ہم سائٹ کو چلانے کے لیے ضروری کوکیز اور اختیاری کوکیز کو یہ سمجھنے کے لیے استعمال کرتے ہیں کہ اسے کیسے استعمال کیا جاتا ہے۔ آپ سب کو قبول کر سکتے ہیں، اختیاری کو مسترد کر سکتے ہیں، یا اپنے انتخاب کو حسب ضرورت بنا سکتے ہیں۔ کوکی پالیسی
لوڈ ہو رہا ہے…
ادائیگی10 منٹ پڑھیں
Pay for Your Cambodia eVisa with PayPal, Apple Pay, or Google Pay (US Guide)
Yes — you can pay for a Cambodia eVisa with PayPal, Apple Pay, or Google Pay. Each digital wallet charges the $80 all-in Tourist or $90 Business price in US dollars, tokenizes your card so your raw number never touches the checkout, and clears in seconds. Here is exactly how each one works for US travelers.
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Written byہنری ڈوپونٹ
10 منٹ پڑھیںUpdated
Can you pay for a Cambodia eVisa with PayPal, Apple Pay, or Google Pay?
Yes. The Cambodia eVisa checkout accepts PayPal, Apple Pay, and Google Pay alongside Visa, Mastercard, American Express, and Discover. You pay the $80 USD all-in Tourist eVisa or $90 USD Business eVisa price, billed in US dollars, with no extra surcharge for paying through a wallet. Each wallet draws on a card or balance you already have: PayPal pulls from your linked balance, bank, or card; Apple Pay and Google Pay charge whichever card is set in your phone wallet. The advantage for US travelers is security and reliability — the wallet tokenizes the transaction so your real card number never touches the checkout, and because your bank often already trusts the wallet device, a tokenized payment is less likely to be declined as a suspicious overseas charge than typing a raw card number.
کلیدی ٹیک ویز
PayPal, Apple Pay, and Google Pay all work for the Cambodia eVisa — you pay the $80 USD all-in Tourist or $90 USD Business price, billed in US dollars, with no separate surcharge for choosing a wallet.
A digital wallet tokenizes the payment, so your raw card number never lands on the checkout. That is the single biggest reason to use Apple Pay or Google Pay on any travel site.
Each wallet still draws on a card or balance behind it: PayPal pulls from your linked bank, balance, or card; Apple Pay and Google Pay bill whichever card sits in your phone wallet.
A wallet can sidestep the most common US decline — your bank flagging an unfamiliar overseas card charge — because the card issuer often already trusts the tokenized wallet device.
The mandatory e-Arrival Card is a separate $5 USD payment verified through us — 14 fields, submitted within 7 days before you land — and it accepts the same wallets with no extra surcharge.
Yes — every major wallet works at checkout
Paying with PayPal
PayPal billing and currency
Paying with Apple Pay and Google Pay
Why a wallet often clears when a typed card fails
Which wallet should you use?
Paying safely — and covering the e-Arrival step too
Yes. PayPal is accepted at the Cambodia eVisa checkout. You select PayPal, log in, and confirm the $80 USD all-in Tourist or $90 USD Business charge, billed in US dollars. PayPal draws the money from your default funding source — your PayPal balance, a linked US bank account, or a card on file. The merchant never sees your card details, which makes PayPal a popular choice for paying on a travel site you are using for the first time.
Does Apple Pay work for the Cambodia eVisa?
Yes. If you are applying on an iPhone or iPad with a card in your Wallet app, you tap the Apple Pay button and authenticate with Face ID or Touch ID — no card number to type. It charges whichever card is set as your default in the wallet, for the same $80 or $90 USD price. Apple Pay tokenizes the payment, so your real card number never reaches the checkout.
کیا Google Pay کمبوڈیا eVisa کے لیے کام کرتا ہے؟
Yes. Google Pay is accepted on Android phones and in Chrome with a card saved to your Google account. You tap the Google Pay button, confirm with your fingerprint or device PIN, and it charges your default wallet card for the $80 or $90 USD price. Like Apple Pay, it tokenizes the transaction so your card number stays private.
Is there an extra fee for paying with a digital wallet?
No. There is no surcharge for choosing PayPal, Apple Pay, or Google Pay — you pay the same $80 USD Tourist or $90 USD Business all-in price as you would with a typed card. The only possible extra is your own bank’s foreign-transaction fee of roughly 1 to 3 percent, which applies to the card behind the wallet, not because you used a wallet. A card with no foreign-transaction fee avoids it.
Will paying with a wallet help if my card keeps getting declined?
Often, yes. The most common decline for US travelers is your bank flagging an unfamiliar overseas card-not-present charge as suspected fraud. A tokenized Apple Pay or Google Pay payment carries device-level trust your bank already recognizes, so it is less likely to be blocked. If a typed card just bounced, retrying the same card through a wallet sometimes clears it — though telling your bank you are making an international purchase is still the surest fix.
Is the Cambodia eVisa charged in US dollars through these wallets?
Yes. The price is set in US dollars, so PayPal, Apple Pay, and Google Pay all show and charge $80 USD for the Tourist eVisa or $90 USD for the Business eVisa. There is no currency conversion at checkout and no dynamic-currency-conversion screen at a marked-up rate. The only caveat is if your wallet defaults to a non-USD funding source, in which case the wallet itself may convert — uncommon for a US traveler paying from a US account.
Henri runs the Pricing Honesty desk at VisaToCambodia. He audits visa-agent checkout pages for hidden surcharges and bait-and-switch fees, and he writes the payment and cost cluster so US travelers see exactly what they pay, on which method, before they confirm — every figure itemized, no surprises at the gate.
Cambodia eVisa: PayPal, Apple Pay, Google Pay (US)
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Can I pay for the e-Arrival Card with a digital wallet too?
Yes. The e-Arrival Card is a separate $5 USD payment verified through us — 14 fields, submitted within 7 days before you land — and it accepts the same wallets as the visa, with no extra surcharge. You can pay it with the same PayPal account or phone wallet. It appears as its own $5 line on your statement, separate from the visa charge, because it is a separate filing.