The Cambodia eVisa is $80 all-in for US travelers, and that one number covers everything: the approved visa as a printable PDF, a 3-business-day turnaround, free resubmission if Immigration flags a correction, and US-timezone support. Here is exactly what each dollar buys — and the one $5 item that sits outside it.

For US citizens, the $80 USD Tourist eVisa (or $90 USD Business eVisa) is one flat all-in price that covers your approved visa delivered as a printable PDF by email, a 3-business-day turnaround, free resubmission if Cambodian Immigration flags a photo or passport correction, and US-timezone support before you fly. The visa is valid 3 months from issue and lets you stay 30 days on a single entry. The number you are quoted at checkout is the number charged to your card — there is no separate service fee tacked on at the final step. The one cost the visa price does not include is the mandatory e-Arrival Card, a separate $5 USD step of 14 fields submitted within 7 days before you arrive. So a solo traveler on a Tourist eVisa pays $85 total to be fully cleared into Cambodia.
Most Americans booking a Cambodia trip see "$80 eVisa" and reasonably assume there is a catch waiting at checkout — a service fee that appears on the last screen, a rush surcharge, an insurance add-on quietly pre-ticked. With the Cambodia eVisa there is no last screen surprise. The price you are quoted is the price charged to your card, and this guide breaks down exactly what that single number covers, line by line, so you know what you are paying for before you confirm.
The short version: $80 for a Tourist eVisa, $90 for a Business eVisa, both all-in. That figure buys an outcome rather than a place in a queue — an approved visa in your inbox as a printable PDF, approved in 3 business days, with a safety net if anything needs correcting and a support team that answers on your clock. The only cost that sits outside it is the $5 e-Arrival Card, which is a genuinely separate step and the one line item Americans most often forget to budget.
If you want the full numbers across every scenario — family budgets, Business pricing, foreign-transaction quirks on US cards — the Cambodia visa cost for Americans guide lays it all out. This page zooms in on a narrower question: what does the eVisa price itself include? When you are ready, you can apply in about ten minutes, and our Cambodia visa for United States citizens hub pulls cost, documents, and processing into one reference.
Here is the itemized list. Each of these is part of the flat price — none of them is an upsell, and none of them appears as a separate charge. Think of the price as buying a finished result and the work it takes to get there, not a form you submit and then hope about.
The core of the price is the visa itself: a 30-day single-entry Cambodia eVisa, valid for 3 months from the date it is issued. It arrives in your inbox as a PDF you print at home — no embassy visit, no passport mailed away, no sticker added to a page. You print two copies, keep one in your travel wallet and one in your bag, and present it at the airport with your passport. That delivery is included; there is no separate "delivery" or "courier" fee, because the whole thing is digital.
The price covers a 3-business-day turnaround from a complete application. That is the timeline for both the Tourist and the Business eVisa, and it is the same whether you pay the moment you book your flight or the night before. There is no faster tier you can buy your way into — one price, one timeline. Because the clock counts business days, you build a buffer around weekends and US holidays by applying about a week ahead, which costs you nothing extra and removes all the timing stress.
This is the part most Americans do not realize they are paying for until they need it. If Cambodian Immigration flags something on your file — a passport photo with a slight shadow, a glare on the bio-page scan, a date that needs adjusting — you fix it and refile at no extra charge. You are not penalized for needing a second go, and the 3-business-day clock keeps running rather than resetting to a fresh fee. A flagged application is a correction, not a rejection that costs you the price all over again.
The price includes a support team you can reach on your clock. A question at 9pm Eastern about which entry point to select or whether your passport has enough validity does not have to wait for Phnom Penh, twelve hours ahead, to wake up. For a trip you are paying thousands to take, having a real answer before you board is part of what the flat eVisa price is for.
The Tourist eVisa is $80 and the Business eVisa is $90, a $10 difference. The two are identical in the things this guide has covered so far: both arrive as a printable PDF, both are approved in 3 business days, both are valid 3 months from issue with a 30-day single-entry stay, both include free resubmission and US-timezone support. The price difference is not about faster service or a thicker support package.
