Le visa cambodgien représente l'un des postes de dépenses les plus faibles et les plus prévisibles de votre budget de voyage : $80 US pour le visa électronique et $5 US pour la carte d'arrivée électronique, ces deux montants étant fixes avant votre départ. Voici le détail du budget pour un Américain, incluant le coût du visa.

A comfortable mid-range Cambodia trip runs most Americans roughly $70 to $120 USD per day on the ground — accommodation, food, transport, and entrance fees — on top of international flights that typically land between $900 and $1,500 USD round-trip. Your visa is one of the smallest and most predictable lines in that budget: the Tourist eVisa is $80 USD all-in, the Business eVisa is $90 USD, both approved in 3 business days, and the mandatory e-Arrival Card adds $5 USD verified through us. Cambodia runs largely on US dollars day to day, so most of your spending is already in the currency you think in. Lock in the visa and e-Arrival first — they are fixed, known, and the one part of the trip whose price will not move.
When Americans price out a Cambodia trip, the visa is usually the line they worry about most and spend on least. It feels like the unknown — a foreign government fee, a process you have not done before — so it gets outsized attention. In reality it is the single most predictable number in the entire budget. Flights move with the season, hotels swing with how you travel, and food depends on whether you eat street-side or sit-down. The visa does not move. It is $80 USD for the Tourist eVisa, full stop, and you can lock it in today.
That is the useful way to think about a Cambodia budget: a couple of small fixed lines you can settle right now, and a larger pool of variable spending you control once you are there. The two fixed lines are the eVisa and the e-Arrival Card. Everything else — where you sleep, how you get around, what you eat, which temples you pay to enter — is yours to dial up or down. Getting the fixed part nailed early removes the part of trip-planning that causes the most low-grade anxiety, and our complete guide to the Cambodia visa for US citizens sets out the whole entry route from start to finish.
This guide builds the whole budget from the entry fees outward: what the visa and e-Arrival cost, how big they are relative to the rest of the trip, what a realistic day on the ground runs, and why Cambodia being a dollar economy makes the math easier for Americans than almost anywhere else in the region. When you are ready, you can apply for the eVisa in a few minutes, and our full breakdown of what the Cambodia visa costs for Americans drills into the fee on its own.
Start with the two numbers you can settle before anything else. The eVisa and the e-Arrival Card are both fixed, both paid in US dollars, and both done well before you reach the airport. Together they are the entry cost — the price of being allowed into the country and declaring your arrival — and neither one fluctuates.
The eVisa is the larger of the two. The Tourist eVisa is $80 USD all-in and the Business eVisa is $90 USD all-in, each approved in 3 business days and delivered as a printable PDF by email. There is no rush surcharge, no airport markup, and no add-on you have to opt out of. The e-Arrival Card is the smaller line: $5 USD verified through us, a short pre-arrival declaration filed within 7 days before you land. It is mandatory for every air arrival in 2026 and it is a separate transaction from the visa.
So the entry cost for a solo American tourist is $85 USD: the $80 USD Tourist eVisa plus the $5 USD verified e-Arrival Card. A business traveler comes in at $95 USD. That is the floor of your Cambodia budget and the one part you can finalize today at a price that will be exactly the same in three months. If you want the visa side broken out line by line, our look at the Tourist eVisa price for US citizens covers it, and the breakdown of the e-Arrival Card fee for Americans handles the $5 step.
Did this guide help you?
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.
Once you see the entry fees next to the rest of a Cambodia trip, the worry about the visa cost tends to evaporate. The two fees that feel like the scary, official part of the budget are, in practice, a rounding error against flights and accommodation. Here is a rough shape for a 10-day mid-range trip flying from a major US city, built to show proportion rather than to predict your exact spend.
Add the midpoints up and a typical 10-day trip lands somewhere around $1,800 to $2,500 USD all in. Against that, the $85 USD of entry fees is roughly 3 to 6% of the total — and unlike every other line, it is locked. Spend an hour fretting over the visa and you are optimizing the one number that was never going to surprise you. The flights and the hotels are where real money is won or lost.
