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You land at KTI, SAI, or KOS without a printed eVisa PDF — what happens next. Cambodian Immigration usually accepts a QR code on a phone, but the bigger risk in 2026 is the Aussie gate agent at Sydney or Melbourne. Here is what works at each step.

Cambodian Immigration at KTI (Phnom Penh), SAI (Siem Reap), and KOS (Sihanoukville) generally accepts the QR code shown on a phone screen for inspection, so most Aussies in this situation clear immigration without drama. The bigger risk is at the Australian end before you board — Qantas and Singapore Airlines gate agents at Sydney and Melbourne sometimes ask for a paper visa printout and have denied boarding without one, even when Cambodian Immigration would accept the phone. The safest move is to print two copies at home before flying. If you have already landed without paper, KTI has a small print kiosk near baggage claim charging around $2 USD (~$3 AUD) per page. Through us, your eVisa is delivered as a printable PDF by email with the QR code embedded.
There is a small but persistent gap between what Cambodian Immigration will accept and what Australian gate agents expect, and that gap is the entire reason this article exists. The Cambodian eVisa is a digital document — a PDF with a QR code embedded — and in 2026 the Phnom Penh, Siem Reap, and Sihanoukville immigration counters are perfectly capable of scanning that QR code straight off a phone screen. From the Cambodian side, paper is increasingly redundant.
From the Australian side, things are a bit different. Airlines carry the legal responsibility for transporting passengers without valid documentation, which means a Qantas or Singapore Airlines gate agent at Sydney or Melbourne can choose to deny boarding if they decide your documentation is unclear. Some agents are completely comfortable with the eVisa on a phone screen. Others have an internal preference for a paper printout, and a small but real share will not budge.
This guide walks through what actually happens at KTI, SAI, and KOS immigration in 2026, the phone-on-screen workaround and when it fails, where you can print at the Cambodian airports if you forgot, the gate-agent risk before you board from Australia, and the recovery path if you lose your printout somewhere in transit. The Cambodia eVisa PDF print and format guide covers how to set the file up before you leave home so none of this becomes a problem in the first place. For the full eligibility picture, the Cambodia eVisa for Australian travellers hub is the canonical source.
Cambodian Immigration's published policy is that the eVisa is a digital document and the QR code is the canonical proof — paper is acceptable but not required. In practice at all three international airports, what officers actually do is consistent enough to summarise in one line: most will scan the QR code straight off your phone, a small share will ask for a paper printout, and almost none will refuse the visa outright if the QR code scans successfully.
The phone-screen workflow at the counter is straightforward. The officer turns their handheld scanner toward your phone, you hold the phone steady at the QR code page (most Aussies open it in the email attachment view), the scanner beeps, the officer reads the matching passport details on their screen, stamps the passport, hands it back. The whole interaction takes about 90 seconds — same as the paper-printout path.
Where the phone-screen path can hiccup is in three small ways. First, screen brightness — a phone on auto-dim in a brightly lit immigration hall sometimes drops too dark for the scanner. Solution: turn brightness to maximum before you reach the counter. Second, screen-lock timeout — a one-minute screen lock can cut you off mid-scan. Solution: set the screen timeout to 5 minutes or longer for the morning of arrival. Third, the QR code shown is from a screenshot of a screenshot rather than the original PDF — quality degradation can break the scan. Solution: open the original PDF attachment, not a forwarded screenshot.
Did this guide help you?
Four nights Siem Reap for the temples, three for the harder history of Phnom Penh, three for the slow river days of Kampot, three for the warm water of Koh Rong, one buffer night for the day you wish you had. Here is the honest 14-day Cambodia plan for Aussies in 2026 — costs in AUD, transport in plain English, eVisa timing baked in.
The 12-month Business eVisa extension is the longest commitment-level Cambodia stay Aussies can buy in-country. ~$300–400 USD (~$457–609 AUD) through a Phnom Penh agent on top of the $90 USD (~$137 AUD) Business eVisa, 7–14 business days. Best per-month rate of any extension — but only worth it if you genuinely plan to use the back half of the year.
Three nights in Siem Reap for Angkor, three nights in Phnom Penh for the riverfront and the harder history, one buffer night for the day you wish you had. Here is the honest 7-day Cambodia plan for Aussies in 2026 — costs in AUD, transport in plain English, and the eVisa timing baked in.
The pattern across that table is clear — paper is universally accepted at every step, phone is mostly accepted but with small risk pockets. If you have the option, print before flying. The Cambodia eVisa PDF print and format guide covers the layout, paper size, and what the QR code actually looks like when it prints correctly.
Most Aussies underestimate the gate-agent step because they assume that if Cambodian Immigration will accept the eVisa on a phone, the Aussie airline will too. This is not consistently true in 2026. Qantas and Singapore Airlines both carry legal responsibility under International Civil Aviation Organization rules for transporting passengers without valid documentation, and gate agents at Sydney and Melbourne sometimes apply that responsibility more conservatively than Cambodian Immigration would.
