A family of four, a couple plus their friends as a group of six, a business team of eight — all on the same Cambodia trip. One application per passport, one inbox, one card, $80 USD (~$122 AUD) each for tourist. No bulk discount, no shortcuts, but plenty of tidy ways to keep all the PDFs together. Full Aussie multi-applicant guide.

One application per traveller, one passport scan per traveller, one photo per traveller — no bulk path, no group discount, no shared form. The clean way is to apply for everyone in one browser session on the same device, group all applications under one inbox (usually the trip organiser's email), and pay for the lot on one Aussie card. Tourist eVisa is $80 USD (~$122 AUD) each; business is $90 USD (~$137 AUD) each. Approved in 3 business days, delivered as printable PDFs by email — one PDF per person. The e-Arrival Card is separate again, fourteen fields each, within seven days of flying.
Cambodia is having a strong year for Australian group travel. Families of four heading to Siem Reap for the school holidays. Couples bringing two other couples along on a beach week in Sihanoukville. Business teams of six or eight flying in for a supplier visit or a regional conference. The single most common question from group organisers is the same: do we apply once for everyone, or once per person? The short answer is once per person — every traveller needs their own Cambodia eVisa. There is no shared family application, no group submission and no bulk discount. The rest of this guide covers how to make the multi-applicant flow as painless as possible. If you're still working out whether you need a visa at all, the do Australians need a Cambodia visa explainer is the right starting point. The smoothest way to get sorted before your flight is to Cambodia visa for Australian citizens on our site.
This piece is the Aussie group-application playbook for 2026 — family of four, couple-plus-friends group of six, business team of eight. It covers the per-passport rule, the one-inbox trick, the autofill convenience of a single browser session, the credit card mechanics, tracking multiple application IDs, and the separate e-Arrival Card every traveller still has to fill. If you want the single-applicant walkthrough first, the standard six-step Cambodia eVisa guide covers that one-person flow end-to-end.
One traveller, one application — every time
Cambodia does not issue family or group eVisas. Every passport — including infants and children — needs its own application, its own photo, its own bio-page scan and its own $80 USD (~$122 AUD) tourist fee. The "bulk" part is purely about workflow convenience, not pricing.
Take the classic Aussie family — mum, dad, a twelve-year-old, a seven-year-old — heading to Siem Reap for an Angkor Wat week. Four passports, four photos, four applications, four $80 USD (~$122 AUD) fees. The whole thing should take roughly forty minutes of active work in one sitting if all four passports and four photos are ready before you start. The autofill from the first application carries the family's home address, phone number, flight details and Cambodian hotel address into the next three, which is where the time saving lives.
Apply for the oldest family member first — usually whoever owns the credit card you are paying with. Their application will set up the autofill profile that the next three applications inherit on the same device and browser. Submit, return to the apply page, click "New Application", and the form remembers your address, phone, arrival date, hotel and departure city. You only need to retype the per-person fields: full name, date of birth, passport number, passport expiry, photo, bio scan. About seven minutes per extra applicant once you are in the rhythm.
Aussie kids get the same Cambodia eVisa as adults at the same price — $80 USD (~$122 AUD) tourist for every child, including infants. They each need their own Australian passport, their own white-background photo (yes, even a two-year-old), and their own scan of the bio page from their kids' passport. There is no "accompanying minor" discount and no parent-and-child combined application. The Cambodia visa for children and minors guide covers the photo wrinkles for young kids — closed-mouth, eyes-open, no toys, no dummies — which is genuinely the hardest part of a family submission.
The second-most-common Aussie group is the couples trip — three couples, six adults, usually a Sihanoukville beach week or a Phnom Penh long weekend. Unlike a family, the group doesn't share an address, an inbox or a credit card. The clean way to handle six applications is to pick one trip organiser — usually the friend who booked the flights — and have them apply for all six on a single laptop, with each person sending across their passport scan and photo over WhatsApp or email beforehand.
If one person fronts the whole $480 USD (~$732 AUD) on their card and the group settles up afterwards via PayID, every approval PDF lands in that organiser's inbox in a tidy bundle. That is the easiest path. The alternative — six people each applying on six devices with six cards — works fine but means six inboxes to chase if anything goes wrong. The one-organiser route is faster, tidier and less prone to a friend's PDF getting lost in their work inbox.
Before the organiser sits down to apply, each friend sends through three things: a clean scan or photo of their passport bio page (the photo page, not the back cover), a white-background photo that meets the eVisa photo spec, and their full name and date of birth as a sanity check against the passport. The Cambodia eVisa photo requirements guide is the spec to share with the group — most photo bouncebacks come from a friend who sent a holiday selfie with a beach behind them. The passport bio-scan guide covers what a clean bio page looks like; phone photos in daylight on a dark surface are fine.
Aussie-timezone support for the organiser
If one person is applying for six, the odds of a small typo on someone's middle name go up. Our team checks each application end-to-end before it reaches Immigration and offers free resubmission if a correction is flagged — which is the real safety net for a one-organiser group submission. Aussie-timezone support means you can sort it without waiting overnight.
Larger Aussie groups travelling for work — supplier visits, factory due-diligence trips, regional sales calls, conferences, sponsored events, longer engagements — usually apply on the Cambodia Business eVisa rather than the Tourist eVisa. The Business path is $90 USD (~$137 AUD) each instead of $80 USD (~$122 AUD), with the same 3-business-day processing and the same printable PDF delivery by email. The reason for the upgrade isn't price — it's that the Business eVisa is the right document for paid meetings, supplier visits, due-diligence work, conferences, sales calls and sponsored events, and it sets up cleaner downstream extension options if anyone needs to stay longer than 30 days.
