CompareMarch 20267 min read

Cambodia vs Thailand: Which to Visit First?

Both are easy to reach, friendly to first-time visitors, and unforgettable in different ways. Here is an honest comparison to help you choose.

Long-tail boats moored at a calm tropical beach in Thailand at golden hour

Key Takeaways

  • First trip to Southeast Asia, want variety and polish โ†’ start with Thailand.
  • Want fewer crowds, lower prices, and one unforgettable wonder โ†’ start with Cambodia.
  • Cambodia is roughly 25โ€“35% cheaper day-to-day than Thailand at similar quality.
  • Two weeks lets you combine both easily โ€” Bangkok and Siem Reap are a short flight apart.

The short answer

If this is your first trip to Southeast Asia and you want polished infrastructure, world-class food, and a wide variety of experiences in one country โ€” start with Thailand.

If you want fewer tourists, a single unforgettable wonder (Angkor), and a slower pace โ€” start with Cambodia.

Best of both

If you have two weeks, the best answer is "both" โ€” they are easy to combine and Bangkok โ†’ Siem Reap is a short flight.

The headline experiences

Thailand: Bangkok's street food, the temples of Chiang Mai, the islands of Krabi and Koh Lanta, and Michelin-listed restaurants alongside 50-cent noodle stalls.

Cambodia: the temple complex of Angkor at sunrise, the riverside calm of Kampot, the laid-back islands of Koh Rong, and the genuinely moving history of Phnom Penh.

Cost

Both countries are affordable by Western standards, but Cambodia is meaningfully cheaper day to day. Expect to spend roughly 25โ€“35% less in Cambodia for similar quality accommodation and meals.

Thailand has more luxury options at the top end; Cambodia has fewer 5-star choices outside Phnom Penh and Siem Reap.

Ease of travel

Thailand has better domestic flights, faster trains, and a denser tourist infrastructure. Getting between cities is faster and more predictable.

Cambodia is improving fast but distances still take longer. Phnom Penh to Siem Reap is a 45-minute flight or a 6-hour drive.

Visas

Many nationalities get visa-exempt entry to Thailand for 30โ€“60 days. For Cambodia, almost everyone needs a visa โ€” but the eVisa is fast, online, and approved in 3 business days.

Combining the two

If you are flying into Bangkok first, apply for the Cambodia eVisa online before you leave home. You will not need to visit any embassy.

How to combine them

A common 10โ€“14 day route: fly into Bangkok (2โ€“3 nights) โ†’ bus or flight to Siem Reap for Angkor (3 nights) โ†’ flight to Phnom Penh (2 nights) โ†’ flight or bus to a Thai island for the back end of the trip.

Borders between the two are open and well-trafficked, and one-way flights between Bangkok and Siem Reap are inexpensive.

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Cambodia vs Thailand: Which to Visit First? | VisaToCambodia Blog