The Cambodia eVisa from Australia is $80 USD (~$122 AUD) for tourists or $90 USD (~$137 AUD) for business — all-in, paid once, approved in 3 business days. Here is exactly what that price covers and what it does not.

$80 USD (~$122 AUD) for the Tourist eVisa, $90 USD (~$137 AUD) for the Business eVisa. Both are all-in prices — no add-ons, no surprise fees, paid once. Both approved in 3 business days. The e-Arrival Card (mandatory, separate) is $5 USD (~$7.50 AUD) verified through us. The AUD equivalent is shown at checkout and on your card statement.
If you have spent any time Googling the Cambodia eVisa cost from Australia this year, you have probably seen prices that range from $30 USD to nearly $200 USD for what looks like the same product. That spread is real, and it is mostly the result of how the visa market re-priced itself after the 2024-25 process changes — the end of the tourist auto-extension in November 2025, the move to Techo International Airport in Phnom Penh, and the rollout of the mandatory e-Arrival Card.
Australian travellers also have to filter out a layer of noise that does not exist in the US or UK markets. A handful of third-party resellers advertise "rush" or "guaranteed 24-hour" tiers that simply do not exist as a Cambodian government product — the official portal processes every application on a flat 3-business-day timeline, no exceptions. We will get into why that matters below.
This guide is a single, current snapshot. Tourist eVisa, Business eVisa, the e-Arrival Card, what is included in the price, what is not, how AUD payment actually works at checkout, and the refund picture if Immigration sends an application back. Numbers are accurate as of May 2026 and reconciled against the current Cambodian Immigration tariff.
One more piece of 2026 context worth flagging up front: the price you pay for a visa from Australia has nothing to do with the visa itself once you arrive. A Cambodian Immigration officer at Phnom Penh, Siem Reap or Sihanoukville does not see whether you paid $30 or $180 — they see an approved eVisa PDF, a passport, and an e-Arrival confirmation. What you are actually paying for in the middle band is the certainty that the application gets lodged correctly, the photo passes spec on the first attempt, and the second mandatory form (the e-Arrival Card) does not slip your mind in the week before you fly.
Two products, two prices, one timeline. The Tourist eVisa (T-Class) is $80 USD (~$122 AUD) all-in. The Business eVisa (E-Class) is $90 USD (~$137 AUD) all-in. Both arrive in your inbox as a printable PDF approval letter within 3 business days of submission. There is no separate handling charge, no "premium" tier, no add-on at checkout. What you see on the order summary is what you pay.
If you are not yet sure which one fits your trip, the short version is: Tourist covers leisure, family visits, and Angkor Wat; Business covers meetings, paid work, conferences, sales calls, supplier visits, due-diligence trips, and long stays. Our Australian application walkthrough has the field-by-field breakdown, and the Do Australians Need a Visa for Cambodia explainer covers eligibility for dual citizens and Australian permanent residents.
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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.
The Tourist eVisa fee covers the full processing of your T-Class visa from form submission to approved PDF. Photo and passport scan checked against current Immigration specs before submission, application lodged, status tracked on your behalf, and the approval letter delivered to your inbox. If Immigration flags a correction — a name mismatch, a photo retake, a passport edge cropped — the resubmission is free. No second fee, no extra processing charge.
Also rolled into the price: English-speaking support during Australian business hours, a 6-day e-Arrival reminder before your flight, and a printable PDF you can save in three places. The visa itself is single-entry, valid for 3 months from issue, and gives you 30 days in country once you arrive. Since November 2025 the tourist visa cannot be extended in-country, so if you plan to stay longer than a month the Business eVisa is the right product instead.
The Business eVisa carries the same end-to-end processing, the same 3-business-day timeline, the same photo and passport pre-checks, the same free resubmission, and the same Aussie-timezone support. The $10 USD difference reflects the underlying E-Class tariff and a slightly more involved review of the stated purpose of travel. The visa itself is single-entry, valid 3 months from issue, 30 days on first entry — but unlike the Tourist, it can be extended in-country in 1, 3, 6, and 12-month blocks through a Cambodian immigration agent once you arrive.
Business travellers from Australia almost always want the E-Class even for trips that look "touristy" on paper, because anything that involves payment, contracts, or a conference badge falls outside the Tourist scope. The Australia country pillar has a longer note on edge cases — paid speaking gigs, mixed leisure-plus-meeting trips, and what counts as business under Cambodian Immigration policy.

