Rubber Manufacturers in Vietnam: Top Suppliers and Sourcing Guide

Vietnam is one of the world's top three natural rubber producers, and its factories manufacture everything from custom molded industrial parts to latex gloves and rubber flooring. For buyers looking to source rubber products, Vietnam offers direct access to raw materials, competitive manufacturing costs, and a growing base of export-ready factories, but finding the right supplier requires understanding how the industry is structured and where to look beyond English-language directories.

Updated Febraury 23, 2026

Key facts for buyers:

  • Vietnam produced approximately 1.3 million metric tons of natural rubber in 2024, with total rubber industry exports projected to exceed $11 billion in 2025

  • The country has a fully vertical supply chain for rubber goods: plantations supply raw latex to domestic processors and product manufacturers.

  • Key rubber manufacturing regions include Binh Duong, Dong Nai, Tay Ninh, and Binh Phuoc in the southeast, with additional capacity around Hanoi in the north.

  • Major export destinations include China, the U.S., India, South Korea, Japan, and the EU.

Why Source Rubber Products From Vietnam?

Direct Access to Raw Rubber

Vietnam's rubber industry advantage begins with access to raw materials. The country's rubber plantations cover roughly 900,000 hectares, concentrated in the southeastern provinces where most rubber product factories are also located. This proximity between plantations and manufacturing facilities shortens supply chains and keeps material costs competitive compared to countries that import their rubber feedstock. Vietnam is one of the only countries where we can visit a rubber plantation and a finished-product factory on the same day, within the same province.

Lower Labor Costs

Labor costs in Vietnam remain significantly lower than in China, which matters for rubber manufacturing processes that involve manual steps like mold loading, trimming, inspection, and assembly. For products where labor represents a meaningful share of unit cost (custom molded parts, gaskets, footwear components, latex-dipped goods), Vietnam can offer real savings without sacrificing quality.

Favorable Trade Agreements

Vietnam benefits from a growing network of trade agreements. The EU-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (EVFTA) and the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) reduce or eliminate tariffs on Vietnamese rubber exports to major markets. Import duties vary by product and destination, so buyers should check the latest rates for their specific market before finalizing landed cost calculations.

Where Vietnam Still Lags Behind

Vietnam's rubber manufacturing base is still developing compared to China's. Turnaround times on custom tooling tend to be longer, and the range of advanced rubber compounds available domestically (specialty silicones, high-performance fluoroelastomers) is narrower. For commodity rubber products and standard industrial parts, Vietnam is highly competitive. For cutting-edge specialty formulations, capacity is growing but not yet on par with China or Thailand.

For a broader look at what can be manufactured in the country, see our guide to products made in Vietnam.

What Rubber Products Can You Source From Vietnam?

Vietnam's rubber product manufacturing spans a wide range of categories. Here are the most relevant ones for international buyers.

Custom Molded Rubber Parts

This is one of Vietnam's fastest-growing segments of the rubber manufacturing industry. Factories produce O-rings, seals, gaskets, bushings, anti-vibration mounts, and other components using compression, injection, and transfer molding. Many of these factories serve the automotive, electronics, and machinery sectors and hold ISO 9001 or IATF 16949 certifications. Buyers sourcing custom molded parts should confirm that the factory has in-house mold-making capability, as this significantly affects lead times and iteration speed.

Tires and Tubes

Vietnam has a well-established tire industry. Domestic producers like CASUMINA (Southern Rubber Industry Joint Stock Company) and Da Nang Rubber manufacture tires for motorcycles, bicycles, cars, and industrial vehicles. Foreign-invested tire plants from companies like Kumho and Yokohama also operate in the country. The tire segment accounts for the single largest share of global natural rubber consumption.

Latex Products

Vietnam produces latex gloves (both medical and industrial grade), catheters, rubber bands, and balloons. The country's direct access to raw latex from domestic plantations gives it a cost advantage in this category. Buyers sourcing medical-grade latex products should verify whether the products are certified to FDA, CE, or ISO 13485 standards, depending on their target market.

Rubber Footwear and Components

Vietnam is the world's second-largest footwear exporter, and rubber soles, outsoles, and insoles are a major component category. Factories producing rubber footwear components are concentrated in Ho Chi Minh City and the surrounding provinces.

Industrial Rubber Products

Vietnamese manufacturers produce conveyor belts, rubber sheets, hoses, rollers, and rubber flooring for construction, mining, and industrial applications. This segment includes both domestic companies and foreign-invested operations.

Silicone Products

While technically distinct from rubber, many Vietnamese rubber factories also handle silicone molding. Products include silicone kitchenware, baby products, medical-grade silicone parts, and electronic component seals. Several Taiwanese and Japanese-invested factories in Vietnam specialize in this crossover category.

Top Rubber Manufacturers and Suppliers in Vietnam

When sourcing rubber from Vietnam, buyers should understand that the industry is split into two distinct categories: companies that produce and process raw natural rubber and companies that manufacture finished rubber products. The right type of supplier depends entirely on what you need.

