The same trip costs Aussies seven times as much by plane as by bus, but saves them six hours. So which one actually makes sense in 2026? It depends on whether you're chasing time, dollars, baggage, or rice-paddy views.

It depends on your trip and your wallet. The bus via the Bavet land border costs $15–25 USD (~$23–38 AUD) and takes 6–8 hours door-to-door — best for backpackers, anyone with bulky luggage, and travellers who actually want to see southern Cambodia's rice paddies. The flight costs $75–150 USD (~$114–229 AUD) and takes 4–5 hours door-to-door including airport time — best for business travellers, anyone with a tight connection, and anyone who'd rather spend the saved hours in Saigon than on a coach. Both routes need a Vietnam eVisa ($25 USD / ~$38 AUD) pre-applied online.
Aussies plotting an Indochina trip in 2026 face a question that didn't really exist a decade ago. Budget airlines now make the Phnom Penh to Ho Chi Minh City flight realistic for under $100 USD (~$152 AUD) on a good day, but the tourist coach via the Bavet land border has also got cheaper, faster, and more comfortable than it used to be. The decision is no longer a one-line answer — it depends on what you're optimising for.
This guide is the honest side-by-side. It draws on actual fare scans across the last three months, real journey times for both options, and the working assumptions our team uses when we help Aussie clients plan their Cambodia–Vietnam combo trips. The Vietnam–Cambodia visa combo guide covers the visa sequencing that applies to both routes; the Bavet bus-route guide and the Bavet–Moc Bai border crossing guide each go deeper on the overland option alone. Our official Cambodia eVisa for Australians pulls all the pieces — cost, documents, processing — into one place.
One framing note before we go further. With every Thailand–Cambodia land border closed since June 2025, Bavet is now the main overland gateway between Cambodia and the rest of Indochina. That changes the bus-versus-flight maths a little — the bus is no longer one of three overland options, it's the overland option. If you want to do any land crossing at all between Cambodia and Vietnam in 2026, this is the route.
Strip the romance away and look at the numbers. Here is the actual cost-and-time picture for Phnom Penh to Ho Chi Minh City in June 2026, drawn from live fare scans across the last three months on the bus operators (Giant Ibis, Mekong Express, Sapaco) and the air carriers (Cambodia Angkor Air, AirAsia, Vietnam Airlines).
Two clarifications on that table. First: the flight's one-hour figure is gate-to-gate, but realistic door-to-door — including the tuk-tuk to KTI Phnom Penh airport (45 minutes), check-in (60 minutes), security (15 minutes), boarding and taxi (20 minutes), then arrival at SGN, immigration queue, luggage carousel, and a Grab into central Saigon (60 minutes total on the Vietnamese side) — is 4 to 5 hours. The bus's 6 to 8 hours is also door-to-door. So the gap is closer to 2 to 4 hours of saved time, not 5 to 7.
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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.
Second: the flight fare range is wide because budget carriers fluctuate heavily based on advance booking. Book 4 weeks ahead on AirAsia and you're at the low end ($75 USD / ~$114 AUD). Book the day before on Vietnam Airlines and you're at the high end ($150 USD / ~$229 AUD). The bus price doesn't move much — it's a fixed $15 to $25 USD (~$23 to $38 AUD) whether you book the night before or three weeks ahead.
For some Aussie travellers in 2026, the flight is the clearly correct choice. The extra dollars are worth it in five specific scenarios.
If you're flying into Cambodia for a few days of supplier visits, factory tours, or a conference and then heading to Vietnam for more of the same, a coach day is a wasted day. Aussie business travellers on a five-day, two-country trip don't have a spare seven hours to lose to a bus. Book the Vietnam Airlines or Cambodia Angkor Air morning flight, work on the plane, land in Saigon by lunch. The Cambodia business meeting trip guide and the Cambodia business visa explainer cover the broader business-trip planning.
If you're flying out of Saigon to Sydney or Melbourne the same evening, the bus is genuinely risky. Border queues at Bavet are usually 45 to 75 minutes but can stretch to two hours on a bad afternoon. The flight from Phnom Penh gives you a clean buffer — book the morning service, land at SGN by 10am, comfortable five-hour window before your long-haul. The bus would put you at SGN at 4pm with no margin if anything goes wrong on Highway 1.
Seven hours on a tourist coach is fine if you're 28 and limber. It's tougher if you're 65, dealing with chronic back pain, or recovering from anything. The flight is genuinely kinder on the body — one hour seated with the option to walk around at the airport, rather than seven hours of coach seat with one rest stop. Aussie retirees on Indochina cruises and slow-travel itineraries almost always pick the flight for this leg.
If your whole Indochina trip is only 10 to 14 days, losing one of them to a bus you could have skipped for $60 USD (~$91 AUD) is a poor trade. The flight protects your itinerary. Three Cambodia days plus three Vietnam days becomes meaningfully more enjoyable when you don't burn an entire travel day on the move between them.
Seven hours on a coach with under-tens is doable but unpleasant. The flight is one hour with an aircraft toilet, snacks, and the novelty factor that buys you half an hour of cooperation. The cost difference for a family of four is significant ($300–600 USD / ~$457–915 AUD vs $60–100 USD / ~$91–152 AUD), but the sanity preservation is worth it for most Aussie family travellers.
