Dutch citizens can apply for the Cambodia e-Visa online because Cambodia maintains only an Honorary Consul in Breda (not Amsterdam). Tourist visa $80, business visa $90, approved by the Cambodian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 3 business days and delivered as a QR code PDF for your Schiphol KLM departure.
The complete picture of the Cambodia tourist visa and Cambodia e-Visa for Dutch citizens: fees, processing time, requirements, and what actually happens at the border.
Cambodia eVisa for Dutch citizens
Dutch passport holders need a Cambodia visa for every visit, and the electronic visa is the practical route because there is no full Cambodian embassy in the Netherlands. The Honorary Consul in Breda offers limited services, so most Dutch travellers go online instead. The Cambodian Ministry of Foreign Affairs approves the eVisa in 3 business days, and the QR code PDF is accepted at Phnom Penh, Siem Reap and Sihanoukville airports as well as the main land borders. KLM flights from Amsterdam-Schiphol via Bangkok or Singapore are the natural connection, and the e-Visa is locked in before you check in at Schiphol.
Cambodia tourist visa $80, Cambodia business visa $90 — both prices are all-inclusive. Upload your passport bio page and a photo, fill in a few details, and your electronic visa lands in your inbox before you fly.
What you don't need:
No embassy visit or appointment
No flight booking required before you apply
No hotel reservation needed
No bank statement or proof of funds
No paperwork beyond your passport and photo
Once approved, your eVisa allows a 30-day single entry stay within 3 months of the issue date. Need longer? Extend at any local immigration office in Cambodia before your 30 days run out.
The Cambodian Honorary Consul in the Netherlands sits in Breda, not Amsterdam — but the online e-Visa is the route most Dutch travellers prefer. In-country visa extensions cost roughly $40–$50 at the General Department of Immigration in Phnom Penh. Per ANWB travel guidance, Dutch passports must have 6 months validity beyond your Cambodia arrival date. Dutch travellers usually depart Schiphol (AMS) via Bangkok or Doha — pre-approved eVisa skips the on-arrival queue.
Tip for Dutch travellers: Tip for Dutch travellers: the August summer holiday is peak season for Dutch backpackers heading to Cambodia, so apply 7-10 days before your Schiphol departure to keep buffer time and stay inside the 90-day visa validity window. Your card statement will show the equivalent in EUR at checkout.
From application to email
How Dutch Citizens Apply for a Cambodia eVisa
The Cambodia online visa application takes 4 simple steps — form to inbox in 3 business days. Our team handles everything between paying and printing your approved electronic visa.
Fill your application
Submit your application with a colour passport-style photo and a scan of your Dutch passport bio page. No flight booking, no hotel reservation and no Honorary Consul visit is required.
01
Pay securely
Pay the $80 USD tourist or $90 USD business fee by card. The transaction settles in USD with the Cambodian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and your card statement will show the equivalent in EUR at checkout.
02
Expert review & submit
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs reviews and returns the approved electronic visa within 3 business days. Dutch passports are processed under standard timelines with no extra paperwork.
03
eVisa delivered to your email
Complete the separate Cambodia e-Arrival form within 7 days of your AMS-Bangkok or AMS-Singapore departure. Save both QR codes to your phone and print a backup copy for the boarding gate and the Phnom Penh or Siem Reap immigration counter.
04
What you need
What Dutch Citizens Need for a Cambodia Visa Application
Valid passport
Valid Dutch passport with at least 6 months remaining validity from your arrival date in Cambodia — the standard Cambodia visa requirements rule.
Passport-style photo
Digital passport-style photo on white background. We resize it to government specs automatically.
Passport bio page scan
Clear scan or photo of your passport bio page (the page with your photo and details). JPG, PNG, PDF, or HEIC up to 10 MB.
Email address
Active email address where your approved eVisa will be delivered. Use one you check daily.
Payment method
Visa, Mastercard, American Express, PayPal, Apple Pay, or Google Pay. All payments are in USD.
Travel dates
Your planned arrival date in Cambodia. Your eVisa is valid for 3 months from the issue date, not your travel date.
