The visa side is identical for Aussie wheelchair travellers — Tourist eVisa $80 USD (~$122 AUD), Approved in 3 business days. The accessibility side is the part worth real planning: KTI is genuinely wheelchair-friendly, Phnom Penh is mixed, Angkor varies temple by temple, and travel insurance with proper mobility-aid coverage is the line that matters most.

The visa logistics are standard for Aussie wheelchair travellers — Tourist eVisa $80 USD (~$122 AUD), Approved in 3 business days, Delivered as a printable PDF by email, with Free resubmission if Immigration flags a correction. KTI Phnom Penh is genuinely wheelchair-friendly with jetbridge boarding, lifts, and accessible toilets across all levels. The accessibility-side work is on the ground — Angkor temples vary site by site (Angkor Wat workable on the ramped sections, Bayon and Ta Prohm harder), Phnom Penh is mixed with good newer hotels but curb-heavy older streets, and travel insurance with explicit mobility-aid coverage is the single line worth getting right before you fly. Smartraveller is the document to read for the broader picture.
Cambodia in 2026 is more accessible to Australian wheelchair travellers than it was even five years ago, and substantially more accessible than the broader Southeast Asian region's average. That is the headline. The new KTI airport in Phnom Penh, which replaced the old PNH terminal on 9 September 2025, was built to international accessibility standards. Newer hotels have proper accessible rooms with roll-in showers and grab rails. A handful of specialist operators run dedicated wheelchair-accessible Angkor itineraries. And the visa side itself is genuinely simple — there is no separate pathway, no medical declaration, no extra Immigration step.
At the same time, parts of Cambodia remain a stretch for solo independent wheelchair travel — older Phnom Penh footpaths, jungle-temple sites at Angkor, smaller boutique hotels in heritage buildings, tuk-tuks as the default ground transport. The point of this guide is not to put you off, because Cambodia is a fantastic destination. The point is to help you plan the parts that need planning, so the trip lives up to what you have imagined for it.
This guide covers the visa standardly — the Tourist eVisa is the same product on the same timeline as for any other Aussie traveller — and then spends real time on the on-the-ground accessibility realities: KTI's airport handling, the spectrum at Angkor, the mixed Phnom Penh picture, and the travel insurance lines that genuinely matter. Read alongside the broader Cambodia visa edge cases guide for related unusual scenarios. For the umbrella view across cost, processing time, and documents, see the Cambodia eVisa for Australian travellers hub.
Start with what does not change. Cambodian Immigration has no separate eVisa pathway for wheelchair users, no extra medical declaration, no different fee structure, no special arrival queue. The Tourist eVisa for an Aussie wheelchair traveller is the same single-entry, 30-day-stay, three-month-validity product on the same processing timeline. You apply through us, the visa is Approved in 3 business days, Delivered as a printable PDF by email, with Free resubmission if Immigration flags a correction. Print the PDF, slot it in your travel wallet alongside your passport, and that is the visa side handled.
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Four nights Siem Reap for the temples, three for the harder history of Phnom Penh, three for the slow river days of Kampot, three for the warm water of Koh Rong, one buffer night for the day you wish you had. Here is the honest 14-day Cambodia plan for Aussies in 2026 — costs in AUD, transport in plain English, eVisa timing baked in.
The 12-month Business eVisa extension is the longest commitment-level Cambodia stay Aussies can buy in-country. ~$300–400 USD (~$457–609 AUD) through a Phnom Penh agent on top of the $90 USD (~$137 AUD) Business eVisa, 7–14 business days. Best per-month rate of any extension — but only worth it if you genuinely plan to use the back half of the year.
Three nights in Siem Reap for Angkor, three nights in Phnom Penh for the riverfront and the harder history, one buffer night for the day you wish you had. Here is the honest 7-day Cambodia plan for Aussies in 2026 — costs in AUD, transport in plain English, and the eVisa timing baked in.
The two practical points worth flagging on the application form itself: use the same name spelling that appears on your Australian passport, and upload a current passport-style photo that meets the standard specifications. If you have a different signature pattern because of dexterity reasons, that is fine — Cambodia does not require a wet signature on the eVisa application, and Immigration does not match signature against the passport for entry. The application path is identical to that walked through in the how to apply for the Cambodia eVisa from Australia guide.
On the e-Arrival Card and mobility aids
The Cambodia e-Arrival Card has 14 fields, costs $5 USD (~$7.50 AUD) verified through us, and applies to every air arrival. There is no separate field for mobility aids — a wheelchair, walking frame, or portable hoist is treated as personal medical equipment and travels under the same rules. The airline is the side that needs the heads-up on equipment dimensions and battery type for powered chairs.
Techo International Airport (KTI), which replaced the old PNH on 9 September 2025, is the most genuinely accessible airport in Cambodia and the best news in this whole guide. The terminal was designed to international accessibility standards from the ground up — flat-floor circulation between check-in, security, immigration, and the gates; lifts between every level; accessible toilets on every floor; lowered counters at Immigration and customs; and crucially, jetbridge boarding as the standard rather than apron buses and stair-trucks. That last point matters enormously, because the old PNH airport relied on stair-truck boarding for a meaningful number of flights, which is the single biggest accessibility headache at older Southeast Asian airports.
Inside the terminal at KTI, an Australian wheelchair user will find a generally smooth path through arrivals — assistance is brought to the jetbridge as the flight disembarks, Immigration has lowered desks at one or two positions, the baggage claim has lifts to ground level, and the airport's ground transport pickup area is on a single flat-floor level with no kerb to negotiate to a van. The full Cambodia airports guide for Australians walks through the broader logistics across KTI, SAI Siem Reap, and KOS Sihanoukville. The dedicated KTI airport guide for Phnom Penh has more terminal-level detail.
