A Cambodia eVisa is $80 all-in for Americans. Vietnam runs $25 to $50, Thailand is visa-free for short trips, and Laos lands around $50. But the sticker price hides what each fee actually buys. Here is the honest Southeast Asia comparison for US travelers in 2026.

For US citizens in 2026, a Cambodia Tourist eVisa is $80 USD all-in (Business $90), approved in 3 business days and delivered as a printable PDF, with a separate $5 e-Arrival Card for every air arrival. Vietnam is cheaper on paper — around $25 for a single-entry eVisa and $50 for multiple-entry. Thailand is free for short tourist visits with no advance visa needed. Laos sits close to Cambodia at roughly $50 online or $35–40 on arrival. So Cambodia is the most expensive single-entry eVisa of the four, but the gap is small once you factor in what each price actually includes: a fixed all-in figure, free resubmission if Immigration flags a correction, and US-timezone support. None of these fees is large enough to decide a trip; they are line items, not deal-breakers.
Below you will find the head-to-head price table, a country-by-country breakdown of what each fee includes, the Thailand land-border closure that reshapes any overland plan, and the full multi-country math for a Vietnam–Cambodia–Laos loop. When you are ready to lock in the Cambodia leg, you can apply online in about ten minutes. For the complete Cambodia picture — every rule, document, and fee — our Cambodia visa guide for United States citizens is the canonical reference.
The Cambodia $80 buys a 30-day single-entry Tourist eVisa, valid for 3 months from issue, approved in 3 business days, delivered as a printable PDF by email. Crucially, it includes free resubmission if Cambodian Immigration flags a photo or passport correction, plus US-timezone support if anything stalls before you fly. That safety net is the part travelers undervalue until a photo gets rejected at 11pm the night before a flight. Our Cambodia visa cost guide for Americans breaks the all-in figure down line by line.
In practical terms, you can no longer use Thailand’s free entry as a back door into Cambodia. If your plan was Bangkok in, overland to Siem Reap, you now need to fly between the two countries, and you still need your Cambodia eVisa sorted before you board — boarding can be denied without it. The land border closure quietly turns Thailand’s "free" advantage into a Cambodia flight you have to buy. Our guide on whether the Cambodia–Thailand land border is open for Americans covers exactly what is and is not possible right now.
The takeaway: as a share of a real Indochina budget, visa fees are tiny — a few hundred dollars across multiple countries, against thousands in flights, lodging, and food. The right move is to pick each country’s visa on convenience and reliability, not to chase a $25 saving on one leg. If you want to see exactly where the Cambodia visa sits inside a full trip budget, our
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De Cambodja e-Arrival Card is een aparte stap van je e-visum en een kleine — $5 USD, geverifieerd via ons, 14 velden, in te vullen en in te dienen binnen 7 dagen voor je vlucht. Hieronder leggen we precies uit wat die kosten dekken, waarom ze niet bij je visumprijs zijn inbegrepen en hoe je door de tijd kunt komen bij de gate.
De Cambodja e-Arrival Card bestaat uit 14 velden verdeeld over drie secties, die binnen 7 dagen voor aankomst moeten worden ingevuld. Hieronder staat precies beschreven wat er in elk veld moet worden ingevuld, in de volgorde zoals het formulier aangeeft, plus het datumformaat dat Amerikaanse reizigers bij de kiosk moet invullen.
De Cambodjaanse e-aankomstkaart vraagt om 14 gegevens, verdeeld over drie onderdelen: uw identiteit, uw vlucht en verblijf, en een korte douaneaangifte. Hieronder vindt u een overzicht van wat er in elk veld gevraagd wordt en de vier documenten die u bij de hand moet hebben voordat u begint.
De klassieke Indochinese combinatie. Phu Quoc is 30 dagen visumvrij.
Vergelijk de kosten →Free to enter — but the Cambodia land border is closed.
Lees de update van 2026. →De vaak over het hoofd geziene derde halte op de route door Indochina.
Plan your trip budget →Waar de meeste Amerikanen elkaar onderweg ontmoeten.
eVisa vs visa on arrival →Bali of Cambodja voor je volgende reis, of misschien wel allebei?
See the eVisa price →What the $80 actually delivers is predictability: a fixed all-in price with nothing added at checkout, a 3-business-day approval, a printable PDF in your inbox, free resubmission if Immigration flags a correction, and US-timezone support. On a trip where one bounced application can cost you a flight, that certainty is worth real money. If you are weighing the eVisa against sorting your Cambodia visa at the airport, our guide on whether the Cambodia eVisa is cheaper than visa on arrival for Americans runs that specific comparison.
For a US citizen, the practical advice is simple: book each country’s visa on its own merits, sort the Cambodia eVisa online before you fly so you are never relying on an airport counter, and treat the $5 e-Arrival Card as a separate must-do. If you are still deciding between applying online and waiting to sort it at the gate, our breakdown of the Cambodia eVisa versus visa on arrival for Americans lays out both paths. If you only need the headline Cambodia number, our Cambodia Tourist eVisa price guide for US citizens covers the $80 figure and exactly what it includes.
Next steps and related reading for Americans: apply for your Cambodia eVisa when you are ready to lodge, browse our directory of country visa guides to price the other legs of your trip, 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.