The Cambodia Business eVisa is $90 USD all-in for Americans — one flat number, billed in US dollars, approved in 3 business days and delivered as a printable PDF. Here is exactly where that figure comes from, how it compares to the Tourist eVisa, and why there is nothing else to pay before you fly.

The Cambodia Business eVisa (Type-E) costs $90 USD all-in for US citizens — one flat price, billed in US dollars, approved in 3 business days and delivered as a printable PDF by email. That is $10 more than the $80 Tourist eVisa, and the extra buys one thing: the Business eVisa is the only Cambodia visa you can extend in-country (1, 3, 6, or 12 months). There is no sponsor letter, employment contract, or company invitation required, so nothing else gets added at checkout. The only separate cost is the mandatory e-Arrival Card, $5 USD, filed in the week before you fly.
The Cambodia Business eVisa costs Americans $90 USD all-in. One number, billed in US dollars, with nothing hidden behind it. You pay $90 at checkout, your application is approved in 3 business days, and the Business eVisa arrives in your inbox as a printable PDF. There is no tier you can accidentally skip, no premium upgrade that quietly doubles the price, and no surprise line item waiting at the airport.
That matters because the Business eVisa sits in a part of the market where pricing games are common. Plenty of sites advertise a low headline figure for a Cambodia business visa, then stack on "processing," "expediting," or "document handling" charges once your card details are in. We price the opposite way: the $90 you see is the $90 you pay, and the rest of this guide breaks down exactly what that figure covers, why it is $10 more than the Tourist eVisa, and what — if anything — sits outside it.
If you are weighing the Business eVisa against the leisure option, our wider Cambodia visa cost guide for Americans lays out both side by side, and the Tourist vs Business eVisa cost comparison drills into the $10 gap specifically. When you already know the Business eVisa is the right one, you can apply now — most Americans finish the form in under ten minutes.
A flat price is only useful if you know what sits inside it. Here is what every American gets for the $90 Business eVisa fee — the outcomes, not a list of internal steps. The point of an all-in number is that you do not have to think about which parts are included, because all of them are.
Notice what is not on that list: no separate "service" charge, no "government fee" you have to add yourself, no expediting upsell. The Business eVisa is a single product at a single price. The 3-business-day approval is what you get by default, and the printable PDF is the deliverable — both are baked into the $90, not sold as extras.
If you want the full itemized view of what is bundled into a Cambodia eVisa price — and what is deliberately left out — our breakdown of what is included in the eVisa price walks through it line by line for both visa types.
The Tourist eVisa is $80 USD all-in. The Business eVisa is $90 USD all-in. The $10 difference is the most common thing Americans ask about, and the answer is refreshingly simple: you are not paying for a faster application, a different document, or extra hand-holding. Both visas use the identical online flow, the same passport and photo requirements, and the same 3-business-day approval. The $10 buys a capability that only the Business eVisa has — the ability to extend your stay once you are inside Cambodia.
The Tourist eVisa gives you a single 30-day stay and stops there. The auto-extension that used to soften that ended in November 2025, so a tourist who wants more than 30 days now has to leave and re-apply. The Business eVisa (Type-E) is the only Cambodia visa you can extend in-country: 1, 3, 6, or 12-month extensions, arranged through a Cambodian immigration agent after you arrive. That single difference is what the extra $10 reserves — the door to a long stay that the Tourist eVisa simply does not have.
So the decision is rarely about the $10. It is about whether your trip is pure leisure capped at 30 days, or whether you might want to stay longer, work, or return on the same visa structure. Our guide to who needs the Cambodia Business visa (Type-E) walks through exactly which travelers it is built for — and it is broader than "paid work."
Here is where the Cambodia Business eVisa quietly saves Americans real money compared with business visas elsewhere in the region. Many countries make you produce a sponsor letter, an employment contract, a company invitation, or a notarized statement of purpose before they will issue a business visa — and each of those carries a cost in time, courier fees, and sometimes notarization charges. Cambodia asks for none of it.
