Cambodia visa requirements for Malians
Travel and visa requirements
Cambodian Visa is not required for Malians
Stay Duration: 30 days
Entry Requirements
- Malians intending to visit Cambodia must first apply for an E-visa.
- This online pre-visa can be granted by the Cambodia consulate in the applicant's home country.
- On presentation of the pre-visa at the border checkpoint of Cambodia the traveller is then issued a visa on arrival.
- This visa is valid for a maximum total stay of 30 days within a one-year period.
- Alongside the printed confirmation that a visa will be issued upon arrival, the traveller must also have a return/onward ticket.
- A proof of hotel accommodation is also needed, as well as an international certificate of vaccination.
- Malians intending to visit Cambodia are required to provide a passport with six months of validity and with atleast two blank pages for stamps on arrival and departure.
- Malians intending to visit Cambodia are allowed an unlimited currency import
- The one month tourist visa costs $30
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Cambodia best known for??
Cambodia is famous for a Hindu temple known as Angkor Wat temple. Here the sunrise is the most captivate thing.
Is it safe to go to Cambodia??
This country is an all year round tourist destination, where the hospitality of locals has no boundaries. Generally, the country is safe, the only exception to this rule is remote areas of Phnom Penh at night. Violent crime in the country is rare.
Is Cambodia still a poor country??
Corruption is deep-rooted and Cambodia is still one of the world's poorest countries, with most of the workforce still employed in subsistence farming.
Does Cambodia still exist??
The head of government is the Prime Minister, currently Hun Sen, the longest serving non-royal leader in Southeast Asia, ruling Cambodia since 1985. In 1863, Cambodia became a protectorate of France, which doubled the size of the country by reclaiming the north and west from Thailand.
Is Cambodia a peaceful country??
The Cambodia of today is very different from that quarter of a century ago. Although it took several years for the armed conflict to end, peace and stability has brought dividends. Once one of the world's very poorest countries, Cambodia is classified by UNDP as a lower middle-income country.