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The Cambodia e-Arrival QR code is the single piece of paper-or-pixel that lets you walk through the e-gate at KTI, SAI, or KOS without a manual desk detour. Here is the 3-place backup rule for Australians — screenshot, offline email folder, printed copy — plus iPhone and Android specifics for the 3am-after-a-long-flight scenario.

Three places, minimum. (1) Take a screenshot to your phone's camera roll the moment the QR arrives by email. (2) Save the email to a 'Cambodia trip' folder you can find offline. (3) Print one paper copy at home before you fly — yes, even for the e-Arrival, not just the eVisa. Airport wifi at the Cambodian Immigration queue is unreliable, and the QR may not load fast enough on hotel data. Our verified e-Arrival is $5 USD (~$7.50 AUD) — but the QR-saving strategy is identical whether you used us or filed direct.
Picture the moment. Your flight from Sydney has come in via Singapore, you have been awake for nineteen hours, and you are shuffling through the arrivals corridor at Techo International (KTI) at 3am Cambodian time. The e-gate signs are clear, the queue is short, and a friendly officer waves you toward the kiosk. You pull out your phone, thumb open the email app, and — nothing. The hotspot the airline gave you onboard has dropped. The Cambodian airport wifi sign-up page is loading sluggishly. The email with your e-Arrival QR code is somewhere in your inbox, but the preview pane is stalling on a server handshake. The officer is patient. The five people behind you are less patient.
That moment is preventable. Cambodian Immigration's e-Arrival QR is a static image — once you have it, you have it forever, no server call required. The trick is making sure 'forever' includes the moment you need it most: jet-lagged, low battery, and on a connection you do not control. The 3-place backup rule that follows is the version of this we now teach every verified e-Arrival customer, but it works identically whether you used us or filed direct on the Cambodian portal.
This guide pairs with our standalone Cambodia e-Arrival form guide and the 14-field walkthrough for Australians for the upstream fill-out step. By the time you are reading this, the assumption is that your QR has already landed in your inbox — and now you need to make sure it survives the trip from your desk in Australia to a kiosk in Cambodia.
The rule is simple. The QR code lives in three places before you board your flight to Cambodia, in three different mediums, with at least two of them accessible offline. Pick more than three if you want — there is no downside — but three is the floor. Travellers who keep the QR in only their email inbox and rely on airport wifi to load it are the ones we hear back from at the manual desk.
The moment the e-Arrival confirmation email lands in your inbox, open it, scroll to the QR code, and take a screenshot. On iPhone that is side-button plus volume-up; on Android it is power plus volume-down. The screenshot goes straight to your camera roll, lives there offline forever, and is one swipe away at the kiosk. This is the fastest path to a successful scan, and it is the backup we recommend Aussies open before they even reach the e-gate queue. Take a second screenshot of the booking reference number underneath the QR while you are at it — that is what we ask for if you need to contact us about a re-send.
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The second place is the original email itself, stored in a folder that syncs for offline access. In Gmail this means creating a label called 'Cambodia trip' and marking it for offline use in Gmail Settings → Offline. In Apple Mail it means a folder in the same Mailbox view, with the account set to 'Download Attachments → All' in Settings → Mail → Accounts. The point is not just having the email; it is having the email when the wifi has died. The QR image inside the email needs to be cached on the device, not pulled from a server at the moment you ask for it.
The third place is a printed copy on plain A4 white paper. One sheet. The Cambodian kiosk's QR reader scans paper as fluently as it scans a phone screen, and a paper copy is immune to flat batteries, cracked glass, and the airport-wifi handshake from hell. Print it at home before you fly, fold it into your passport, and forget about it. If everything else works, you never look at it. If anything goes wrong, you hand it to the immigration officer and the kiosk scans it in two seconds.
iPhone makes the 3-place rule easy if you know which corners of iOS to use. The camera roll handles the screenshot, the Files app handles the PDF, and a one-time Shortcut can automate offline-sync of any new Cambodia-related email attachment. None of this needs a paid app or a developer account.
First, the screenshot. As soon as the e-Arrival email lands, open it, scroll until the full QR is on screen, then side-button + volume-up. The screenshot goes to Recents in Photos. Open Photos, find it, tap the heart icon to favourite it — favourited photos are easier to find in the airport queue when you have 40 holiday snaps competing with the QR. While you are there, create a new album called 'Cambodia QR' and drag the screenshot in. The Cambodia eVisa mobile application step-by-step covers the broader mobile-first workflow for Australians who do everything on a phone.
Second, the Files app. The e-Arrival confirmation email usually has the QR attached as a PDF as well as embedded inline. Tap the PDF in the email, then the share sheet, then 'Save to Files'. Pick the 'On My iPhone' location — not iCloud — and create a folder called 'Cambodia Trip'. Local storage on the device is the offline-by-default option; iCloud needs a server handshake to pull the file the first time you open it after a long gap. Local wins.