For other Aussie travellers in 2026, the bus is the clearly correct choice. The saved $60 to $130 USD (~$91 to $198 AUD) is well-spent in five scenarios.
If you're doing a three-month Southeast Asia run and time is the cheap thing while money is the expensive thing, the bus is an easy yes. $15 to $25 USD (~$23 to $38 AUD) is one cheap hostel night. The flight at $100 USD (~$152 AUD) is four hostel nights. Multiply that across the trip and the bus is paying for a full week of Cambodia.
Surfboard, music gear, large souvenirs, a second checked bag full of textiles from Russian Market — none of this travels well by plane. AirAsia charges $40 to $80 USD (~$61 to $122 AUD) for oversize fees, and even the legacy carriers cap you at one piece. On the bus, the under-coach hold takes everything within reason at no extra cost. For Aussies who shop hard at the Phnom Penh markets, this alone can recover the saved fare.
Highway 1 between Phnom Penh and Saigon runs through some of the most photogenic rural landscape in Southeast Asia — rice paddies stretching to the horizon, palm clusters, water buffalo, slow brown rivers, the entire backdrop of the Mekong delta. From the plane you see clouds. From the bus you see the actual country. For Aussies on a first Indochina trip who care about the scenery, the bus is the better experience even if it costs more time.
If you're working with an Aussie working-holiday budget of $50 to $80 AUD per day on the road, every $100 USD (~$152 AUD) saved is genuinely two days of further trip. The bus is the rational choice for under-30 Aussie travellers without business expense reimbursement, and the $20 to $30 USD (~$30 to $46 AUD) saved on the meal-and-snacks side of a bus day (versus airport food and Saigon transfers) makes the gap even wider.
The flight burns roughly 80 to 100 kg of CO2 per passenger for the Phnom Penh to Saigon hop. The bus is closer to 30 kg per passenger thanks to the shared seating capacity and the shorter total distance per person. For Aussies tracking carbon for personal or work-trip reasons, the bus is a meaningful improvement — about a third of the footprint.
Whichever route you pick, the visa requirements are identical. The Cambodia eVisa for Australians is $80 USD (~$122 AUD) all-in regardless of whether you fly or bus out — there is no land-vs-air surcharge. The Vietnam eVisa is $25 USD (~$38 AUD) for single-entry, applied for online before you travel, and accepted at both Tan Son Nhat airport and the Moc Bai land border.
For the Cambodia paperwork, our standard product covers it — approved in 3 business days, delivered as a printable PDF by email, with Aussie-timezone support. Free resubmission if Immigration flags a correction. The how to apply for a Cambodia eVisa walkthrough covers every field, and the Cambodia visa cost breakdown covers the dollar breakdown if you want the line-by-line.
Two practical differences worth noting between the routes. On the flight, you'll need the Cambodia e-Arrival Card if and only if Cambodia is your air-arrival country — and on this leg, you're departing Cambodia, so no card is needed regardless. On the bus, there's no Cambodia e-Arrival to file in either direction; the e-Arrival Card is mandatory only for air arrivals into KTI, SAI, or KOS.
Multi-entry Vietnam eVisa is worth the extra $25 USD (~$38 AUD) if you might bounce back
If your trip plan is Cambodia → Vietnam → Cambodia (for example, flying home from Phnom Penh after a Vietnam side-trip), pay the extra $25 USD (~$38 AUD) up front for the $50 USD (~$76 AUD) multi-entry Vietnam eVisa. Applying for a fresh single-entry mid-trip in Saigon adds three to five working days of waiting, which is rarely worth saving the $25 USD (~$38 AUD).
Most Aussie travellers can settle the question with three quick questions. Run through these and the answer usually falls out.
If two of those three questions point you the same direction, that is the right answer. If they split, then the deciding question is usually budget: every $100 USD (~$152 AUD) saved on the bus is two extra hostel nights, or one nice restaurant meal in Saigon, or a half-day Mekong delta tour. For Aussie travellers who feel the cost of their trip, that maths usually settles it for the bus.
Our team handles the Cambodia eVisa side of things either way — the eVisa is $80 USD (~$122 AUD) all-in, approved in 3 business days, and delivered as a printable PDF by email. Checked end-to-end before it reaches Immigration. Aussie-timezone support if anything needs sorting before your departure.
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 at the border for quick answers, and use our glossary of Cambodia visa terms to decode any acronym in this guide; for a structured side-by-side evisa vs visa on arrival comparison, see the dedicated comparison page.
Same Vietnam eVisa works for both bus and flight arrivals. $25 single, $50 multi.
See the combo guide →Bangkok overland is off the table in 2026. Plan a flight if Thailand is on your route.
Read the closure update →The other working land route into Cambodia — from the north, Pakse to Stung Treng.
Plan the Laos route →Long-haul stopover for most Aussies. Sort it before the Cambodia leg.
Sort the stopover →Compare Bali vs Cambodia if you are choosing between two SE Asia trips.
Compare the two →