Cambodia is one of Southeast Asia's most accessible expat destinations — ultra-low cost of living, a fully dollarised economy (USD used everywhere), relatively straightforward residency via business or ordinary visa, and Phnom Penh and Siem Reap offer surprisingly vibrant expat communities.
Last updated: March 2026 — الفريق التحريري, eVisa-Card.com
| Capital | Phnom Penh |
| Currency | Cambodian Riel (KHR) / USD |
| Language | Khmer |
| Monthly cost | ~$700–1,400/month |
| Visa Type | Details |
|---|---|
| E-Visa (T class / Tourist) | Available online at evisa.gov.kh. 30 days, single entry, extendable once for 30 days. Cost: $30 + $6 processing fee. |
| Ordinary Visa (E class) | Available on arrival or online. 30 days, can be extended multiple times. The 'E' visa is the basis for most long-term stays. Extensions: 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, 1 year (multiple entry possible on 1-year extension). |
| Business Visa (EB class) | For those conducting business. Extendable for 1 year multiple entry. Popular with expat business owners and remote workers. |
| Retirement Extension | No specific retirement visa, but those 55+ can apply for a 1-year 'retirement' extension of their ordinary visa. Requires proof of $1,500/month income or $50,000 in bank. |
| CAMKIDS Visa (for families) | Specific category for foreign family members of Cambodian nationals. |
Cambodia's public healthcare system is very limited. Most public hospitals lack basic equipment and medicines. Expats should use private hospitals for all care beyond minor issues.
Private hospitals in Phnom Penh (Royal Rattanak Hospital, Sen Sok International University Hospital, Naga Clinic, Sunrise Japan Hospital) provide adequate to good care. Siem Reap has Royal Angkor International Hospital. For serious conditions, Bangkok is the standard evacuation destination (~1 hour by plane).
| Service | Cost |
|---|---|
| Private GP consultation | $25–60 |
| Specialist consultation | $50–100 |
| Emergency room (private Phnom Penh) | $100–500 |
| Hospitalisation (private, per night) | $200–600 |
| Dental cleaning | $25–50 |
| Medical evacuation to Bangkok | $5,000–20,000 (without insurance) |
International health insurance is not required for any visa category in Cambodia but is essential for safety. The combination of limited local facilities and proximity to excellent Thai hospitals makes evacuation coverage critical.
Cambodia's fully dollarised economy makes banking straightforward — USD accounts are the norm. Account opening is relatively easy for foreigners, even on tourist visa at some banks.
Foreigners CANNOT own land in Cambodia, but the law was amended in 2010 to allow foreigners to own condominium units on the 2nd floor and above (not ground floor or land). Workarounds include 50-year long-term leases and Cambodian company structures.
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| Transfer tax (registration fee) | 4% of property value |
| Stamp duty | 0.1% of registered value |
| Notarisation | ~$200–500 |
| Lawyer fees | $1,000–3,000 |
| Annual property tax | 0.1% of assessed value above $25,000 |
| Annual rental income tax (if renting out) | 14% withholding tax |
This guide is researched and maintained by the editorial team at eVisa-Card.com. آخر تحديث: مارس 2026. Always verify current requirements with official government sources and consult a licensed professional before making major decisions.
Editorial Team — eVisa-Card.com
Expat guides written by travel experts, immigration specialists and expats with first-hand experience in Cambodia.
✔ Verified information ✔ Updated March 2026 ✔ Official sources cited