What 'more conservatively' looks like in practice — the agent will scan your passport, the system flags a visa requirement for Cambodia, the agent asks to see proof. If you hold up your phone with the QR code, some agents will accept it and let you board. Others will ask for a paper printout of the PDF, and a small share of those will refuse to let you board if you cannot produce one. Anecdotally about 1 in 30 Aussie travellers without paper gets the conservative agent, but on a Friday morning Sydney departure full of Cambodia-bound passengers the agent who is having a bad day can easily turn into your agent.
The fix is to carry paper, full stop. Print two copies — one to hand to the gate agent, one tucked into your passport for immigration. The PDF prints to a single A4 page, the QR code is the central element, and the cost at home is essentially zero. Even at a public library or a print shop in Sydney CBD the cost is under $1 AUD. The risk-reward calculation against missing a flight is not close.
Print before you leave home, every time
Even if you are confident the phone screen will work at every step, the cost of being wrong is a missed international flight. Print two copies the day before departure, slot them into the passport, and forget about it. The whole 'forgot to print' problem evaporates if you simply do this once at home.
If you are already on the plane and realising you forgot to print, the situation is recoverable at the destination — but only at two of the three airports reliably. Here is what each looks like on the ground in 2026.
KTI replaced PNH on 9 September 2025 and the print facilities at KTI are more developed than the old airport. There is a small print kiosk near baggage claim (between the arrivals hall and the taxi pick-up) charging around $2 USD (~$3 AUD) per page, USD cash preferred, riel and small AUD notes sometimes accepted. The kiosk staff can pull the PDF off your phone via Bluetooth or USB-C, or print from a USB stick. Open 7am-10pm local. Typical queue is under 5 minutes outside the post-flight rush.
The catch — if you need to print before clearing immigration (because the officer specifically asked for paper), you cannot. The kiosk sits after the immigration hall, in the baggage area. The workflow is to show the QR code on your phone at immigration first, clear into the baggage area, then print before clearing customs if you want a paper copy for your records.
SAI has a similar small print service near the information desk in the arrivals concourse, similar pricing at around $2 USD (~$3 AUD) per page. Service is less consistent than KTI — staffed during day hours only, sometimes closed for an early morning or late evening flight arrival. Same workflow constraint: it sits after immigration, so paper is recoverable for customs and onward use, not for immigration itself.
KOS does not have a reliable airport print facility in 2026. The airport is smaller, the international arrivals volume is lower, and the on-site print service has come and gone over the years. If you are landing at KOS without paper, the realistic options are to use the phone screen at immigration (almost always works at KOS — officers are used to it) or to print in Sihanoukville town at one of the hotel business centres after you arrive. The Cambodia airports guide for KTI, SAI, and KOS covers the broader ground reality at each.
The most common version of this story is the printout left in the seat-back pocket of the Singapore Airlines flight from Sydney to Singapore, discovered missing at the Changi transfer. The recovery path is short and works almost every time, but it has to be done while you have wifi or before you board the next leg.
The pattern across recovery is that the PDF itself is never the problem — it is in your inbox already, and your inbox is accessible from any device with internet. The Cambodia KTI airport guide for Australians has the on-the-ground detail about where the print kiosk sits relative to the immigration hall, which matters if you are short on time between landing and your hotel transfer.
Across all the variations covered above, the practical recommendation is short. Print two copies of the eVisa PDF at home the day before you fly. Save the PDF to your phone's Files app as well, with the screen-brightness and screen-timeout adjustments. Email the PDF to yourself as a recovery copy. Total time investment is under 10 minutes, total cost is essentially zero, and every potential failure mode covered in this guide goes away.
Through us, the eVisa is delivered as a printable PDF by email and the QR code is embedded in the file, so you do not need any special viewer or download flow. The PDF prints to a single A4 page on any home or library printer. Aussie-timezone support is available on the same confirmation thread if anything looks off — the printout dimensions, the QR code clarity, or the name spelling on the printed file.
If you have already arrived without a printout and you are reading this on the airport wifi, the short answer is: open the PDF attachment in your email, turn the phone brightness to maximum, walk to the immigration counter, hold the phone steady at the QR code, and 19 times out of 20 you are through in 90 seconds. The 20th time, ask politely if there is a print kiosk nearby — at KTI and SAI, there is.
No overland route — every arrival is an airport arrival in 2026.
Read the 2026 update →A working overland option through Moc Bai / Bavet.
See the combo guide →Indochina loop completes here without print drama.
Plan the Laos route →The smoothest stopover and an easy place to print if needed.
Sort the stopover →Bali or Cambodia for your next trip — or both.
Compare the two →Arriving in Cambodia without a printed eVisa PDF is recoverable in 2026 — Cambodian Immigration is increasingly comfortable with the phone-screen QR code, and the on-arrival print facilities at KTI and SAI close the gap for anyone who needs paper. The bigger risk sits at the Aussie gate before you board, and the fix for that is to print at home before you fly. The Do Australians need a visa for Cambodia explainer covers the upstream eligibility picture, and the Cambodia e-Arrival 14-fields walkthrough for Australians covers the digital arrival card that runs alongside the visa.
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 eligibility for quick answers, and use our glossary of Cambodia visa terms to decode any acronym in this guide.