On May 6, Deputy Prime Minister Ho Quoc Dung chaired a meeting on the implementation of Directive 05/CT-TTg on focusing resources to accelerate the progress of cadastral map measurement; land registration; establishing cadastral records and building a national database (CSDL) on land.
Deputy Minister of Agriculture and Environment (MARD) Nguyen Thi Phuong Hoa said that according to reports from localities, before the implementation of Directive 05/CT-TTg, there were about 106 million land plots nationwide.
Of which, the number of land plots with data is 62.8 million plots; 23.5 million land plots have met the criteria of "correct, sufficient, clean, living"; and 38.9 million plots have not met the criteria, and it is necessary to supplement information, compare and verify with the population database. The number of land plots that have not been built data is about 43.2 million plots.
Implementing Directive 05/CT-TTg, localities have handled about 500,000 "right, sufficient, clean, live" land plots, raising the total number of land plots meeting this criterion to over 24 million plots.
34/34 localities have synchronized land databases with the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development with a volume of about 62.4 million land plots.
The volume of data that needs to be updated and supplemented to meet the "right, sufficient, clean, live" standard is currently about 38.4 million land plots that have built the cadastral database and need to be further cleaned, of which about 20 million land plots need to be matched and verified by land users.
Concluding the meeting, Deputy Prime Minister Ho Quoc Dung emphasized that the progress of implementing Directive 05/CT-TTg is still slow, not meeting the progress requirements.
Requesting "not to postpone the implementation time", the Deputy Prime Minister affirmed that from now until the end of 2026, the land database must be completed in accordance with the spirit of Directive 05/CT-TTg.
The Deputy Prime Minister emphasized the requirement to "clear people, clear tasks, clear time, clear responsibilities, clear products", tasks must be quantified specifically for each stage instead of just reporting in the style of "haved, are doing and will do".
Regarding the task of data cleaning, the Deputy Prime Minister requested to launch a "day and night campaign" to complete the review, supplementation of information, matching and verification of about 38 million land plots belonging to group 2 (land plot groups that need to update cadastral records and full data) before the end of June 2026.

For about 43 million land plots belonging to group 3 (data to be newly created, expected to be measured for cadastral maps) that need to be measured, cadastral records are made and new data is built, the Deputy Prime Minister requested to strive to basically complete them in the third quarter of 2026 and review and re-evaluate them in the fourth quarter of 2026.
The Deputy Prime Minister emphasized not to let the situation of each locality deploying a separate software and data standard lead to non-interconnection, causing waste and difficulties in operation later.
Regarding administrative reform, according to the Deputy Prime Minister, the ultimate goal is not only to complete the database but also to effectively exploit it, avoiding the situation where people have to provide and re-supply many types of documents even though the data is already on the system.
The Deputy Prime Minister said that he had received feedback on the fact that data between fields such as notarization, land, and taxes have not been integrated synchronously, causing people to still have to carry many sets of documents when carrying out procedures.
Therefore, the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development needs to continue to review and clearly quantify the results of administrative procedure reduction and dossier composition to better serve people and businesses.