No flight booking required
No hotel reservation required
No bank statement required
That's everything. No embassy appointment. No paperwork. No surprises.
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Choose your visa
Tourist or Business eVisa: Which Should Dutch Travellers Choose?
Pick the Cambodia eVisa type that matches your travel purpose. Choosing wrong can result in entry denial or fines under Cambodian immigration law.
Tourist eVisa
For leisure travel, family visits and short stays.
The Tourist eVisa is the right choice for most Dutch travellers visiting Cambodia. It covers sightseeing in Siem Reap, beach time in the Koh Rong islands, visiting Angkor Wat, and staying with family or friends — anything that isn't paid work or formal business activity.
Best for: tourism, leisure, visiting family or friends, short cultural trips
Allows: hotel stays, sightseeing, beach travel, river cruises
Does NOT allow: paid work, formal business meetings, signing deals
Apply: 100% online in 10 minutes — no embassy visit needed
All-inclusive pricing — government processing fee, expert review, photo optimisation, and e-Arrival guidance bundled in. No surprises at the border.
Dutch travellers comparing routes find the e-Visa is the cleanest path because Cambodia maintains only an Honorary Consul in Breda, with limited services and no full mission in Amsterdam. Visa on arrival is available at $30-36 USD cash, but the online visa at $80 USD all-inclusive is the option ANWB highlights and the route most KLM passengers use to clear entry before boarding at Schiphol. The QR code PDF is accepted at every major airport and land border, and extension inside Cambodia costs roughly $40-50 USD for a further 30 days on the Type T tourist visa.
Important: Using a Tourist visa for business activities (meetings, deals, employment) violates Cambodian immigration law and may result in deportation or future entry bans. When in doubt, choose Business.
Border entry
Where Dutch Citizens Can Enter Cambodia with Their eVisa
The approved Cambodia e-Visa entry points cover every international airport and the major land borders — except where noted below.
Arriving by Air
Phnom Penh International
Airport code PNH
Angkor International, Siem Reap
Airport code SAI
Sihanoukville International
Airport code KOS
Arriving by Land
Bavet
Land crossing from Vietnam
Tropaeng Kreal
Land crossing from Laos
O Smach
Land crossing from Thailand
Important: eVisa is only valid at designated entry points. Cham Yeam and Poipet are currently closed for eVisa entry — verify before travel. Land borders sometimes have stricter document checks than airports; arriving by air is the smoothest option for first-time visitors. Last confirmed: May 2026.
Smart choice
Cambodia eVisa vs Visa on Arrival for Dutch Citizens
Both options exist for Dutch travellers. The Cambodia e-Visa beats the Cambodia Visa on Arrival on every dimension that matters — price predictability, queue time, and pre-approval before you fly.
Dutch backpackers visiting during the August summer holiday typically circuit through Siem Reap for Angkor Wat, Bayon and Ta Prohm, then move on to Phnom Penh for the Royal Palace, the National Museum and Tuol Sleng. The Koh Rong archipelago and Sihanoukville are the coastal escape, while the Mekong towns of Kratie and Kampot suit slower itineraries. The 30-day Type T stay and 90-day visa validity from issue make a Cambodia-Vietnam-Thailand backpacker loop a natural fit, with overland borders at Poipet and Bavet both accepting the online visa.
Tourist eVisa covers this
Angkor Wat, Siem Reap
The world's largest religious monument and Cambodia's most iconic site. Most visitors base themselves in Siem Reap for 2–3 days to explore the temple complex at sunrise.
Tourist eVisa covers this
Phnom Penh
Cambodia's capital blends French colonial architecture with vibrant street markets, the Royal Palace, and sobering history at the Killing Fields and S-21 museum.
Tourist eVisa covers this
Koh Rong Islands
Some of Southeast Asia's last undeveloped beaches. Accessible by ferry from Sihanoukville — no internal flights or extra visas needed.
Tourist eVisa covers this
Kampot & Kep
A slow-paced riverside town famous for its pepper farms, French colonial buildings, and the freshwater crab market at Kep — a perfect 2-day escape from the cities.
