The number you approve is the number you pay. The Cambodia eVisa for Americans is one flat US-dollar price with nothing added at the end — here is the full breakdown of what is in it and what is not.

No. The Cambodia eVisa is a single flat price billed in US dollars — $80 USD for the Tourist eVisa and $90 USD for the Business eVisa — and that is the entire charge. There is no processing fee bolted on at the end, no per-page surcharge, no surprise rush upsell, and no checkout step that inflates the total. The price you approve is the price that lands on your statement. The only line that can ever appear on top is your own US bank's foreign transaction fee, which your card issuer sets, not us. The e-Arrival Card is the single separate cost: $5 USD verified through us.
Here is the part most Americans want first. There are no hidden fees on the Cambodia eVisa. The price is one flat US-dollar number — $80 USD for the Tourist eVisa, $90 USD for the Business eVisa — and that number is the whole charge. Nothing gets appended at the final checkout step. No "processing fee," no "service surcharge," no per-page add-on, no rush-tier upsell that magically appears once your details are entered. The figure you approve is the figure you pay.
That is worth saying plainly because the visa-agent corner of the internet has trained American travelers to expect a bait-and-switch. You see one price on the landing page, then a different, larger one at the end after a "verification fee" and an "express handling charge" get stacked on. We do not do that, and this guide shows you exactly why — line by line, what is in the price, what is not, and the one external charge that is never ours to add.
Below we break the all-in total down to its parts, list everything it already covers, name the one fee your own bank can add, and show you how to read any visa checkout before you pay so a surprise total never catches you again. When you are ready, you can apply directly. For the line-by-line dollar math, our Cambodia visa cost for Americans guide lays out the full total.
The Cambodia eVisa for Americans is a single all-in price, quoted up front and charged once. Tourist eVisa: $80 USD. Business eVisa: $90 USD. Both are billed in US dollars, so there is no currency conversion for you to work out and no exchange-rate spread on our checkout. You enter your details, you see the total, you approve it, and that total is what we charge. There is no second screen where the number grows.
It helps to name the fees that simply do not exist here, because they are exactly the ones other visa sites lean on. There is no separate "government processing fee" added at the end as a surprise line. There is no per-applicant verification charge stacked on top of the base price. There is no express or priority tier that costs extra — every eVisa is approved in 3 business days, and there is no slower default we then charge you to skip. And there is no booking-style "convenience fee" that appears only once your card details are in.
Flat price vs. stacked checkout
A stacked checkout shows a low headline number, then adds a service fee, a handling fee, and an express fee on separate screens so the final total is far higher than advertised. A flat price shows the full number first and never moves it. The Cambodia eVisa here is the second kind: $80 USD Tourist, $90 USD Business, shown up front, charged once.
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The Cambodia e-Arrival Card is a separate step from your eVisa, and a small one — $5 USD verified through us, 14 fields, filed within 7 days before you fly. Here is exactly what that fee covers, why it is not bundled into your visa price, and the timing that keeps you moving at the gate.
The Cambodia e-Arrival Card is 14 fields across three sections, filed within 7 days before you land. Here is exactly what each field wants, in the order the form asks for it, plus the date-format slip that flags US travelers at the kiosk.
The Cambodia e-Arrival Card asks for 14 pieces of information across three sections — your identity, your flight and stay, and a short customs declaration. Here is exactly what each field wants and the four things to have in front of you before you start.
So the total is honest in both directions. It does not hide a low number to lure you in, and it does not bury extras to inflate the bill at the end. An $80 USD Tourist eVisa is $80 USD when you start and $80 USD when you finish. That is the whole point of a flat all-in price: there is nothing left to discover once you have read it.
A flat price is only fair if it actually covers what you need, and this one does. Rather than charging a thin base fee and then billing you for each thing that should have been included, the all-in total bundles the whole job. Here is exactly what your $80 USD Tourist or $90 USD Business eVisa already pays for.