To apply for the Cambodia Business eVisa you need the same light document pack as the Tourist eVisa: a valid US passport, a passport-style photo, a scan of your passport bio page, an email address, and a payment method. No invitation from a Cambodian company. No proof of a registered business. No letter from your employer on letterhead. That means there is nothing to chase, notarize, translate, or pay a third party to prepare — so the $90 stays $90 rather than ballooning with side costs you only discover halfway through.
This trips up Americans who assume a "business" visa must require business paperwork. It does not. Our rundown of the Cambodia Business eVisa documents Americans actually need debunks the invitation-letter myth in full, so you do not waste a week — or a notary fee — gathering documents Cambodia never asks to see.
The $90 is charged in US dollars. You do not have to convert from another currency, eyeball an exchange rate, or guess what your card will actually bill — the price you see at checkout is the price in USD, full stop. For a business trip that usually matters more than for a leisure one, because the charge often has to land cleanly on an expense report.
We accept Visa, Mastercard, American Express, PayPal, Apple Pay, and Google Pay. That covers nearly every card an American business traveler carries, including most corporate cards. Because the amount is a clean $90 in USD, it reconciles neatly against an expense system — no mystery foreign-currency conversion line, no rounding drama when finance reviews it.
If you are putting the Business eVisa on a company card, our guide to paying for the Cambodia Business eVisa on a company card covers the practical bits — whose name goes on the application versus whose card pays, and how the receipt reads for reimbursement. And if a card gets declined at checkout, that is almost always a routine fraud-hold on an unfamiliar international merchant, not a problem with your application.
One thing the $90 does not include, and should not: your travel. Flights, hotels, ground transport, and anything you spend once you land are separate. The visa fee is just the visa fee. But unlike the visa fees in some neighboring countries, there is no departure-tax surprise bolted on at the airport and no second payment window after approval. You pay $90 once, and the Business eVisa is done.
There is exactly one mandatory cost that is not part of the $90 Business eVisa, and it applies to every air arrival regardless of visa type: the Cambodia e-Arrival Card. It is a separate digital form, not part of the visa, and it costs $5 USD verified through us. Fourteen fields, three short sections, submitted within 7 days before your flight. The Business eVisa proves you can enter; the e-Arrival Card is the arrival declaration the airport expects at the gate.
So the honest total for a single American business traveler in 2026 is $90 for the Business eVisa plus $5 for the e-Arrival Card — $95 all-in. That is the whole government-facing cost of getting yourself, work-ready, through Cambodian Immigration. There is nothing else to budget for the entry itself.
It is worth treating the e-Arrival Card as a deliberate second step rather than an afterthought, because a single mismatched date is the most common reason travelers get bounced back at the kiosk. Our walkthrough of the Cambodia e-Arrival Card for US citizens covers the timing and the fields that trip Americans up.
Here is the whole picture in one line: $90 USD all-in for the Cambodia Business eVisa, $5 USD for the mandatory e-Arrival Card, $95 total to get a work-ready American through the airport. The $90 is one flat price billed in US dollars, it buys a 3-business-day approval and a printable PDF, and the only reason it sits $10 above the Tourist eVisa is the in-country extension path. If you want to see how that stacks against the leisure route, the Tourist vs Business eVisa cost comparison runs the numbers side by side.
When you are ready to lodge, the Business eVisa application for US citizens walks through every field, and you can start the form whenever your passport and a photo are in front of you. There is no document pack to assemble first, so there is no reason to wait until the week before you fly.
Next steps and related reading for Americans: apply for your Cambodia Business eVisa when you are ready to lodge, bookmark our Cambodia visa hub for US citizens as the single canonical reference, compare the cost against the leisure option in the Cambodia visa cost guide for Americans, and confirm exactly who needs the Type-E in our Cambodia Business visa explainer.
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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.