare that become progressively harder to displace — is measured in missed market share that compounds over time.

Vietnam also has a structural advantage over other major ASEAN beauty markets as a first entry point. Compared to Thailand — which many international beauty brands choose as their ASEAN entry point due to Bangkok's status as a regional commercial hub — Vietnam offers faster regulatory clearance (Vietnam CPD: 4-8 weeks vs Thailand FDA notification: 3-6 months), a larger population (100M vs 72M), a faster-growing beauty market (9% vs 5-6% CAGR), and a consumer base that is less saturated with international brands and therefore more open to new entrants. Thailand's beauty market is more mature, more competitive, and more expensive to enter — particularly in Bangkok, where retail shelf space, KOL partnerships, and digital advertising all command pricing premiums. Vietnam offers comparable or better growth potential at a lower cost of entry and with less entrenched incumbent competition.

For Qingdao lash factories specifically, the strategic logic is even more direct. Vietnam imports the vast majority of its lashes from China, those imports currently flow through trading-company-mediated channels that add cost without adding value, and the Vietnamese beauty entrepreneurs who are building the next generation of local brands need factory partners who understand their requirements — low MOQ, Vietnamese-language packaging, fast logistics, and social-media-ready product assets. The factory that organizes to serve this market directly, rather than waiting for trading-company orders to arrive, captures margin that would otherwise go to intermediaries, builds direct relationships with the Vietnamese brands and distributors who will shape the market over the next decade, and positions itself for the market's structural growth. The competitors who continue to treat Vietnam as an afterthought — a secondary market served through intermediaries because "it is not the US or Europe" — will find, five years from now, that the market has been organized by others, the distributor relationships have been locked in, and the entry window that was open in 2026 has narrowed to a crack.

Vietnam's "Golden Demographic" Window — Why Early Entry Matters: Seventy percent of Vietnam's 100 million people are under the age of 35. These are digital-native, beauty-obsessed consumers whose disposable income is rising year over year as Vietnam's economy continues its manufacturing and services-led growth trajectory. The next decade will see Vietnam's beauty market double or triple in size — from approximately $2.5 billion today to a projected $5-8 billion by the mid-2030s — and the brands that build awareness, trust, distribution relationships, and consumer mindshare now will be the incumbents that every new entrant must displace. Vietnam in 2026 is comparable in its market development stage to China's beauty market circa 2010-2012: rapidly rising consumer sophistication, growing brand consciousness, a mobile-first digital commerce infrastructure that is world-class, and a limited window of opportunity before the market becomes crowded with international players. The brands that enter now — with authentic product quality, Vietnamese-language commitment, and genuine investment in the market — will build relationships with consumers, KOLs, distributors, and retail partners that compound over time. The window is open, and the market fundamentals are compelling. But the window will not stay open indefinitely — and the cost and difficulty of displacing an established brand in Vietnam will only increase as the market matures.

Getting Started: Your Vietnam Market Entry Checklist

Based on the market analysis, regulatory framework, channel strategy, and operational considerations detailed throughout this article, here is a concise checklist of the 10 actions that move a lash brand or factory from "considering Vietnam" to "operating in Vietnam."

  1. Engage a Vietnamese regulatory consultant or responsible entity — identify and contract a DAV-recognized entity who will submit and manage your Cosmetic Product Declarations. This is the gating item: without a responsible entity, you cannot submit a CPD, and without a CPD, you cannot legally sell in Vietnam.
  2. Prepare the ASEAN CPD documentation package — assemble Certificate of Free Sale, GMP certificate (ISO 22716), product formula by INCI, finished product specifications, safety assessment report, and draft Vietnamese-language labeling. Ensure all manufacturer names, addresses, and product identifiers are consistent across every document.
  3. Curate a Vietnam-market product assortment — select 4-8 lash styles aligned with Vietnamese consumer preferences: 8-14mm natural volume, wispy and cat-eye shapes, brown/soft-black bands under 0.5mm, individual cluster kits. Do not simply repackage a US or Middle East catalog.
  4. Develop Vietnamese-language packaging and marketing assets — produce retail-ready packaging with Vietnamese product names, descriptions, ingredient lists, CPD number placeholder, and usage instructions. Create TikTok-optimized product photography and short-form video content.
  5. Identify a Vietnamese customs broker and logistics partner — select a broker with specific cosmetics clearance experience and a logistics provider offering DDP terms for first shipments. Pre-clear your documentation package with the broker before the first shipment leaves Qingdao.
  6. Produce trial inventory and ship to Vietnam — manufacture 50-100 boxes per SKU; ship via air freight (speed) or LCL sea freight (cost) depending on timeline; ensure CPD approval is received before or concurrent with shipment arrival.
  7. Set up TikTok Shop and Shopee storefronts — create Vietnamese-language storefronts with professional product listings, photography, and pricing aligned with the 80,000-150,000 VND sweet spot. Register for Shopee Mall or LazMall if brand criteria are met.
  8. Execute a KOC product seeding program — identify 20-50 Vietnamese beauty KOCs matching your target demographic; send free product with personalized Vietnamese-language notes; monitor content generation and engagement; convert top performers to affiliate partnerships.
  9. Launch with 2-3 mid-tier KOL affiliate partnerships — activate TikTok Shop affiliate links for selected beauty KOLs; monitor sales attribution, conversion rates, and content quality; use performance data to inform scaling decisions.
  10. Establish a Zalo Official Account — create a Vietnamese-language brand presence on Zalo for direct customer communication, product support, and community building. This is the channel through which Vietnamese consumers expect to interact directly with brands and where long-term brand loyalty is cultivated outside of platform-mediated transactions.