Your Cambodia eVisa covers all regions — no internal visa or border crossing required once you're inside the country.
Practical advice from travellers who've been — currency, connectivity, weather, and the eVisa print rule that catches everyone out at Cambodian immigration.
Currency
US dollars are accepted almost everywhere alongside Cambodian Riel. You do not need to exchange currency before flying — small change comes back in Riel.
Best time to visit
November to April (dry season). May to October brings monsoon rains — southern coastal regions are most affected. November to February is the sweet spot for Angkor Wat.
Connectivity
Buy a local SIM at Phnom Penh or Siem Reap airport ($2–3 USD). Most foreign phones work on GSM. Metfone and Smart are the recommended carriers — both have airport kiosks.
Health
No mandatory vaccinations. Hepatitis A and Typhoid are commonly recommended. Drink bottled water only — even in major hotels. Carry mosquito repellent for evening visits to temples.
Print your eVisa
Print 2 copies of your approved eVisa on A4 paper. Cambodian immigration does NOT accept mobile screenshots. We email PDF-ready files with print instructions.
Getting around
Tuk-tuks are everywhere — agree the fare first. The PassApp and Grab apps give metered, cashless rides in Phnom Penh and Siem Reap. Domestic flights link the major cities.
Also traveling?
Visa Requirements for Other Southeast Asia Countries
Many Dutch travellers booking a Cambodia visa for Dutch citizens combine their trip with neighbouring countries. Here's what you need to know about visas for nearby Southeast Asia destinations.
Everything left to know before you apply for your Cambodia tourist visa or Cambodia e-Visa. If your question isn't here, our team replies via WhatsApp or email within minutes.
Do Dutch citizens need a visa for Cambodia?
Yes — Dutch passport holders need a Type T tourist visa or Type E business visa for any stay. The Cambodia electronic visa is approved by the Cambodian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in 3 business days, with no embassy visit needed anywhere in the Netherlands.
Is there a Cambodian embassy in the Netherlands?
No — Cambodia maintains only an Honorary Consul in Breda (not Amsterdam), with no full embassy in the Netherlands. Most Dutch travellers use the online visa instead because the Honorary Consul has limited services compared to a full Cambodian mission.
How much is the Cambodia eVisa for Dutch citizens?
The Type T tourist online visa costs $80 USD and the Type E business eVisa costs $90 USD through our service. The Cambodian government fee alone is $30 USD; the rest covers processing and Ministry of Foreign Affairs submission. Your card statement will show the equivalent in EUR at checkout.
How long does the Cambodia visa take for Dutch passport holders?
Standard processing for Dutch citizens is 3 business days. Travellers flying from Amsterdam-Schiphol with a connection in Bangkok, Singapore or Doha should apply about a week before departure to leave buffer time.
How much does it cost to extend a Cambodia tourist visa for Dutch travellers?
Visa extension inside Cambodia typically costs USD 40-50 for a further 30 days on the Type T tourist visa, paid in cash at the General Department of Immigration in Phnom Penh. Dutch travellers planning longer stays often choose the Type E business visa instead because it can be extended indefinitely.
Can Dutch citizens get a Cambodia visa on arrival?
Yes — visa on arrival is available to Dutch passport holders at Phnom Penh, Siem Reap and Sihanoukville airports for $30-36 USD cash. The e-Visa is preferred because the price is locked in and there are no airport queues.
How long can Dutch citizens stay in Cambodia on the tourist eVisa?
The Type T tourist online visa allows a 30-day stay from the date of entry, with the visa itself valid 90 days from issue. Dutch travellers can extend once inside Cambodia or switch to a Type E business visa for longer stays.
What does ANWB say about Cambodia visas for Dutch travellers?
ANWB and the Dutch government recommend obtaining a visa before travel, with the electronic visa highlighted as the simplest option. Dutch passports must be valid for at least 6 months beyond entry and have one blank page.
What documents do Dutch citizens need for the Cambodia online visa?
A passport valid 6 months beyond entry, a colour passport-style photo, and a card for the $80 USD payment. No flight booking, no hotel reservation and no Honorary Consul visit is required.