When an Australian pays $80 USD (~$122 AUD) for the Tourist eVisa or $90 USD (~$137 AUD) for Business through VisaToCambodia, that is the entire charge from us. No card surcharge, no rush tier, no translation fee, no priority queue. Here is what 'hidden fees' actually means in this industry — and what you specifically don't pay on our checkout.

No. The end-to-end charge from VisaToCambodia for an Australian applicant is exactly $80 USD (~$122 AUD) for the Tourist eVisa or $90 USD (~$137 AUD) for the Business eVisa. There is no card surcharge, no priority queue upsell, no rush processing tier (rush does not exist — everyone gets the same 3-business-day window), no translation fee, no printed-PDF surcharge, and no resubmission fee if Cambodian Immigration flags a correction. The figure on the order summary is the figure on your card statement. The only legitimate extra most Aussies see is their own bank's international transaction fee (typically 2.5–3%), paid to the bank rather than to us, which is avoidable with a no-FX-fee card.
Most Australian travellers have a memory shaped by the visa applications they made between 2018 and 2023. A $25 USD (~$38 AUD) eVisa banner that became $58 USD (~$88 AUD) at checkout. A 'processing fee' that appeared at the final step. A pre-ticked travel-insurance bundle adding $40 USD (~$61 AUD). A 'priority' tier that resold the standard timeline as if it were premium. A 4% currency surcharge baked into the FX layer. Then the bank tacked on its own international transaction fee. By the time the confirmation email landed, the advertised price was a rumour.
That training is hard to unlearn. The most common email into our Sydney support desk is some version of 'is the $80 USD (~$122 AUD) actually the full price'. Fair question after years of getting burned. The honest answer is that yes, the $80 USD Tourist eVisa is $80 USD (~$122 AUD) all-in, and the $90 USD Business eVisa is $90 USD (~$137 AUD) all-in, and there is no second screen where surcharges appear. But 'all-in' is also the phrase every reseller in this space uses, including the ones who absolutely do bolt on a card surcharge at the final step. So saying it once is not enough — it needs the line-by-line audit underneath.
This article walks through what you actually pay end-to-end on a Cambodia eVisa application through us, what 'hidden fees' look like in the wider visa industry so you can spot them on competitor sites, and the one legitimate extra most Aussies will see — their own bank's international transaction fee — which is between them and the bank, not a charge from us.
If you want the line-by-line breakdown of what is included in the $80 USD (~$122 AUD) Tourist and $90 USD (~$137 AUD) Business prices, the fees explained guide has the itemised version. The wider Cambodia visa cost overview covers the AUD ranges across every component for an Australian applicant. For the umbrella reference on cost, documents, and processing time, see the Cambodia visa for Australians hub.
There are exactly two possible transactions from us across the entire Cambodia entry stack. The Cambodia eVisa, at $80 USD (~$122 AUD) Tourist or $90 USD (~$137 AUD) Business. And the verified e-Arrival Card, at $5 USD (~$7.50 AUD), which is a separate mandatory product on a different timeline. That is the whole list. If you bought both, you would see two line items on your statement totalling $85 USD (~$130 AUD) on Tourist or $95 USD (~$145 AUD) on Business. If you only bought the visa, one line. There is no third charge from us under any scenario.
What that $80 USD (~$122 AUD) Tourist or $90 USD (~$137 AUD) Business covers — and the reason the price does not move at the final checkout step — is the full bundle that some competitors charge separately for. Application processing. Photo specification pre-check. Passport scan review. Status tracking across the 3-business-day window. Approved PDF delivered to your inbox. Free resubmission if Cambodian Immigration flags a correction. Aussie-timezone English support by email and live chat. The 6-day e-Arrival reminder before your flight. Everything end-to-end inside the single fee.
Every Cambodia eVisa application — through us, through any other reseller, or direct — runs on the same 3-business-day window. Cambodian Immigration does not operate a paid priority lane on the eVisa scheme. Any service charging an Australian for 'rush' or 'priority' or '24-hour processing' is reselling the standard 3-business-day timeline at a premium and using the urgency to justify it. We do not offer a rush tier because there is no underlying rush product to resell. If your trip is tight on the calendar, the right move is to apply as early as possible inside the 3-month validity window, not to pay extra for a queue that does not exist.
The one legitimate extra most Aussies will see on a Cambodia eVisa transaction is their own bank's international transaction fee. This is not a charge from us — it is a charge from the bank to the cardholder, for processing a USD-denominated transaction on an AUD-issued card. Most of the big four banks add 2.5–3% of the converted AUD amount, listed on the statement as 'intl txn fee' or 'overseas processing'. On an $80 USD (~$122 AUD) Tourist visa, that adds roughly $3–$4 AUD. On the $90 USD (~$137 AUD) Business visa, roughly $3.50–$4.50 AUD.
The exact figure depends on which bank issued the card. The Commonwealth Bank typically adds around 3% on Visa and Mastercard credit. Westpac runs similar. NAB and ANZ are in the same band. AmEx personal cards usually sit at 3% as well. The cleanest way to avoid the fee entirely is to pay with a no-FX-fee card — Wise debit, ING Orange Everyday, Macquarie debit, 28 Degrees, Up Bank, or HSBC Everyday Global. Those cards do not pass through an international transaction fee on USD charges, and the AUD amount on your statement will match the AUD amount shown at checkout to within a cent or two.
If you want the deeper walkthrough on how the USD-to-AUD conversion works on a Cambodia eVisa charge — including the live mid-market mechanics and how the AUD figure on your statement is calculated — the AUD conversion guide is the right read. The credit-card surcharge piece goes deeper specifically on what each of the big four Australian banks adds to a Cambodian merchant transaction.
No-FX-fee cards that work cleanly on our checkout
Wise debit, ING Orange Everyday (with monthly deposit), Macquarie debit, 28 Degrees, Up Bank, and HSBC Everyday Global all charge zero on a USD transaction. If you applied with a card that added a 3% fee, switching cards for the e-Arrival (or the next visa) costs nothing to do.
Once you know the patterns, the audit is mechanical. Three steps, one minute. Step one: look up the live USD-to-AUD mid-market rate on a finance app or quick web check. Step two: take the headline visa price on the competitor checkout and convert it at that rate yourself. Step three: compare your number to the AUD figure the competitor displays. If the competitor figure is meaningfully higher than your calculation, the gap is an FX margin baked in. If the competitor figure is in the right ballpark, look at the line items below — pre-ticked add-ons, rush tiers, surcharges, bundled e-Arrivals.
On our checkout, the $80 USD or $90 USD price is displayed alongside the AUD equivalent using the live mid-market rate. The total at the final step matches the total at the cart step. There is no second screen where surcharges appear. The card statement matches the checkout AUD to within a cent or two, before the bank's own international transaction fee (if any) lands as a separate line below.
If you have already paid for a Cambodia eVisa elsewhere and are seeing line items you cannot match to products, the card decline fixes and payment troubleshooting playbooks have the diagnostic steps. If you are mid-application and want a sanity check before tapping confirm, the do-Australians-need guide and the how-to-apply walkthrough are both useful adjacent reads.
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 cost for quick answers, and use our glossary of Cambodia visa terms to decode any acronym in this guide.
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