What the extra $10 buys is the right visa class for what you are doing — and, more importantly, a path forward if your trip runs long. The Business eVisa is the only Cambodia visa that can be extended from inside the country, for 1, 3, 6, or 12 months. The Tourist eVisa cannot be extended at all since the tourist auto-extension ended in November 2025, so a Tourist traveler who wants to stay past 30 days has to leave and buy a fresh $80 eVisa. If there is any chance your stay stretches beyond a month, paying $90 up front for the Business class is the cheaper decision. The tourist vs business eVisa cost comparison walks through which one fits your trip.
Same price, regardless of who applies
There is no family discount, no group rate, and no per-traveler markup. Every applicant — adult, child, or infant — pays the same $80 Tourist or $90 Business price, plus the $5 e-Arrival Card. A family of four on Tourist eVisas pays four times $80 for the visas, not a bundled rate. The price is flat per person, which makes the math simple but means there is nothing to negotiate down.
The single most important thing to understand about the eVisa price is the one cost it does not cover. The Cambodia e-Arrival Card is a separate, mandatory step for every air arrival, and it is not part of the visa fee. It is its own form — 14 fields across personal, travel, and customs details — submitted within 7 days before you land, and verified through us for $5 USD. The visa proves you are allowed to enter; the e-Arrival Card is the actual arrival declaration the immigration desk checks at the gate.
Treating the e-Arrival Card as if it were rolled into the visa is the most common way Americans get tripped up at the arrivals kiosk. The two are filed at different times — the visa now, when you book; the e-Arrival Card later, in the week before you fly — and they are billed as two separate line items. So the honest "all-in to clear Cambodian entry" number for a solo Tourist traveler is $85: $80 for the visa, $5 for the e-Arrival Card.
Beyond the e-Arrival Card, the only other variable that can sit on top of the price comes from your own bank, not from us. The charge is billed in US dollars, so there is nothing to convert, but some US cards add a foreign-transaction fee of roughly 1 to 3 percent on an international charge — that is the bank charging you, not the visa price changing. A no-foreign-transaction-fee card avoids it entirely, and the accepted payment methods for your Cambodia eVisa are the usual US-issued Visa, Mastercard, and Amex. There is no departure tax to pay in cash either; the airport fee is built into your flight ticket. If you want the reassurance spelled out, the no hidden fees breakdown for Americans confirms there is nothing waiting on the final screen.
A fair question when you pay up front: what if the visa is not approved? The honest answer for US travelers is that an outright rejection is rare, because the vast majority of issues are correctable problems — a photo the system flags, a scan with glare, a typo in a date — rather than fundamental ineligibility. Those are exactly what the free resubmission built into the price is for. You fix the flagged item, refile at no extra charge, and the approval continues.
Because correctable issues are handled by resubmission rather than a fresh payment, you are not in the position of buying the visa twice to get one approval. That is the practical meaning of "all-in": the price you pay is the price to reach an approved visa, including the back-and-forth it sometimes takes to get there. If you want the full picture of how money is handled when a file is flagged or, rarely, declined outright, the guide on what happens to your money if a Cambodia eVisa is rejected covers each scenario.
The thing to avoid is paying for "speed" or "guarantees" that do not exist. Any site selling a same-day Cambodia eVisa or an expedited tier for an extra fee is charging you for handling that cannot change the underlying 3-business-day timeline. The flat price already includes the fastest legitimate turnaround there is, so there is nothing genuine to upgrade to.
One flat price, one outcome. The $80 Tourist eVisa (or $90 Business) buys your approved visa as a printable PDF by email, a 3-business-day turnaround, free resubmission if Immigration flags a correction, and US-timezone support — all in, with nothing added at the final screen. Budget the $5 e-Arrival Card as the one separate line item, and you have the complete cost of clearing Cambodian entry. If you want the dollar-by-dollar Tourist figure on its own, the Cambodia Tourist eVisa price for US citizens drills into it.
Next steps and related reading for Americans: apply for your Cambodia eVisa when you are ready to lodge, see the full Cambodia visa cost for Americans for every scenario, 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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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.