The manufacturers listed below are among the most visible players in Vietnam's rubber sector. They are not the only options, and many of the best-fit factories for a given project don't appear in English-language online research, which is one reason working with a sourcing company that operates on the ground in Vietnam can make a significant difference.

Raw Natural Rubber Producers

These companies operate rubber plantations and processing facilities. They produce raw and semi-processed natural rubber (SVR grades) that serve as feedstock for tire manufacturers, industrial rubber processors, and other downstream industries. If you need natural rubber as a material input, these are the major players.

Vietnam Rubber Group (VRG)

Vietnam's largest agricultural group manages over 400,000 hectares of rubber plantations. VRG produces roughly 30% of Vietnam's total natural rubber output and operates through more than 100 subsidiaries. The group processes multiple SVR grades and exports primarily to China, India, and other Asian markets.

Phuoc Hoa Rubber Joint Stock Company (PHURUCO)

Located in Binh Duong province, about 65 km from Ho Chi Minh City. Phuoc Hoa manages three processing factories producing approximately 27,000 tonnes of rubber annually. Known for consistent quality in SVR 3L, SVR 10, and SVR 20 grades.

Dong Phu Rubber Joint Stock Company (DORUCO)

Operating since 1927 (originally a Michelin plantation), Dong Phu is one of Vietnam's most established rubber producers. Revenue from rubber latex accounts for roughly 70% of total company revenue, with the balance from rubberwood processing, a growing secondary revenue stream for many Vietnamese rubber companies.

Finished Rubber Product Manufacturers

These are the companies that actually manufacture rubber goods, the suppliers most buyers searching for "rubber manufacturers in Vietnam" are looking for. They use rubber as a raw material input and produce finished or semi-finished products for export.

CASUMINA (Southern Rubber Industry Joint Stock Company)

Vietnam's leading tire manufacturer produces tires for motorcycles, bicycles, cars, and industrial vehicles. CASUMINA is publicly listed on the Ho Chi Minh City Stock Exchange and exports to multiple international markets. Best known for high-volume tire production with established quality systems.

Sao Vang Rubber Joint Stock Company

Based in Hanoi, Sao Vang manufactures tires, technical rubber products, and rubber components for industrial applications. The company has both domestic distribution and international export operations. A good option for buyers seeking tire or technical rubber products from northern Vietnam.

Jhao Yang Rubber (Vietnam)

A Taiwanese-invested manufacturer with over 45 years of experience in rubber and silicone molding. Their Vietnam factory produces custom-molded rubber parts, rubber-bonded-to-metal components, and liquid silicone rubber (LSR) parts. Serves automotive, electronics, medical, and consumer goods sectors. Holds IATF 16949 certification.

Vina Rubber

A Vietnamese manufacturer specializing in precision custom molded rubber and silicone parts, including O-rings, silicone seals, gaskets, and FDA food-grade components. Vina Rubber handles in-house mold fabrication, enabling faster turnaround on new tooling. Exports to international markets, including Japan, Korea, and the U.S.

Peak Vietnam

Based in Hanoi with over 20 years of experience in the manufacturing of rubber industrial parts. Produces custom rubber parts, silicone seals, rubber gaskets, and grommets. Focused on industrial and OEM components for international buyers.

Giai Phong Rubber Co.

More than 30 years of experience in technical rubber production. Implements LEAN manufacturing and Japanese 5S management practices. Supplies rubber and plastic components for automotive, motorcycle, electronics, medical, and household applications.

How to Find the Right Rubber Factory in Vietnam

Online directories are a starting point, but they only scratch the surface. Vietnam's rubber manufacturing landscape includes hundreds of factories that don't maintain English-language websites or list themselves on B2B platforms. For a detailed breakdown of supplier discovery methods, see our guide on how to find manufacturing companies in Vietnam.

Define Your Product Specifications First

Before contacting any factory, you need a clear product specification: rubber compound type (natural rubber, EPDM, NBR, silicone, etc.), hardness (durometer), tolerances, certifications required, and target order volume. Vietnamese rubber factories are much more responsive to detailed inquiries than vague requests. At Cosmo, we've seen the difference first-hand: a well-prepared spec sheet with drawings and material callouts will get you quotes in days, while a general inquiry like "we need rubber parts" may not get a response at all.

Verify Molding and Tooling Capabilities

For custom rubber products, the factory's molding capabilities matter more than their size. Confirm whether they do compression molding, injection molding, transfer molding, or all three. Ask whether they fabricate molds in-house or outsource tooling, since in-house mold-making means faster development cycles and easier revisions.

Check Certifications and Export Experience

ISO 9001 is the baseline. For automotive rubber parts, look for IATF 16949. For medical-grade products, ISO 13485 and FDA registration. Factories that export regularly to your target market are more likely to understand your compliance requirements. Ask buyers in your region for references.