In other words, the things that other agents quietly break out as add-on charges are part of the single number here. There is no menu of upsells after checkout. If you want to see precisely which line items sit inside the total, our breakdown of what is included in the Cambodia eVisa price for Americans itemizes every piece, and the Cambodia Tourist eVisa price for US citizens guide focuses on the $80 USD figure in detail.
There is exactly one line that can ever appear on top of the eVisa price, and it is not ours. It is your own US card issuer's foreign transaction fee. Because the payment is processed outside the United States, some US cards apply their standard foreign transaction fee — typically about 3% — even though the charge is already in dollars. On an $80 USD Tourist eVisa that is roughly $2.40; on a $90 USD Business eVisa, roughly $2.70.
The reason this matters to a no-hidden-fees promise is that it is not hidden and it is not ours. We do not add it, we do not receive it, and we cannot switch it off — it is written into your cardholder agreement and charged by your bank. A card with no foreign transaction fee pays exactly the USD price and nothing more. So the fee is real, it is predictable, and it is entirely under your control: it depends only on which card you use.
That is the honest full picture. The eVisa price is flat and complete; the only possible add-on is a fee your own issuer sets, which a no-fee card or a wallet linked to one removes entirely. If you want to know whether your card charges it before you pay, our guide to Cambodia eVisa foreign transaction fees for Americans walks through checking your card in two minutes, and our payment methods guide lists every card and wallet we accept.
There is one genuinely separate cost, and it is not hidden either — it is just a different document. The e-Arrival Card is the mandatory declaration every air arrival files, and it is $5 USD verified through us. It is 14 fields, filed within 7 days before you fly, and it is separate from the eVisa because it is a separate Cambodian requirement, not an add-on to the visa price. We name it plainly so it never reads as a surprise charge buried in the visa total.
The other question Americans ask under the "hidden fees" heading is what happens to their money if the application does not go through. The answer is that the all-in price includes free resubmission if Cambodian Immigration flags a correction, so a fixable issue does not cost you a second fee — you correct and resubmit at no extra charge. That is the opposite of a hidden cost: it is a cost we have already absorbed into the flat price so a small mistake never turns into a second payment.
If you want the full detail on outcomes — what is and is not refundable, and how a flagged application is handled end to end — our guide on Cambodia eVisa refunds if you are rejected for US citizens lays it out. The headline you can hold onto: there is no penalty fee for needing a second go at the upload, because free resubmission is already part of the price you paid.
A popular pairing for Americans — but all 7 land borders into Cambodia are closed.
Check Cambodia entry rules →The classic Indochina loop. Americans need a separate Vietnam eVisa, billed online.
See the entry points guide →The quieter third stop on the regional route for US travelers.
Compare the costs →Where many Americans connect on the way through to Phnom Penh.
See payment methods →Your destination — one flat USD price, nothing added at the end.
Start your eVisa →Put plainly: the Cambodia eVisa for Americans is $80 USD for the Tourist eVisa and $90 USD for the Business eVisa, billed in dollars, approved in 3 business days, and delivered as a printable PDF by email. That single number already includes free resubmission and US-timezone support. There is no processing fee added at the end, no per-page surcharge, and no express upsell — the price you approve is the price you pay.
The only line that can ever appear on top is your own US bank's foreign transaction fee, which a no-fee card removes entirely. The only genuinely separate cost is the $5 USD e-Arrival Card, named up front, never buried. Everything else you might fear from a visa checkout — the stacked fees, the surprise totals, the pre-ticked upgrades — is exactly what a flat all-in price is built to avoid.
Next steps and related reading for Americans: apply for your Cambodia eVisa when you are ready to pay, see the line-by-line math in the Cambodia visa cost for Americans guide, confirm whether your card adds a fee with our Cambodia eVisa foreign transaction fees for Americans guide, and bookmark the Cambodia visa for United States citizens hub as your single reference for everything else.