Travelling to Cambodia at short notice for a funeral is a hard week made harder by paperwork. There is no compassionate fast-track on the Cambodia eVisa — the timeline is 3 business days for everyone. If the funeral is within 72 hours, Visa on Arrival at KTI, SAI, or KOS is the realistic option. Here is the practical 2026 path, written gently.

There is no compassionate fast-track on the Cambodia eVisa — the standard timeline is 3 business days for everyone. If you have 3 or more business days, apply for the Tourist eVisa at $80 USD (~$122 AUD) all-in through us, Approved in 3 business days, Delivered as a printable PDF by email. If the funeral is within 72 hours, use Visa on Arrival at KTI Phnom Penh, SAI Siem Reap, or KOS Sihanoukville — $30 USD (~$46 AUD) cash, a passport-style photo, the arrival form completed on the aircraft, and a current Australian passport with at least six months validity. Each traveller needs their own visa and their own 14-field e-Arrival Card ($5 USD / ~$7.50 AUD).
If you are reading this from a kitchen table in Australia after a phone call you did not expect, we are sorry. There is no version of the next 48 hours that is not hard, and a logistics article cannot soften that. What it can do is take the visa side off your plate as cleanly as possible, so you can focus on the family side. The goal of this guide is to be honest with you about what the Cambodian visa system can and cannot do at short notice, and to point you at the option that works for your specific timeline.
Two things are worth saying upfront. First, there is no compassionate fast-track on the Cambodia eVisa. The system was not designed with bereavement travel in mind, and the 3 business day processing window applies the same way for a funeral as it does for a beach holiday. That can feel cold; it is, in practice, just how the system runs. Second, Cambodia does maintain Visa on Arrival service at all three international airports for Australian passport holders, which means a flight inside the 72-hour window is workable — you just take a slightly different path through the airport on landing.
This guide walks through both options in order — the standard eVisa for travellers with 3 or more business days, the Visa on Arrival workaround for travellers within 72 hours, the documentation worth carrying, what to expect at Cambodian Immigration on a bereavement trip, and a few practical notes on family travel where multiple Aussie relatives are flying in. Read alongside the broader Cambodia visa edge cases guide for related unusual scenarios. Our Cambodia visa for Australian citizens pulls all the pieces — cost, documents, processing — into one place.
When the funeral is four or more business days out, the Tourist eVisa is almost always the right answer. The application is the same regardless of trip purpose — Cambodian Immigration does not require a stated reason on the visa form, and the Tourist eVisa covers a bereavement trip exactly the same as it covers a holiday. You apply online, the file is checked end-to-end, and 3 business days later the approved PDF lands in your email.
Most Aussie travellers in this situation pick the standard Tourist eVisa, apply through us with Aussie-timezone support, and the visa is in their inbox before the flight boards. Free resubmission if Immigration flags a correction means a small typo in the application does not blow up the timeline. The
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A small practical note on the application form
The form asks for purpose of visit (tourism), address in Cambodia (the hotel or family member's home), and contact details. You do not need to state that the trip is for a funeral. If you would prefer not to think about the trip purpose while filling in the form, just use the hotel address and select 'tourism' — the visa is identical either way.
When the timing does not allow 3 business days for the eVisa, Visa on Arrival is the practical answer. Cambodia maintains VoA service at all three international airports — KTI Techo International in Phnom Penh, SAI in Siem Reap, and KOS in Sihanoukville — for Australian passport holders. The visa is issued at a dedicated counter after you disembark and before you reach the main Immigration desks, and the process is straightforward when you have the right items in hand.
Cash is the only payment method that consistently works at the VoA counter. Cards are sometimes accepted at KTI but the system is not reliable enough to bet a same-day flight on. Bring USD cash in good condition — damaged, marked, or older-series notes are sometimes refused. Most Aussies travelling in this scenario withdraw USD from their home bank ATM the day before flying or pick it up from an airport currency exchange before boarding. The Visa on Arrival airports guide for 2026 covers the operational details at each of the three airports.
Processing at the counter is typically 15-30 minutes, sometimes longer if multiple flights have arrived simultaneously. The officer checks the passport, takes the cash, attaches the visa sticker to a blank passport page, and stamps the entry. From there you walk through to the main Immigration desks for the formal arrival stamp and biometric capture, then through to baggage claim. Total time from aircraft door to airport exit is usually 60-90 minutes including VoA, Immigration, baggage, and customs.
A small detail worth knowing if you are landing late at night and the funeral is the following morning. KTI Techo International operates the VoA counter 24 hours a day, but the airport's onward-transport options thin out between roughly midnight and 5am. Pre-book a taxi or arrange a hotel airport-transfer in advance rather than relying on flagging one down at 2am. Most Phnom Penh hotels are 30-45 minutes from KTI by road, and the same is true of SAI in Siem Reap (15-20 minutes into town) and KOS in Sihanoukville (25-35 minutes depending on destination).
If the family member arriving has not flown into Cambodia before, the KTI airport guide for Phnom Penh walks through the practical layout — VoA counter location, Immigration desks, baggage claim, customs green/red channels, and the SIM-card kiosks just past arrivals that most Aussies pick up before leaving the terminal. None of this is dramatic, but knowing it ahead of time removes a small layer of friction at a moment when small layers add up.
Cambodian Immigration officers process tens of thousands of arrivals every day at KTI and do not generally ask questions about the purpose of a trip when the visa is in order. The interaction at the desk is brief — passport, visa, e-Arrival Card QR or print, biometric photo, stamp, smile, wave you through. The whole thing takes 60-90 seconds on a normal day.
