Cambodia e-Visa: How to Apply, Cost, Processing Time & Validity (2026)

Checked 2026-06.

Checked 2026-06: Cambodia issues an electronic visa (e-Visa) for most travellers through the official government portal at evisa.gov.kh, with the tourist (Type-T) entry fee at roughly US$30 plus a small online processing charge and typical turnaround of a few business days. Fees and rules change — confirm the current figure on the official portal before you pay.

iVisa is a paid concierge that completes the form, reviews your documents and handles the application for you — handy if you want hand-holding or a guided process. Be clear-eyed: it adds a service fee well above the government fee, so it only makes sense if you value the convenience, not the lowest price.

Apply for a Cambodia e-visa via iVisa

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ItemDetailValidityCostNotes
Tourist e-Visa (Type-T)Single entry; apply online at evisa.gov.kh90 days from issue to enter; up to 30-day stay~US$30 gov fee + ~US$6 portal processing (≈US$36 total)Most common for holidays; extendable once (~30 days) in-country. Figures dated, checked 2026-06.
Ordinary / Business e-Visa (Type-E)Single entry; for work/business/longer stays90 days from issue to enter; up to 30-day stay~US$35 gov fee + portal processingCan lead to in-country extensions/conversions. Confirm exact fee on official portal.
Official portal (DIY)Passport bio-page scan + passport photo; card paymentPer visa type aboveGovernment fee + ~US$6 processing only — no markupCheapest route. Typical processing ~3 business days; apply ~1 week ahead.
iVisa (concierge service)They complete the form & review your documentsPer visa type aboveService fee ON TOP of the gov fee (flat package, materially higher)Pay only if you want hand-holding or a faster track — not the cheapest option.

The Cambodia e-Visa is an electronic entry authorisation you apply for online before you travel, available to nationals of most countries. The application lives on the official government portal at evisa.gov.kh: you upload a passport bio-page scan and a recent passport-style photo, pay by card, and receive a PDF visa by email that you print and carry. There is no embassy visit and no sticker — the approval is the printed PDF. Your passport must be valid for at least six months from your date of entry and have at least one blank page.

Cambodia's e-Visa comes in category types. The Tourist e-Visa (Type-T) is the one most leisure travellers need. There is also an Ordinary/Business e-Visa (Type-E), used by people visiting for work, business or longer-term purposes and which can lead to extensions and other in-country visa conversions. Both are single-entry: once you leave Cambodia the visa is used up, so if you plan to exit and re-enter you would need a new visa or a different visa class. Always pick the category that matches your real purpose of travel.

On cost, be careful with old figures online. Effective 1 January 2025 the government reduced the e-Visa entry fee: the Tourist (Type-T) fee dropped to about US$30 (from US$36) and the Ordinary (Type-E) fee to about US$35 (from US$42). On the official portal an online processing charge of roughly US$6 is typically added on top, so a tourist e-visa commonly works out to around US$36 in total. Treat these as approximate, dated figures (checked 2026-06) — the official portal shows the exact amount at checkout, and that is the number to trust.

On timing and validity: processing usually takes around three business days, though it can be quicker or slower depending on volume, so apply at least a week before you fly. The e-Visa is generally valid for 90 days from the date of issue, meaning you must enter Cambodia within that window; once admitted you may stay up to 30 days. A tourist stay can usually be extended once inside the country, by about 30 days, through the immigration office — that is a separate, in-country process, not part of the online application.

Here is the honest money point. You can apply yourself directly on the official portal (evisa.gov.kh) and pay only the government fee plus the small portal processing charge — no middleman markup. Third-party services such as iVisa will do the legwork for you, but they charge a service fee on top of the government fee, so the all-in price is materially higher (often quoted as a flat package well above the gov amount). If you're comfortable filling a short online form and uploading two files, doing it yourself is the cheapest route; pay for a service only if you specifically want someone to handle it, review your documents, or push a faster turnaround.

Check your specific case with the visa-on-arrival eligibility checker.

FAQ

How much does a Cambodia e-visa cost in 2026?

Since 1 January 2025 the tourist (Type-T) government fee is about US$30 and the Ordinary (Type-E) about US$35, down from US$36/US$42. The official portal usually adds a ~US$6 online processing charge, so a tourist e-visa commonly totals around US$36. These are dated, approximate figures (checked 2026-06) — the exact amount appears at checkout on evisa.gov.kh.

Can I apply for the Cambodia e-visa myself, or do I need an agency?

You can apply yourself on the official portal at evisa.gov.kh and pay only the government fee plus the small processing charge — no agency needed. Paid services like iVisa add a service fee on top of the government fee, so they cost more; use one only if you want someone to handle the application or chase a faster turnaround.

How long does the Cambodia e-visa take to process?

Processing typically takes around three business days, though it can vary with demand. Apply at least a week before your trip to leave a buffer.

How long is the Cambodia e-visa valid and how long can I stay?

The e-Visa is generally valid for 90 days from the date of issue, so you must enter Cambodia within that window. Once admitted you can stay up to 30 days, and a tourist stay can usually be extended once (about 30 days) at the immigration office inside Cambodia. It is a single-entry visa.