Aussie travellers tend to be sceptical of "all-in" pricing in the visa market, and fairly — too many resellers tack on photo upload fees, currency-conversion fees, or "service" fees at the final screen. Our $80 USD (~$122 AUD) and $90 USD (~$137 AUD) are quoted with everything already inside. Here is what that includes in plain terms.
A few things that are deliberately not part of the bundle: travel insurance, flight bookings, hotel reservations, or onward-travel proof. None of those are required to apply for the Cambodia eVisa from Australia in the first place. If a competitor is quoting you a higher price because their package "includes travel insurance", you are paying for a product Cambodian Immigration does not ask for.
The free resubmission point is the one most Australian applicants ask about, so it is worth a sentence of its own. If Immigration responds to your file with a flagged correction — almost always a photo retake, occasionally a passport scan reshoot, very rarely a name clarification — we handle the rework inside the existing fee. There is no second processing charge, no "amendment" fee, no fresh tariff payment. The same clock keeps running on the 3-business-day window. The only scenario that triggers a new application is an outright denial or a typo on a field Cambodian Immigration treats as immutable, which we cover in the refunds section below.

We accept Visa, Mastercard, AmEx, PayPal, Apple Pay, and Google Pay. The order summary at checkout shows both the USD price and the live AUD equivalent so you know exactly what your card will be charged before you confirm. The same AUD amount is what appears on your card statement — no mid-transaction re-rate, no surprise foreign-currency line item appearing two days later.
There is no FX gymnastics for the applicant. The conversion happens once, at checkout, against the current mid-market rate plus standard card-network costs. What you see is what you pay. If your bank charges its own international transaction fee on top — many Australian banks add roughly 3% — that is between you and your bank, not us. A debit card on most Aussie neo-banks (Up, Wise, Revolut) avoids it entirely.
For a sense of the live AUD-USD rate in mid-2026, the Reserve Bank of Australia publishes a daily reference series — useful if you want to know whether the published AUD figure on your checkout looks right before you confirm. Day-to-day movement of a cent or two is normal, which is why our quoted AUD on this page is rounded ("~$122 AUD" rather than a specific dollars-and-cents figure). The exact AUD you pay is the figure shown in your order summary at the moment you tap confirm.

The Cambodian government processes every eVisa application on a flat 3-business-day timeline. There is no premium queue, no fast-track, no expedited tier — not for tourists, not for business travellers, not for diplomats. Three business days is three business days. The clock starts when your file lands with Immigration with all 14 form fields and both uploads complete.
Any service advertising a "guaranteed 24-hour Cambodia eVisa" or a "rush" tier at $150-$200 USD is reselling the standard 3-day process at a markup. They take your money on Monday, lodge the file in the same queue everyone else uses, and hope it lands inside 24 hours. Sometimes it does. Often it does not, and the rush fee is not refunded.
We do not list a rush tier because we do not sell a product that does not exist. The honest version of "fast" is: apply 7 to 10 days before your flight, give the photo and passport scan ten minutes of care, and the 3-business-day window absorbs almost every weekend and most Cambodian public holidays. That is the realistic Aussie playbook.

Three honest scenarios, three honest answers. We set expectations up front because nothing erodes trust faster than a vague refund policy at the moment you need it.
Scenario one — Immigration rejects your application. Rare for Australian passport holders (clean criminal record, valid passport, current photo) but it happens. Our process: we resubmit free of charge once we have addressed whatever the rejection cited. There is no second fee from us. The underlying government tariff is non-refundable on outright denial, which is industry-standard, but a resubmission inside the same case file does not trigger that.
Scenario two — you cancel before we lodge the application. If you change your mind or your trip falls through after payment but before we have submitted the file to Immigration, you can request a refund and we will process it back to the original payment method. Cancellation requests after lodgement cannot be refunded because the underlying tariff has already been paid through to the Cambodian government.
Scenario three — you applied with the wrong name. The most common version: a middle name missed, a hyphen omitted, or a transliteration that does not match the passport machine-readable zone. Once an application is approved with the wrong details, it cannot be edited — Cambodian Immigration treats the visa and the passport as a matched pair, and a name mismatch is denied at boarding. The fix is a fresh application with a fresh fee. We flag spelling slips before submission for exactly this reason. The Smartraveller advisory has the broader Aussie traveller checklist if you want a final scan.
Bangkok in, Siem Reap out — but the land border's closed.
Read the 2026 update →Classic Indochina pairing. Phu Quoc beaches are visa-free for 30 days.
See the combo guide →Overlooked third stop on the Indochina loop.
Plan the Laos route →Where most Aussies stop on the way through.
Sort the stopover →Bali or Cambodia for your next trip — or both?
Compare the two →The Cambodia eVisa is valid for 3 months from the date of issue, single entry, 30 days in country. That gives most Australian travellers a comfortable booking window — apply 4 to 6 weeks before your flight, get the approval letter back in 3 business days, and you still have plenty of validity in hand. If you are a last-minute booker, the 3-business-day rule is the only number that actually constrains you. The full timing playbook is in our Australian processing time guide.
If you are still weighing the eVisa against turning up cold and using visa-on-arrival at Phnom Penh, the Cambodia eVisa vs Visa on Arrival comparison covers the practical differences — speed, queue length, payment, and what happens if you arrive after a long-haul flight with crumpled USD notes. For most Aussies, the eVisa wins on every line.
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 cost for quick answers, and use our glossary of Cambodia visa terms to decode any acronym in this guide.