If you are travelling on the back of bereavement and the officer does ask a follow-up question — usually only when the trip is unusually short, like 3 or 4 days for a same-week funeral — a calm, brief, honest answer is enough. 'Family funeral' is a complete answer. You do not need to provide details, you do not need to produce the death certificate at Immigration, and the officer will not ask for documentation unless there is something else flagged in your file. Most Aussies in this situation are surprised by how unremarkable the interaction is.
One thing worth carrying anyway is a digital copy of the death certificate or a letter from the funeral home, saved to your phone and to your email. It is rarely asked for at Cambodian Immigration, but it is genuinely useful for three other purposes: airline change-fee waivers if you need to adjust the return date, travel-insurance claims for any pre-paid bookings you have cancelled at short notice, and occasional follow-up paperwork at the funeral home in Cambodia. The first-trip planning checklist for Australians covers the broader documentation prep worth thinking through.
On the e-Arrival Card
Every air arrival into Cambodia, including a bereavement trip, needs a 14-field e-Arrival Card submitted within the 7-day window before flight. $5 USD (~$7.50 AUD) verified through us, Aussie-timezone support if you are filling it in at short notice. Each traveller needs their own — there is no family or group exemption.
Bereavement trips often involve several Australian relatives travelling together — siblings flying in from different states, a partner accompanying, sometimes children. The Cambodian visa system handles this cleanly with one simple rule: every traveller needs their own visa and their own e-Arrival Card. There is no family discount, no shared application, no group exemption. The good news is the applications run in parallel — if four siblings apply together for the eVisa on a Monday, all four approvals usually land together on the Thursday.
For families with children under 18, the Cambodia visa for children and minors guide covers the specific documentation worth carrying — a copy of the birth certificate showing both parents, the standard parental consent letter for solo-parent or grandparent travel, and the same Tourist eVisa or Visa on Arrival applies. Children pay the same fees as adults; there is no junior rate. If one of the travelling parents has a different surname from the child (common in Australian families where a parent has retained a maiden name), carry the marriage certificate or a brief explanatory letter as well.
On accommodation, Cambodia's hotel sector is well-equipped for short-notice bookings, particularly in Phnom Penh and Siem Reap where there is plenty of mid-range and serviced-apartment inventory. Many Aussie families in this situation book a serviced apartment for 5-7 nights — kitchen, washing machine, separate bedrooms — rather than a hotel, simply because it makes the practical week easier when everyone is grieving and short on sleep. None of this changes the visa side, but it is worth knowing.
Flight booking for the group is the other practical question that comes up. Most Aussie carriers and the major Asian connecting airlines — Qantas, Virgin Australia, Jetstar, Singapore Airlines, Cathay Pacific, AirAsia — will book multiple passengers on the same itinerary at short notice, often with a same-day pricing window if the booking is made within 48 hours of departure. If you are coordinating travel for relatives in different states, book each leg into Phnom Penh separately rather than trying to fit everyone on the same flight from a single Australian airport — the connecting hubs in Singapore, Bangkok, or Kuala Lumpur mean a Sydney sibling and a Perth sibling can both be at KTI within a few hours of each other even on different inbound flights.
One quiet detail worth thinking through ahead of time: Cambodian customs allows reasonable personal items at no duty, including modest amounts of cash and the contents of a small carry-on. If your family is sending physical items along with travellers — paperwork the funeral home needs, photographs, a small piece of jewellery to be returned to a relative — keep it in a single labelled envelope per traveller, declare anything substantial on the customs form, and avoid splitting items across multiple bags where confusion could arise at the green-channel customs desk. The how to apply for the Cambodia eVisa from Australia guide walks through the broader pre-flight prep including the documentation worth packing.
Bangkok is the most common stopover on the way to Phnom Penh for Aussie travellers.
Compare →Useful for families with relatives across the Vietnam-Cambodia border.
Compare →Less common but workable when family is spread across the region.
Compare →Singapore Airlines and Scoot both fly Singapore-Phnom Penh with regular daily slots.
Compare →Rare for a bereavement trip but useful context for regional planning.
Compare →When the call comes, the order of operations is straightforward, and you do not need to do all of it at once. Look up the funeral date and work out how many business days you have. If three or more, apply for the Tourist eVisa through us — $80 USD (~$122 AUD) all-in, Approved in 3 business days, Delivered as a printable PDF by email, Free resubmission if Immigration flags a correction, Aussie-timezone support. If fewer than three business days, plan on Visa on Arrival at KTI — $30 USD (~$46 AUD) cash, one photo, the arrival form, six-month passport validity.
Each traveller also needs the 14-field e-Arrival Card within the 7-day window before flight — $5 USD (~$7.50 AUD) verified through us, Aussie-timezone support. Carry a digital copy of the death certificate or funeral home letter on your phone for airline waivers and insurance claims, even though Cambodian Immigration is unlikely to ask. And give yourself permission to leave the rest of the trip planning to people who care about you — the visa side is the easiest part to take off your plate. The Cambodia first-trip planning checklist and the lost-passport emergency guide cover related logistics worth bookmarking.
Next steps and related reading for Australians: apply for your Cambodia eVisa when you are ready to lodge, bookmark our Cambodia visa hub for Australian citizens as the single canonical reference, skim the FAQ on Cambodia visa processing time for quick answers, and use our glossary of Cambodia visa terms to decode any acronym in this guide.