How to address people in Vietnamese

Last update: 2026-02-22

How to address people in Vietnamese: a practical guide for visitors

Vietnamese does not use a fixed word for “you.”

Instead, people address each other based on:

  • Age difference
  • Social hierarchy
  • Relationship context

If you understand one rule, understand this: Age determines how you speak.

This guide focuses on practical usage for everyday situations.

1. Social relationships (most important for visitors)

In daily life — restaurants, taxis, shops, hotels, casual conversations — you estimate someone’s age compared to yours.

A simple way to think about it: Compare their age to your grandparents, your parents, and yourself.

Quick reference table

Estimated age compared to you Call them Call yourself
Same generation as your grandparents / retirement age (~60+) Ông (male) / Bà (female) Cháu
Around your parents’ age or older Bác Cháu
Slightly younger than your parents (about 10 years younger than them) Cô (female) / Chú (male) Cháu
Around your age or slightly older Anh (male) / Chị (female) Em
Slightly younger than you (within ~10 years) Em Anh (if male) / Chị (if female)
Much younger than you (children) Cháu Cô (if female) / Chú (if male)

How to think about it naturally

Elderly (grandparent generation)

If the person is around retirement age or clearly elderly:

  • Call them: Ông / Bà
  • Refer to yourself as: Cháu

Example: Cháu cảm ơn bà.

Parent generation (older adults)

  • If the person is around your parents’ age:
    • Call them: Bác
    • Refer to yourself as: Cháu
  • If slightly younger than your parents:
    • Call them: Cô (female) / Chú (male)
    • Refer to yourself as: Cháu

Around your age

If the person is close to your age or slightly older:

  • Call them: Anh (male) / Chị (female)
  • Refer to yourself as: Em

This is the most common everyday usage in Vietnam.

Slightly younger than you

If the person looks a bit younger than you (within about 10 years):

  • Call them: Em
  • Refer to yourself as:
    • Anh (if you are male)
    • Chị (if you are female)

Much younger (children)

If the person is significantly younger (child or teenager):

  • Call them: Cháu
  • Refer to yourself as:
    • Cô (if female)
    • Chú (if male)

In modern urban settings, you may also use:

  • Tôi (neutral, more formal)

What if I am not sure?

Age estimation is not an exact science.

Vietnamese people also guess — it’s normal.

If unsure:

  • Choose the slightly more respectful option.
  • Or default to Anh / Chị for adults (safe and common).

For example: It is safer to call someone “Chị” rather than “Em” if you are unsure.

Can I just use “I” and “you”?

In many situations — especially with younger or middle-aged Vietnamese — people understand simple English pronouns like “I” and “you.”

You can use them briefly if you feel stuck.

However:

Using Vietnamese address forms, even imperfectly, shows effort and cultural awareness — and is always appreciated.

Think of “I/you” as a backup, not the default.

2. Family relationships (for deeper cultural understanding)

Inside families, the system becomes more specific and detailed.

Common examples:

  • Father: Bố / Ba
  • Mother: Mẹ
  • Grandfather: Ông
  • Grandmother: Bà
  • Older brother: Anh
  • Older sister: Chị
  • Younger sibling: Em

Children refer to themselves as:

  • Con

Vietnamese families rarely use personal names alone.

Hierarchy is always reflected in language.

Why this system matters

Vietnamese pronouns are not just grammar.

They express:

  • Respect
  • Age hierarchy
  • Social closeness
  • Cultural awareness

Choosing the correct form immediately builds goodwill.

Choosing incorrectly is usually forgiven — especially for foreigners — but showing effort makes a strong positive impression.

Final survival rules

If you remember only three things:

  • Older → lower yourself (Em / Cháu)
  • Younger → gently raise yourself (Anh / Chị / Cô / Chú)
  • When unsure → use Anh / Chị

Politeness matters more than perfection.

A smile and respectful tone will always help.

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