Each of these 10 steps is individually achievable with modest resources. Together, executed in sequence, they form a complete Vietnam market entry program that moves a brand from zero presence to operational capability in approximately 3-4 months from the start of regulatory preparation to the first TikTok Shop sale. The total capital required — regulatory fees, trial inventory, initial marketing, and setup costs — is approximately $5,000-$12,000 depending on SKU count and marketing investment level, making Vietnam one of the more capital-efficient international beauty market entries available to lash brands and manufacturers in 2026.

Bring Your Lash Brand to Vietnam's Growing Market

Vietnam is not a manufacturing competitor to Qingdao — it is a 100-million-consumer beauty market with a young, digitally engaged population, a 9% CAGR growth trajectory, and an ASEAN-harmonized regulatory framework that makes market entry more accessible and cost-efficient than most international beauty markets of comparable size and growth potential.

The Vietnamese consumer wants natural, K-beauty-inspired lash styles at a fair and transparent price, sold through the channels where she already spends her time and trust — TikTok Shop, Shopee, trusted beauty retailers like Hasaki and Watsons, and the beauty KOLs whose recommendations she follows.

The Vietnamese beauty entrepreneurs who are launching the country's next generation of homegrown brands need factory partners who understand their specific requirements: low MOQ to test before scaling, Vietnamese-language packaging that speaks to consumers in their own language, fast and reliable logistics from Qingdao to Ho Chi Minh City, and social-media-ready visual content that powers their TikTok-native marketing.

And the Vietnamese import regime — with standard MFN duty rates of 5-10%, no Section 301-equivalent punitive surcharge, 10% VAT, and efficient customs clearance for properly documented cosmetics shipments — makes Chinese-manufactured lashes cost-competitive in Vietnam in a way that the US market's combined 30.8% duty rate structurally does not allow.

At Aurevia Lashes, we support your Vietnam market entry with the complete documentation, product, and logistics package required to turn market opportunity into shelf-ready product. Our Vietnam-market support includes:

Whether you are an established international lash brand entering the Vietnamese market for the first time, or a Vietnamese beauty entrepreneur launching your own lash line and seeking a factory partner who understands your specific requirements, we provide the manufacturing quality, regulatory documentation, packaging capability, and logistics support that turn Vietnam's market opportunity into commercial reality.

The market is growing at 9% CAGR. The regulatory framework is ASEAN-harmonized and accessible. The consumer — 100 million strong, 70% under 35, digitally native, K-beauty obsessed — is ready and spending. The competitive landscape is fragmented, with no dominant lash brand controlling significant market share. The logistics from Qingdao are efficient: 7-10 days by sea, 2-3 days by air. And the import cost structure — with standard MFN duty rates and no Section 301 punitive surcharge — supports competitive retail pricing and healthy brand margins.

The question is not whether Vietnam's beauty market will reward early, committed entrants who invest in product quality, Vietnamese-language branding, local KOL partnerships, and multi-channel distribution. It will, and the fundamentals — 100 million consumers, 70% under 35, 9% CAGR, ASEAN-harmonized regulation, efficient logistics from Qingdao, and a fragmented competitive landscape — make the case clearly and compellingly.

The question is whether your brand will be among those entrants — or whether you will watch from the sidelines as competitors build the brand positions, distributor relationships, and consumer loyalty that become progressively harder and more expensive to displace as the market matures through the 2030s.

Vietnam's beauty market is ready. The consumer is ready. The regulatory path is clear. The logistics are efficient. The competitive window is open now — but it narrows with each passing quarter as more international brands recognize the opportunity and more Vietnamese entrepreneurs build the homegrown brands that will define the market. The time to act is while the cost of entry is measured in thousands of dollars and the reward for early commitment is measured in the brand equity and market share that will compound over the next decade of Vietnam's beauty market growth.

Request a quote for Vietnam market-ready lashes — from ASEAN-compliant CPD documentation to Vietnamese-language packaging, curated product assortment to DDP logistics, we support your complete Vietnam market entry with factory-direct quality and service.

For questions about the Vietnam market, ASEAN regulatory requirements, or how our Qingdao factory can support your specific brand requirements for the Vietnamese consumer, contact us at guangzhiwang0@gmail.com. We respond to all Vietnam market inquiries within one business day.