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Cambodia

Southeast Asia (ASEAN; borders Thailand, Laos, and Vietnam; Gulf of Thailand coast at Sihanoukville/Kampot) · Primary language: Khmer (Cambodian) is the official language. English is common in Phnom Penh and Siem Reap tourism, international schools, NGOs, and many startups, but immigration counters, provincial hospitals, police reports, and lease disputes still run primarily on Khmer. French has legacy use among some older professionals; Chinese dialects appear in business circles—neither replaces Khmer for everyday administration.

Overview for US expats

Dollarised everyday economy (USD and riel), very low living costs versus the US composite on Numbeo (COL index ~34.3, Mar–Apr 2026 snapshot—note uneven contributor counts), Angkor heritage tourism, and a growing Phnom Penh expat scene. Private hospitals in the capital serve much expat care; public facilities are cheaper but crowded, and Siem Reap or coastal towns have thinner specialist depth—medevac insurance is sensible for remote work at the beach. Right-hand traffic, heavy motorbikes, seasonal flooding, and high pollution readings in dry months are practical adjustment points. Visa extensions and labour enforcement expectations evolve—keep receipts and align stay purpose with the correct permit.

Phnom Penh and Siem Reap are major hubs

E-visas, ordinary-visa extensions, work permits via the Ministry of Labour and Vocational Training, stay rules from the General Department of Immigration, tax registration with the General Department of Taxation, and NSSF enrollment are Cambodian national matters. We keep one country profile for Cambodia and separate Phnom Penh and Siem Reap pages for capital and heritage-gateway context.

Everyday life

Healthcare quality (1–5)
3
Cost of living (1–5, higher = more affordable)
6
Safety (1–5)
3
Ease of living in English (1–5)
3

Data points (where available)

Numbeo cost of living index
34.3
Safety index
50.1
Healthcare index
51.6

Schooling for families (1–5)

Early childhood
3
Primary (elementary)
3
Secondary (middle/high)
3

Why Cambodia works well for expats

  • Numbeo Mar–Apr 2026 snapshot: national cost-of-living index ~34 versus a US composite near 100—meals, domestic help, and local services are inexpensive in USD terms
  • English-friendly pockets in Phnom Penh and Siem Reap plus international schools (IB, British, US tracks) for relocating families
  • ASEAN location with budget flights to Bangkok, Ho Chi Minh City, Singapore, and Kuala Lumpur
  • Straightforward e-visa channel for short exploratory visits when rules match your itinerary
  • Young, entrepreneurial energy in tech and social-enterprise circles relative to market size

Tradeoffs and challenges

  • Khmer is essential for neighbour disputes, many police or land-registry interactions, and provincial travel
  • Petty theft, phone snatching, and scams target distracted newcomers—use ride-hail PINs and avoid flashing cash
  • Governance and rule-of-law indicators trail OECD peers; land titles and long leases need vetted lawyers
  • Pollution index on Numbeo is high in contributor-weighted data—monitor PM2.5 in dry season
  • Cambodian nationality law generally requires renunciation of prior citizenship for naturalised adults—dual citizenship is not a reliable outcome; verify with counsel

Visa routes for US citizens

  • other

    Difficulty: easy

    US citizens can typically obtain a tourist e-visa or visa on arrival (where offered) for short visits through the official Foreign Ministry e-visa portal—check validity, entries, and permitted ports before travel. Tourist visas are for leisure-aligned stays, not local employment. Cambodia does not market a standalone national remote-worker visa comparable to Malaysia’s DE Rantau; long-term remote work while holding only a tourist-class visa can be a compliance grey area—confirm purpose of stay with immigration counsel.

  • other

    Difficulty: medium

    Ordinary visa (E-class) categories and extensions for business meetings, longer exploratory stays, or other purposes stated on the visa label—extension rules and fees change periodically at immigration offices. Align each renewal with your actual activities; running a payroll job or managing a local enterprise without the correct work authorisation creates enforcement risk.

  • work permit

    Difficulty: medium

    Foreign work permits issued by the Ministry of Labour and Vocational Training together with an appropriate visa / stay authorisation from the General Department of Immigration—typically employer-led with quotas, contracts, and health checks. US civil documents often require apostille and certified Khmer translation.

  • entrepreneur

    Difficulty: hard

    Company registration with the Ministry of Commerce, tax registration with the General Department of Taxation, and sector licences where required. A business registration alone does not replace immigration status—pair corporate setup with an EB visa, quota-backed employment, or other qualifying routes and professional advice.

  • family reunification

    Difficulty: medium

    Dependents of principal visa holders when marriage certificates, birth certificates, and sponsorship documentation meet immigration standards—plan legalisation timelines for US-issued civil records.

  • retirement

    Difficulty: hard

    No simple passive-income retirement visa branded like Thailand’s O-A; long-stay retirees often cycle extensions on eligible ordinary-visa categories if rules permit or structure other lawful bases. Expect bespoke planning rather than one brochure product.

Example cities to explore

Phnom Penh, Siem Reap, Sihanoukville, Battambang, Kampot, Kep

References and further reading

Next steps