The point of laying it out this way is not to make the visa feel trivial — it is to put it in proportion so you budget the right things. Settle the fixed $85 USD now, then put your planning energy into the flights and accommodation that actually swing the total. If you are weighing how Cambodia compares to neighbors on the entry-fee side specifically, our comparison of Cambodia visa cost against Vietnam, Thailand, and Laos shows where it sits, and our note on why there are no hidden fees on the Cambodia visa explains why the $85 is genuinely the whole entry number.
Cambodia is one of the better-value destinations in Southeast Asia for an American, and the daily spend reflects it. What you burn through in a day depends almost entirely on how you choose to travel, not on prices being unpredictable. Three rough tiers cover most travelers.
A budget traveler — guesthouse rooms, street food and local markets, tuk-tuks and shared transport — runs comfortably on $40 to $55 USD a day. A mid-range traveler with a nice private room, a mix of casual and sit-down meals, the occasional private driver, and full site access sits around $70 to $120 USD a day. A traveler leaning toward comfort — boutique hotels, guided tours, finer dining, domestic flights between cities — climbs to $150 USD a day and up. None of these tiers are exotic; they are the same dials you adjust on any trip.
A few specific costs are worth flagging because Americans ask about them most. A three-day Angkor Archaeological Park pass is a meaningful one-time line of around $62 USD, well worth budgeting separately. Domestic flights between Phnom Penh, Siem Reap, and the coast are cheap by US standards but add up if you hop around. SIM cards and data are inexpensive. Tipping is modest and discretionary. The unglamorous truth is that food and accommodation are the two dials that move your daily number the most.
Against all of that daily spending, the entry fees you settled weeks earlier barely register. The whole $85 USD of eVisa and e-Arrival is roughly one mid-range day on the ground — paid once, before you leave home, never thought about again. That is exactly why we tell American travelers to lock the entry fees first and budget the variable spend second. If you are traveling as a family and need to multiply the visa line, our guide to the Cambodia visa cost for families and children does the per-traveler math.
Two fixed entry lines, paid in dollars before you fly.
Voir le coût total →Easy to pair with Cambodia — fly the leg, the land border is closed.
Comparez les coûts →The other half of the classic Indochina loop.
See the comparison →The quiet third stop on a Mekong itinerary.
Check the entry fees →Pas besoin de se rendre à l'ambassade : le visa électronique et l'arrivée en ligne sont la solution pour les Américains.
Les Américains ont-ils besoin d'un visa ? →Here is the part that makes Cambodia unusually friendly to an American budget: the country runs largely on US dollars day to day. Hotels quote in dollars, restaurants take dollars, tour operators price in dollars, and most ATMs dispense dollars. The Cambodian riel exists and you will get it as small change, but the dollar is the working currency for almost anything a traveler buys. For you, that removes the single most annoying source of budget guesswork — the running mental conversion you do in countries on an unfamiliar currency.
It also means your visa and e-Arrival fees, your hotel, your tuk-tuk, and your dinner are all denominated in the same unit you already think in. There is no foreign-exchange surprise between what you budgeted and what you spend, no wondering whether the price on the menu is a good deal once converted. Your budget in dollars is your spend in dollars. The main thing to watch is your own bank: a foreign-transaction fee on your card or a poor ATM rate is the one place a few percent can quietly leak out, and that is on your card issuer, not on Cambodia.
Because the entry fees are billed in US dollars too, there is nothing waiting at the airport in local currency — you pay the $80 USD eVisa and the $5 USD e-Arrival before you fly and arrival is a non-event at the desk. Carry a small amount of cash for tuk-tuks and markets, lean on a card with no foreign-transaction fee for larger spends, and your real-world cost will track your budget closely.
Next steps and related reading for Americans: apply for your Cambodia eVisa to lock the fixed line at $80 USD, see the full Cambodia visa cost for US citizens to budget the entry fees in detail, and read the Tourist eVisa price breakdown for US citizens so both fixed lines are settled before you book the rest of the trip.