Le Cambodge ne délivre pas de visa de retraite spécifique que vous pouvez demander depuis les États-Unis. Pour les Américains de plus de 55 ans, la procédure se déroule en deux étapes : entrer au Cambodge avec un visa électronique d’affaires ( $90 USD, 3 jours ouvrables), puis le convertir en prolongation de séjour pour retraités (ER) sur place. Voici comment cela fonctionne en 2026.

Cambodia does not issue a standalone retirement visa that you apply for from the United States. The retirement route is a two-step path: you enter Cambodia on the Business eVisa (Type-E, $90 USD all-in, approved in 3 business days, delivered as a printable PDF by email), then convert to the ER retirement extension in-country through a Cambodian immigration agent. The ER (Extension of Retirement) is available in 6-month and 12-month lengths, is renewable indefinitely, and is aimed at travelers over 55 who are genuinely retired and not working in Cambodia. There is no separate online retirement-visa application — the Business eVisa is the front door, and the ER extension is what keeps you there.
Most Americans planning a retirement in Cambodia open the search expecting to find a dedicated retirement-visa application — something like Thailand's O-A or the Philippines SRRV, a single form you file from home with a bank balance and a doctor's note attached. Cambodia does not work that way. There is no standalone retirement visa you apply for from the United States, no lump-sum deposit to lock up, and no online retirement-visa portal to fill in before you fly.
What Cambodia has instead is the ER extension — short for Extension of Retirement — and it is an in-country step, not an entry visa. You do not get it before you arrive. You get it after, by entering on the Business eVisa (Type-E) and converting that visa into an ER extension through a Cambodian immigration agent once your feet are on the ground. The ER is the closest thing Cambodia offers to a retirement visa, and for Americans over 55 it is the standard, well-worn path.
This guide walks the full route end to end — why the Business eVisa is the correct front door, how the ER conversion works, the 6 and 12-month extension lengths, the rough costs, and where retirees actually settle. If you are weighing the visa classes themselves first, our explainer on which Cambodia visa you need points you to the right class in under a minute, and the Cambodia Business eVisa (Type-E) deep dive covers the entry visa this whole path depends on. For the umbrella reference on cost, documents, and processing, see the Cambodia visa for United States citizens hub.
The ER extension is one of several extension types that sit on top of the Business eVisa once you are inside Cambodia. The Business eVisa (Type-E) is the only Cambodia visa that can be extended in-country, and the extension comes in several flavors depending on your situation — EB for employment and business, EG for job-seeking, ES for students, and ER for retirement. Our full breakdown of the Cambodia ordinary (E-class) visa family walks through each of those extension tracks side by side. The ER is the one Americans over 55 use to settle.
Here is the part that trips people up. The visa in your passport when you land is still the Business eVisa. The ER is the extension stamp that converts that 30-day Business eVisa into a long-stay retirement permit. You never hold a document that says "retirement visa" on the front — you hold a Business eVisa with an ER extension applied to it. Functionally, that combination is your retirement visa. Legally and on paper, it is two layers.
That layering is why the application order matters so much. You cannot apply for the ER from the United States, because the ER is not an entry visa — it is an extension of a visa you already hold inside the country. You apply for the Business eVisa online before you fly, enter Cambodia, and then a Cambodian immigration agent converts it to ER. If you want to see how the same machinery handles the employment side, the
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La carte d'arrivée électronique pour le Cambodge est une démarche distincte de votre visa électronique et peu coûteuse : $5 USD (vérifiés par nos soins), 14 champs à remplir dans les 7 jours précédant votre vol. Voici le détail de ce que couvrent ces frais, pourquoi ils ne sont pas inclus dans le prix de votre visa et comment les obtenir rapidement pour faciliter votre passage à l'embarquement.
La carte d'arrivée électronique cambodgienne comporte 14 champs répartis en trois sections et doit être remplie dans les 7 jours précédant votre atterrissage. Voici le contenu précis de chaque champ, dans l'ordre indiqué sur le formulaire, ainsi que le bordereau de format de date destiné aux voyageurs américains au guichet automatique.
La carte d'arrivée électronique du Cambodge requiert 14 informations réparties en trois sections : votre identité, votre vol et votre séjour, ainsi qu'une brève déclaration en douane. Voici le détail des informations demandées dans chaque champ et les quatre éléments à préparer avant de commencer.
One more thing worth saying plainly: the ER extension is not the same as Cambodian permanent residency or citizenship. It is a long-stay extension you renew. Many Americans run a full retirement in Cambodia on nothing more than rolling ER extensions, year after year, and never pursue a residency card or a passport. The ER is genuinely designed for that — indefinite renewal is the whole point.
The retirement route for Americans over 55 is two clean steps, and the order is fixed. Step one happens online before you fly. Step two happens in Cambodia, in person, through an agent.
You apply for the Business eVisa online: $90 USD all-in, approved in 3 business days, delivered as a printable PDF by email. The document pack is short — a US passport with at least 6 months validity, a passport-style photo, a scan of your passport bio page, an email address, and a payment method. No bank statement, no proof of pension, no sponsor letter, no return flight required at this stage. You enter Cambodia on that Business eVisa with the standard initial 30-day single-entry stay.