Visit Before Committing to Production

A factory visit is the single most effective way to assess a rubber manufacturer's real capabilities. Production floors reveal things that no website or certificate can: equipment condition, workforce skill level, quality control processes in practice, and raw material handling. If you're planning a trip, read our guide to visiting factories in Vietnam.

Expect Longer Lead Times Than China

Vietnamese rubber manufacturers generally take longer to respond to RFQs and produce samples than their Chinese counterparts. At Cosmo Sourcing, we budget up to 2 weeks from the time we send RFQs to Vietnamese factories, and we follow up aggressively. Factor in additional time for tooling development on top of that. This is a normal part of doing business in Vietnam, not a sign of disinterest. For a fuller picture of what to expect, our Vietnam sourcing guide covers the key differences between working with Vietnamese and Chinese suppliers.

Challenges to Watch When Sourcing Rubber From Vietnam

Batch-to-Batch Consistency

Natural rubber is an agricultural product, and its properties vary by season, plantation, and processing method. Factories using domestically sourced natural rubber may exhibit greater batch variation than those using synthetic compounds. We've had projects where the first production run was perfect and the second batch came in at a noticeably different hardness because the factory switched latex suppliers between runs. Establish clear material specifications and testing requirements upfront, and request test reports for each production batch.

Mold Ownership and IP

Confirm mold ownership in writing before production begins. In Vietnam, as in China, mold ownership disputes can become complicated if not addressed contractually. Your purchase order or manufacturing agreement should specify that tooling is your property, even if the factory stores it.

Communication and Language

Most Vietnamese rubber factory owners and engineers speak limited English. Technical discussions about compound formulations, tolerances, and testing methods often require a bilingual intermediary to avoid costly misunderstandings. I've personally seen orders go sideways because a buyer and a factory had different interpretations of a hardness specification that was never clarified in Vietnamese. This is one area where working with a sourcing company with Vietnamese-speaking staff on the ground provides real value.

Payment Terms

Advance payment is standard in Vietnam, and factories tend to be less flexible on payment terms than Chinese suppliers. Wire transfer is the most common method. For guidance on structuring payments safely, see our guide to paying Vietnamese suppliers.

Raw Rubber vs. Finished Products: Know What You Need

Many of the most prominent rubber "manufacturers" in Vietnam are actually raw rubber producers and plantation operators. If you need finished rubber products, make sure the supplier you're evaluating actually has manufacturing equipment, not just rubber plantations and processing lines for SVR grades. We see this regularly at Cosmo: a client comes to us after spending weeks in contact with a company they found online, only to discover it's a plantation that sells raw latex, not a factory that can mold their product.

Source Rubber Products From Vietnam With Cosmo Sourcing

Finding the right rubber factory in Vietnam takes more than an Alibaba search. Many of the best manufacturers don't have English-language websites, and evaluating a factory's real capabilities requires someone on the ground who speaks the language and understands the manufacturing process.

Cosmo Sourcing has been helping buyers source products from Vietnam since 2012. We've worked with thousands of clients across more than 10,000 products, and rubber goods are one of the categories where our local factory network and first-hand manufacturing knowledge make the biggest difference. Our team in Ho Chi Minh City identifies qualified rubber manufacturers for your specific product, obtains 2 to 6 competitive quotes with original factory pricing (no commissions or markups), coordinates sampling and quality inspections, and provides direct factory introductions so you own the supplier relationship.

We operate on a flat-fee pricing model: you pay a fixed sourcing fee, and every factory quote you receive is the original, unaltered price. No hidden markups, no percentage commissions, and full transparency at every step.

Ready to find rubber manufacturers in Vietnam?

📧 info@cosmosourcing.com 🌐 cosmosourcing.com/contact-us

info@cosmosourcing.com 

Jim Kennemer

Jim Kennemer is the founder and Managing Director of Cosmo Sourcing, a product sourcing company he launched in 2012 and has been building ever since, based in Ho Chi Minh City.

Over more than a decade, Jim has helped thousands of clients find and vet factories across Vietnam, Southeast Asia, Mexico, and beyond, covering everything from apparel and furniture to electronics and outdoor gear. His approach has always been hands-on: visiting factories in person, understanding production realities on the ground, and cutting through the noise that slows most sourcing projects down.

Cosmo Sourcing operates on a flat-fee model, which means Jim and his team work entirely in the client's interest. No commissions, no hidden markups, no conflicting incentives. With teams now operating across multiple countries and 10,000+ products sourced, the company has become a go-to resource for brands and businesses that want direct factory relationships without the guesswork.

When Jim writes about sourcing, it comes from real experience: factory floors, supplier negotiations, and the kind of hard-won knowledge you only get by doing this work for over a decade.

Previous
Previous

Top Products Made in Thailand: Sourcing and Manufacturing Guide

Next
Next

Fastener Manufacturers in Vietnam: Top Factories and Sourcing Guide