ما از کوکیهای ضروری برای اجرای سایت و از کوکیهای اختیاری برای درک نحوه استفاده از آن استفاده میکنیم. شما میتوانید همه کوکیها را بپذیرید، کوکیهای اختیاری را رد کنید یا انتخابهای خود را سفارشی کنید. سیاست کوکیها
در حال بارگذاری…
Cambodia eVisa Photo for Babies & Kids: US Families
مشخصات عکس10 دقیقه خوانده شده
Cambodia eVisa Photos for Babies and Kids: What American Families Need for Each Child
Every child on a family trip needs their own Cambodia eVisa photo, and the rules are the adult rules — plain white background, eyes open, neutral face, no parent hand in frame. That last one is what trips families up. Here is the lay-down trick for babies and the eye-level routine for toddlers that pass the upload check first time.
HW
Written byهانا ویتلاک
10 دقیقه خوانده شدهUpdated
What does a Cambodia eVisa photo for a baby or child need to be?
A recent passport-style color photo of the child against a plain white or off-white background, with the full face visible and centered, eyes open, and a neutral expression — no smile, no pacifier, no toy, no glasses, and no parent hand or arm in the frame. Submit it as a JPEG under 2 MB, ideally 600×600 pixels or larger and roughly square. For a baby who cannot sit up, lay them on their back on a plain white sheet and shoot straight down from directly above. The spec is identical to the adult photo, which means every child needs their own — there is no shared family photo and no exemption for infants.
نکات کلیدی
Every child needs their own Cambodia eVisa photo — there is no shared family photo and no exemption for babies. The infant spec is the same as the adult spec.
The rule American parents miss most: no parent hand, arm, or second person in the frame. For a baby that cannot sit up, lay them on a plain white sheet and shoot straight down from above.
Eyes open and a neutral expression are required at every age. No pacifier, no toy, no smile if you can manage it — a calm, relaxed face is what the upload validator wants.
Background, file, and framing match the adult photo: plain white or off-white, JPEG under 2 MB, ideally 600×600 pixels or larger, full face centered with even daylight.
A flagged child photo is a same-day fix, not a fresh application — free resubmission is included and the 3-business-day clock keeps running once you re-upload.
Why every child needs their own photo
The Cambodia eVisa photo spec for a child
The lay-down trick for a baby who cannot sit up
Toddlers and older children — get to their eye level
The flags that bounce a child photo
One photo, one file, one child — keep them matched
Yes. There is no exemption for infants — every child, including a newborn, needs their own eVisa and their own photo on the same plain-white-background, eyes-open, neutral-expression rule as an adult. There is no shared family photo. The easiest method for a baby is to lay them on their back on a plain white sheet and shoot straight down from directly above, which keeps the background clean and removes any need for a hand to prop them up.
How do I take a Cambodia visa photo for a baby who cannot sit up?
Lay the baby flat on their back on a smooth plain white sheet, blanket, or towel with nothing else in the frame, and shoot straight down from directly above with the phone held parallel to the surface. The white bedding becomes the background and gravity keeps the head centered, so no hand is needed. Use daylight from a nearby window rather than the flash, time it for when the baby is calm and alert, and take a dozen frames to catch one with the eyes open.
Can a parent hold the baby in the Cambodia eVisa photo?
No. A parent hand, arm, or any second person in the frame is the most common reason a family photo is flagged. The child has to appear alone against the plain background. For a baby who cannot hold their head up, the lay-down method — flat on a white sheet, shot from above — solves this without anyone needing to steady the child.
Do the eyes have to be open in a baby Cambodia visa photo?
Yes. Eyes open is required at every age, and a sleeping newborn photo is one of the most common child rejections. Take the shot when the baby is calm and alert rather than drowsy, and shoot many frames so you can pick the one with both eyes clearly open and a relaxed expression.
How do I photograph a toddler for the Cambodia eVisa?
Get down to the toddler eye level rather than shooting down from adult height, which distorts a small face. Sit them in a chair draped with a plain white sheet or stand them about two feet from a plain white wall, use the rear camera in daylight from a side window, and keep every toy, pacifier, and sibling out of the frame. A calm, closed-mouth expression passes — you are only avoiding a big grin, a scrunched face, or a cry.
Can my children share one photo or one eVisa?
No to both. Each child applies on their own passport for their own eVisa, and each eVisa needs its own photo. There is no family bundle and no shared image — a family of four is four separate $80 USD applications, each with its own headshot. When filling several forms at once, name each photo file clearly and check each application against the right passport so you do not load the wrong child photo.
Hannah runs the Rejection & Resubmission desk at VisaToCambodia. Child photos are the single biggest reason a family application loses a day, so her team has logged every flag the upload validator throws at babies and toddlers and turned it into a routine American parents can run on a bedsheet in five minutes.
You get an email with a specific list of what to re-upload — usually a fresh shot with the eyes open, no hand in frame, or against a plain white sheet. There is no extra charge: free resubmission is included in the all-in price, and once you reply with a corrected photo the 3-business-day clock keeps running. A flagged child photo is a same-day fix, not a fresh application.