Why not the Tourist eVisa? Because the Tourist eVisa (Type-T) cannot be extended at all — the old auto-extension ended in November 2025 — and it cannot be converted to ER. If you enter on a Tourist eVisa intending to retire, you would have to leave the country and re-enter on a Business eVisa before you could even start the ER conversion. Entering on the Business eVisa from the start saves you a wasted border run. This is the single most common mistake we see retirees make, and it is entirely avoidable.
Once you are in Cambodia, you hand your passport to a Cambodian immigration agent — most retirees use one based in Phnom Penh, Siem Reap, or near their chosen town. The agent lodges the ER extension paperwork, your passport is returned stamped a week or two later, and you are now on a long-stay retirement footing. You pick the extension length at this stage: 6 months or 12 months. The conversion is straightforward because the heavy lifting — identity, payment, photo — was already done at the Business eVisa stage online.
Start the ER conversion well before your initial 30-day Business eVisa stay runs out. We recommend lodging the paperwork with your agent at least 2 weeks before day 30. Cutting it close risks an overstay, and the Cambodian overstay penalty is $10 USD per day from day one, payable in cash at the airport on exit — a needless cost when the conversion is so routine.
The ER extension comes in two lengths that matter for retirees: 6 months and 12 months. Both are renewable, and the 12-month version is multi-entry, which is the one almost every settled American retiree chooses because it lets you fly home to the States, or pop to Bangkok or Singapore, without losing your extension.
On cost: the Business eVisa entry visa is the fixed, transparent part — $90 USD all-in. The ER extension itself is arranged in-country through a Cambodian agent, and agent pricing fluctuates with the local market and the extension length, so we do not quote exact figures here. As a working guide for 2026, the 12-month ER carries a higher headline fee than the 6-month but lands at a noticeably lower cost per month of stay, which is why long-term retirees default to it. Budget for the agent fee on top of the $90 USD Business eVisa, and ask your agent for the current all-in figure before you hand over your passport.
Renewal is the quiet strength of the ER route. There is no cap on how many times you can renew a 12-month ER, and renewals are lodged the same way — through your agent, before the current extension expires. An American who lands at 60 and settles in Kampot can run rolling 12-month ER extensions straight through their seventies without ever applying for a separate residency status. Our general guide to Cambodia visa extension costs for Americans lays out how the extension fee structure works across all the extension classes, including ER.
The ER extension is aimed at travelers who are genuinely retired and not working in Cambodia. In practice that means over 55 — Cambodia frames the ER around retirement-age travelers — though the eVisa system itself does not hard-code a minimum age into the online Business eVisa you apply for first. The honest summary: if you are over 55, retired, and intend to live in Cambodia on savings or a pension rather than local work, the ER is built for you.
What Cambodia does NOT demand is the financial gauntlet that defines retirement visas elsewhere in the region. There is no mandatory locked bank deposit, no minimum monthly pension threshold written into the eVisa flow, and no health-insurance certificate required to apply for the Business eVisa that the ER sits on. This is one of the reasons Cambodia has quietly become a magnet for American retirees who found Thailand or Malaysia financially out of reach.
Note that everything in that list is for the Business eVisa front door. The ER conversion itself is handled in-country by your agent, and any local supporting paperwork is light and agent-guided. The contrast with a US-side retirement-visa application — bank letters, apostilled documents, medical exams mailed to a consulate — is stark. Cambodia keeps the upfront pack to the same five-item Business eVisa pack every American applicant uses.
The ER route has fueled a real and growing community of American retirees, and they cluster in a handful of places. Knowing where helps you picture the life the visa unlocks, and it shapes which town your immigration agent is based in.
On the practical side, two things matter most to retirees and neither is a visa issue. First, healthcare: serious cases are typically handled in Phnom Penh or via medical evacuation to Bangkok or Singapore, so retirees settling in smaller towns plan for that. Second, money: most US retirees fund the life from a US pension, Social Security, or savings, drawn through international cards and ATMs. Neither affects your ER extension, but both shape where you base yourself.
Arrival is identical to any Business eVisa entry. Open airports for US arrivals are KTI (Phnom Penh — the new Techo International Airport, which replaced the old PNH on 9 September 2025), SAI (Siem Reap-Angkor), and KOS (Sihanoukville). All seven Thailand-Cambodia land borders have been closed since June 2025, so an overland arrival from Bangkok is not an option in 2026 — fly in. State Department guidance publishes current entry and local-conditions information for Cambodia that is worth a five-minute read before a long-stay move, and the US Embassy in Phnom Penh is the place American retirees register and renew passports once settled.
Next steps and related reading for US citizens: apply for your Cambodia Business eVisa when you are ready to start the retirement path, read the full Business eVisa (Type-E) deep dive that this route depends on, see the EB extension explainer if your stay involves work rather than retirement, and check the student visa guide if a younger family member is joining you to study. When in doubt, the which Cambodia visa decision guide points you to the right class.