Cambodia ER (Retirement) Class Visa 2026: requirements, costs, who qualifies

Cambodia’s ER (retirement-class) visa is Southeast Asia’s most relaxed long-stay path — flexible renewal, USD acceptance, sub-$1,500/month real lifestyle, and Angkor Wat as your weekend trip. Verified 2026 detail.

Last verified: May 26, 2026.

ER (Retirement) Class Visa overview

  • Income: no formal minimum, customarily $1,200+/month documented
  • Validity: renewable extensions of 6/12/24 months
  • Cost: ~$300 for 1-year ER (via agent) + $42 entry visa
  • Tax: Foreign-source income generally untaxed for retirees
  • Age: 55+ recommended (no hard rule)

Why Cambodia works

  • One of the world’s most relaxed visa policies — extensions easily processed via local agents
  • USD widely accepted alongside Cambodian Riel (no FX risk for US retirees)
  • Very low cost of living — $800-1,500/month couple lifestyle achievable
  • Siem Reap + Sihanoukville + Phnom Penh — three viable bases
  • Angkor Wat + Cambodian coast + Mekong River culture

Eligibility requirements

  • Initial e-visa or visa on arrival ($30-42)
  • Switch to ER class visa via local immigration agent ($150-300)
  • Renewal documentation: rental agreement + bank statements + clean record
  • Health insurance recommended but not required

Cost of living — Cambodia 2026

  • 1-bed Siem Reap (near Old Market): $250-450/month
  • 1-bed Phnom Penh (BKK1/Tonle Bassac): $450-800/month
  • 1-bed Sihanoukville (less popular post-2020 development): $350-600/month
  • Restaurant meal: $3-10
  • Couple comfortable monthly: $1,000-1,800 USD

FAQ

Is the ER visa formally documented?

It’s an extension class within Cambodian immigration, typically arranged through licensed visa agents rather than directly. The path is informal-but-functional — millions of expat retirees use it. For absolute legal certainty, talk to a Phnom Penh-based immigration lawyer.

Cambodia infrastructure vs Vietnam?

Cambodia is one tier behind Vietnam on roads, internet, healthcare, but ahead on visa flexibility + USD acceptance. Pick Cambodia for visa ease + lowest cost; Vietnam for infrastructure + community.

ER (Retirement/Extension) Class Visa application process step by step

Step 1. Initial entry: e-visa via evisa.gov.kh ($30-$36) OR visa on arrival ($30-$42). 30-day tourist visa.

Step 2. Switch to ER class visa via licensed Cambodian immigration agent within Cambodia. Cost: $150-$300 for 1-year ER renewal.

Step 3. Required: passport (6+ months validity), Cambodian address, no formal income proof for ER class (informal threshold $1,200+/month customary).

Step 4. Renewable in 6/12/24-month increments — extends as long as you want.

Step 5. Tax: territorial — foreign income generally not taxed for retirees on ER class.

Banking + practical setup in Cambodia

Major banks: ABA Bank (most foreigner-friendly), ACLEDA Bank, Canadia Bank, Cambodia Mekong Bank.. ABA Bank dominates — 30%+ market share + best English-language app + accepts foreigners with passport + Cambodian phone number. Account opening straightforward post-ER visa. USD widely accepted alongside Cambodian Riel — most transactions in USD.

Cultural notes for newcomers

Cambodia’s culture is dominated by Buddhist heritage + traumatic Khmer Rouge legacy still within living memory. Phnom Penh is small but rapidly developing; Siem Reap is tourism + Angkor Wat hub; coastal Sihanoukville has been transformed by Chinese investment (mixed expat reviews). Khmer language essential for full integration; English in tourist + hospitality + NGO sectors.

Real cost of living + lifestyle

Siem Reap couple: $1,000-$1,800/month — among the world’s lowest. Phnom Penh: $1,200-$2,000. Sihanoukville: $1,300-$2,200. Healthcare: limited public + adequate private (Royal Phnom Penh Hospital, Sunrise Japan Hospital) for routine; many expats fly to Bangkok or Saigon for serious care.

Most common newcomer pitfall

ER class visa is administered informally through licensed agents — there’s no formal “retirement visa” category in Cambodian immigration law. The system has worked reliably for 20+ years for thousands of expat retirees, but technically it’s an extension of a tourist-class entry. For absolute legal certainty, consult a Phnom Penh-based immigration lawyer.

How Cambodia compares to regional peers

Vs Vietnam: Cambodia is more visa-flexible + USD acceptance + lower setup friction. Vietnam has better infrastructure + healthcare + bigger nomad community.

Additional FAQ

Is Cambodia safe for expat retirees?

Siem Reap, Phnom Penh expat-popular districts (BKK1, Tonle Bassac), Kep, Kampot are within standard tourist-retiree safety norms. Sihanoukville post-2017 Chinese-investment transformation has been more turbulent — some expats avoid it. Rural Cambodia remains friendly + safe for cautious travelers. Standard precautions apply.

What about Cambodian healthcare for major procedures?

Cambodian private hospitals handle routine + minor surgical care well. For major procedures (complex cardiac, advanced oncology, neurosurgery), most expats travel to Bangkok (Bumrungrad, Bangkok Hospital) or Saigon (FV Hospital). 1-2 hour flights, JCI-quality care at fraction of US prices.

Why this country/region in 2026 specifically

Cambodia’s ER visa is the world’s most flexible long-stay path — no formal income proof, no formal age requirement, indefinite renewals via licensed agents. Combined with USD acceptance + sub-$1,500/month real lifestyle + Angkor Wat + Mekong cultural heritage, Cambodia creates uniquely accessible Asian expat life.

Cambodia’s expat retiree community concentrates in Siem Reap (Angkor Wat-adjacent, slow-paced) and Phnom Penh (capital, BKK1 + Tonle Bassac districts). Kep + Kampot offer coastal alternatives. Cambodia’s informal-but-functional immigration system has worked reliably for thousands of expats over 20+ years, though it lacks the formal legal certainty of Thailand or Malaysia structures.

Even more FAQ

Cambodia visa renewals — what could go wrong?

The ER class system is administered through licensed immigration agents — quality varies. Reputable agents have 15-20 year track records. Risk: agent goes out of business mid-renewal. Mitigation: use agents recommended by established expat community (Khmer 440 forum, Cambodia Expats Online), pay in installments rather than 5-year prepayment, maintain backup tourist visa option.

Related: full visa comparison · Thailand DTV · Bali B211A.

✓ Last verified: May 26, 2026.

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