In a corporate setting, the EA or travel coordinator usually handles the whole batch. Eight applications in one browser session takes roughly ninety minutes of active work, plus another fifteen to chase down anyone whose passport scan or photo isn't quite right. The autofill convenience of one session — same Australian office address, same arrival flight details, same Phnom Penh or Siem Reap hotel — is significant on a team of eight. Use the company corporate card for the lot. The Cambodia business visa for Australians guide covers what the Business eVisa actually permits, including the meeting and supplier-visit framing the team should put on the application.
Each Cambodia eVisa application generates its own application ID at submission and again on the approval PDF. For a team of eight, build a quick tracker in a spreadsheet at the time of applying: column A name, column B passport number, column C application ID, column D status (Submitted/Approved/Printed), column E PDF location on the shared drive. It sounds over-engineered for a small team, but it saves a phone call from a team member three days before flight asking whether their eVisa has come through. Save every PDF to the same shared folder with the filename pattern "<Surname>_<FirstName>_Cambodia_eVisa.pdf" and the team can self-serve.
Whatever the group size, the payment mechanics are the same: each application is its own checkout. There is no shared cart, no bundled invoice and no group discount. If you are paying for four family applications on one Aussie Visa card, the card sees four separate charges of $80 USD (~$122 AUD) — not a single $320 USD (~$488 AUD) line. This matters for two reasons. First, your bank may flag the third or fourth identical charge as suspicious; second, your statement is easier to reconcile if you know what to expect.
Some Australian banks — particularly Commbank, NAB and Westpac — flag the third or fourth identical USD charge in quick succession as potential fraud and decline the rest. If you are submitting four family applications back-to-back, send a quick travel notice through your banking app first, or call your card issuer to whitelist multiple Cambodian visa charges in the next thirty minutes. The Cambodia eVisa card decline fixes guide covers the specific patterns Aussie banks pull and the fastest way to clear them. Apple Pay and PayPal are slightly less prone to multi-charge declines because they tokenise each transaction differently.
Each submission generates its own application ID and its own confirmation email. For a family of four, expect four confirmation emails in a row when you submit, and four approval emails inside 3 business days. The approval PDFs are delivered as printable PDFs by email — one per traveller, each with its own QR code Cambodian Immigration scans at KTI, SAI or KOS. Save every PDF to the same Documents folder; print two A4 colour copies per traveller; do not just rely on the email attachment. The Cambodia processing time guide covers what to do if one application lands after the others, which occasionally happens.
Once every eVisa is approved and printed, the second piece of paperwork kicks in: the Cambodia e-Arrival Card. This is the 14-field digital arrival form every passenger must submit within the 7-day window before their flight lands. It is completely separate from the eVisa, with its own form, its own QR code on completion, and — like the eVisa — one submission per traveller. There is no family e-Arrival and no group submission.
What you can do — and what most Aussie family and group organisers do — is sit with all the passports in front of you and fill every traveller's e-Arrival in one sitting. Each one is fourteen fields: passport details, flight number, arrival airport, Cambodian address, return flight date, and the standard health and customs declarations. The Cambodia e-Arrival for couples and families guide is the multi-person playbook for the e-Arrival specifically. Plan roughly five minutes per traveller; a family of four takes about twenty minutes, a team of eight about forty.
Seven-day window — set a calendar reminder for the group
The e-Arrival window opens exactly seven days before your flight lands in Cambodia. File it too early and the system rejects it; file it on arrival and you queue at a kiosk while everyone else walks through. For a group, set a single calendar reminder for the trip organiser at seven days out, then knock them all over in one sitting.
Our verified e-Arrival service is $5 USD (~$7.50 AUD) per traveller, checked end-to-end before it reaches Cambodian Immigration. For a family of four that is $20 USD (~$30 AUD); for a team of eight, $40 USD (~$60 AUD). The catch the verified path solves is small format slips — date-of-birth in the wrong order, flight number capitalisation, hotel address line breaks — which the kiosk at KTI rejects silently and re-queues you for. Free resubmission if Immigration flags a correction sits behind every one of them.
Multi-applicant submissions occasionally hit edge cases a single-applicant submission never sees. Plan for two or three of these and the trip rolls; ignore them and you might lose someone at the boarding gate. The good news is that the recovery paths are all the same as for a single applicant — refunds where applicable, free resubmission if Immigration flags a correction, fresh applications where required.
If a family member or team member cancels after the eVisa is issued, the $80 USD (~$122 AUD) is unfortunately non-refundable once approved — Cambodian Immigration has already issued the document. The refund and cancellation guide covers the narrow set of cases where a refund is possible (mostly pre-approval cancellations within an hour or two of submission). For everyone else's trip, nothing changes: the remaining travellers still fly on their own approved eVisas.
Adding a late traveller is straightforward — same $80 USD (~$122 AUD) tourist application, same 3-business-day processing, lodged separately under their own passport and own email or under the group organiser's inbox if you prefer. They don't need to be added to anyone else's application because no application has multiple travellers on it. Apply as soon as the trip is confirmed; the only risk is leaving it too close to flight and running into the 3-business-day window.
If one person's application — say, the seven-year-old's photo, which is genuinely the hardest one to get right — is flagged for a correction by Immigration, the rest of the family or group is unaffected. We resubmit the flagged application free of charge once the corrected document is supplied, and the others continue through to approval on the normal three-day timeline. The Cambodia eVisa resubmission guide covers what triggers a flag and how the resubmission works.
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.
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