Third, the Shortcut. iOS Shortcuts has a built-in action called 'Get Contents of URL' and another called 'Save File'. Build a one-step shortcut that takes a URL, downloads it, and saves it to 'On My iPhone → Cambodia Trip'. Run it once with the QR code URL from your confirmation email and you have a clean PDF copy on device that you can re-run any time. This is overkill for one trip but useful for travellers who go often, and it is the backbone of how some of our team test new e-Arrival flows.
Pre-load the screen before you queue
When you spot the e-gate queue at KTI/SAI/KOS, open Photos and pull up the QR screenshot before you join the line. Once it is on screen, switch to airplane mode + wifi off. The QR is now displayed offline and cannot be interrupted by a wandering cell tower or a captive-portal redirect from airport wifi. The reader scans it in two seconds.
Android gives you slightly different tools but the same 3-place result. Google Drive handles the offline file, Google Photos handles the screenshot, and the native Screenshots folder is itself a workable backup. The principle is the same: three places, two of them offline by default.
Step one is the screenshot. Power + volume-down on most Android phones, two-finger swipe-down on some Samsung models. The screenshot goes to a Screenshots subfolder inside Photos/Pictures. Open Google Photos, find the screenshot, and add it to a new album called 'Cambodia QR'. Tap the three-dot menu and 'Star' the photo — starred items are easier to find in a crowded gallery. Backup-and-sync is on by default in Google Photos, which means a free cloud copy as well; that copy is not your offline backup, but it is a nice insurance against losing the device.
Step two is Google Drive. Open the email attachment, tap the share menu, and pick 'Save to Drive'. Drop it in a folder named 'Cambodia Trip'. Then — this is the step Aussies skip — long-press the file in Drive and tick 'Available offline'. Drive caches it locally so it loads even with no wifi at the airport. Without this tick, Drive needs a server handshake to fetch the file every time, which is exactly the failure mode we are trying to avoid.
Step three is the native Screenshots folder, which is a hidden third backup most Aussies forget about. Even if you delete the screenshot from Photos, it usually still lives in /Pictures/Screenshots/ on internal storage, accessible from the Files app. Combined with the printed copy and the Drive offline file, that gives you four working backups on Android — comfortably more than three.
Phones get lost, laptops get reset, emails get accidentally deleted. If the QR vanishes between submission and flight, you have a few clean recovery paths depending on how you filed. None of them require panic, but all of them are easier with 12–24 hours of buffer rather than an hour at the airport.
If you filed direct on the Cambodian e-Arrival portal, the confirmation email contains a unique link that re-loads the QR code on demand. As long as the link is intact, the QR is recoverable. If the entire email is gone, the portal has a 'Retrieve my submission' flow keyed on your passport number plus the email you submitted with — Cambodian Immigration re-sends the confirmation to that address within 1–4 hours. The do-Australians-need-Cambodia-visa pillar covers the underlying entry rules if you are still working out whether you even need the e-Arrival.
If you applied through our verified e-Arrival, reply to your confirmation email with your passport number and a brief 'please re-send the QR'. We re-issue within 12–24 hours at no cost, and faster if you flag urgency. Verified customers also get a second human check on the file before re-issue, so any data drift between the eVisa and the e-Arrival gets caught at the same time. The how-to-apply-cambodia-evisa-australia guide walks through the upstream eVisa step if you are coordinating both.
If the worst case happens and you arrive at the Cambodian airport with no QR at all, the immigration officer on duty can manually look up your e-Arrival record using your passport. The check adds 15–30 minutes at the manual desk, the officer scans your passport, pulls the e-Arrival from Cambodian Immigration's system, and prints a paper QR slip for you on the spot. It is not catastrophic — but it is exactly the slow-lane detour the 3-place rule is designed to avoid.
Bangkok in, Siem Reap out — but the land border's closed.
Read the 2026 update →Classic Indochina pairing. Phu Quoc beaches are visa-free for 30 days.
See the combo guide →Overlooked third stop on the Indochina loop.
Plan the Laos route →Where most Aussies stop on the way through.
Sort the stopover →Bali or Cambodia for your next trip — or both?
Compare the two →Three places, two formats, one rule. Screenshot the QR to your camera roll the moment it arrives, save the email to a folder marked offline-available, and print one A4 paper copy for your carry-on. Pre-load the QR on your phone before you queue at KTI, SAI, or KOS, then switch to airplane mode so a wandering cell tower does not interrupt the scan. If you lose the QR before flying, re-download from the portal email link, or — if you used us — reply to our confirmation for a free re-send inside 12–24 hours. The Smartraveller Cambodia advisory is the standard pre-flight read for any DFAT updates that might shift the regional picture.
If you have not started the eVisa yet, do that first — the eVisa is the upstream document, the e-Arrival is the arrival-week form, and they have to match. The Cambodia visa for Australia citizens hub has the full sequence, pricing ($80 USD tourist / $90 USD business all-in), and timing. The Cambodia airports guide for Australians covers what each terminal looks like once you have walked through the e-gate with a clean QR in hand.
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 e arrival for quick answers, and use our glossary of Cambodia visa terms to decode any acronym in this guide.