SAI Siem Reap, the main international airport for the Angkor temples, is smaller and older than KTI but has been retrofitted with lifts, ramped corridors, and accessible toilets, and now also uses jetbridge boarding for most international flights. Sihanoukville (KOS) is more variable — apron-bus boarding is more common, the terminal is smaller, and ground assistance is patchier. If you have a choice of arrival point, KTI Phnom Penh is the smoothest entry; SAI Siem Reap is the second choice; KOS is workable but plan ground assistance carefully.
Here is where the planning conversation gets specific. Angkor is the reason most Aussies come to Cambodia, and the temples vary enormously in how accessible they actually are. The Apsara Authority, which manages the Angkor Archaeological Park, has installed timber boardwalk ramps and graded access paths at several of the main sites over the past decade, but many of the temples are 800-year-old Khmer architectural complexes — steep stairs, narrow doorways, uneven flagstone courtyards, and root-broken paths in the jungle sections. No amount of retrofitting changes the underlying built form.
The practical move for most Aussie wheelchair travellers is to book through a specialist operator who runs wheelchair-accessible Angkor itineraries. Several Siem Reap operators have invested in accessible tuk-tuks with ramps, accessible vans for longer-distance temple loops, and locally trained assistants who know which sites work and where to position for the best photographs. Costs run roughly $80-150 USD (~$122-229 AUD) per day for a private accessible tour, depending on duration and inclusions. The 7-day itinerary for Australians has a broader template you can adapt with accessibility-aware substitutions.
Sunrise at Angkor Wat with a wheelchair
The classic Angkor Wat sunrise viewpoint across the reflecting pool is reached by a packed-earth path that is wheelchair-workable in dry conditions but turns to mud in wet season. April-October trips should plan a paved alternative viewpoint from the causeway itself, which is just as photogenic and avoids the path.
Phnom Penh splits sharply into the international-hotel zones, where accessibility is genuinely good, and the older central neighbourhoods, where the colonial-era footpaths are curb-heavy, vendor-crowded, and patchy. The good news is that you can plan a trip that lives mostly in the accessible side without feeling like you are missing the city. The five-star and high-tier four-star hotels around BKK1 and the riverside have full accessible rooms with roll-in showers, grab rails, lowered countertops, and accessible pool decks. The Phnom Penh Royal Palace, the National Museum, and the Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum all have wheelchair access at the main entrance, with the National Museum having particularly thoughtful internal ramping.
What is harder is anything that involves moving across older Phnom Penh on foot. Sisowath Quay along the riverside is mostly flat and walkable, with a continuous paved promenade for several kilometres. The streets behind it — Street 178, Street 240, the cafes around the post office — have decent footpaths in patches but plenty of curb-cuts that lead to busy traffic with no signalled crossings. The Russian Market and Central Market have raised entry steps and crowded internal aisles that are tough in a chair. Plan day trips with an accessible tuk-tuk or van and short walking sections at the destination, rather than walking transitions between sights.
Tuk-tuks are the default Phnom Penh transport, and standard tuk-tuks are not wheelchair-accessible because of the high step into the passenger compartment. A small number of operators run modified accessible tuk-tuks with side ramps, and the better hotels can arrange an accessible van with a rear lift for around $25-40 USD (~$38-61 AUD) per half-day. PassApp and Grab work in Phnom Penh as standard ride-hailing apps; their accessible-vehicle options are limited but growing. Smartraveller's Cambodia destination page flags the broader infrastructure picture.
Suvarnabhumi has strong accessibility infrastructure for a regional onward trip.
Compare →A workable pair-trip if you build in the right ground transport on the Vietnam side.
Compare →Less accessible infrastructure than Cambodia — plan with realistic expectations.
Compare →Changi is regional best-in-class for wheelchair accessibility and assistance.
Compare →Mixed accessibility — the better resorts are genuinely good, transitions less so.
Compare →Every Australian comprehensive travel-insurance policy covers emergency medical evacuation, baggage, and trip-disruption. What varies meaningfully between providers, and what every wheelchair traveller should pay close attention to, is the mobility-aid coverage. A powered wheelchair runs anywhere from $5,000 to $25,000 AUD; a complex bespoke chair can run higher; a portable hoist is another $1,500-3,000 AUD. The cost of replacing or repairing damaged equipment, or shipping replacements internationally if a chair is lost in transit, sits firmly outside the baggage limit on most standard policies.
Phone the insurer's specialist line before you buy — not the website chatbot — and ask the questions directly with your specific equipment and underlying condition. Get the cover confirmation in writing, attached to your policy schedule. The medical evacuation and evacuation guide walks through the broader picture on what happens if something serious does go wrong on a trip.
The honest summary is that Cambodia is a strong destination for Aussie wheelchair travellers who plan thoughtfully and a frustrating one for those who do not. The visa side is the easy bit — same Tourist eVisa at $80 USD (~$122 AUD), Approved in 3 business days, Delivered as a printable PDF by email. KTI Phnom Penh is genuinely good and removes the airport friction that used to define accessible travel in the region. Angkor is reachable with the right operator and the right expectations. Phnom Penh is mixed but workable from the right hotel base. Travel insurance with explicit mobility-aid coverage is the single most important line to get right.
If you are doing the homework now for a trip later this year, get the visa moving once your flights are booked — Approved in 3 business days, Delivered as a printable PDF by email, with Aussie-timezone support if anything needs checking before flight. The first-trip planning checklist for Australians is a useful pre-flight rundown and pairs naturally with the accessibility-specific planning above.
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 after approval for quick answers, and use our glossary of Cambodia visa terms to decode any acronym in this guide.