How to Make Money Blogging in Cambodia with Travelpayouts

travelpayouts

If you’re already blogging in Cambodia, running a lifestyle site, or writing about food, travel, and life here, then the next logical step is turning that work into income. Not in theory. In practice. And one of the best and most reliable ways to do that is through Travelpayouts.

We’ve used it. It pays. And unlike a lot of other affiliate platforms, it actually works in Cambodia.

This isn’t a get-rich-quick scheme. But if you’ve got traffic, know how to write usefully, and understand what people are searching for, then it’s one of the simplest ways to monetise your blog properly and who knows maybe get paid to travel.

What is Travelpayouts

Travelpayouts is a travel affiliate platform. It brings together a large network of brands under one system. Instead of signing up to Booking.com, Trip.com, Klook, WayAway, and dozens of other travel services individually, you can apply to all of them from one dashboard.

You promote flights, hotels, tours, insurance, and more. When people book through your links, you earn a commission.

It’s designed for bloggers, content creators, YouTubers, or anyone who knows how to get eyes on links. You don’t need to be a full-time influencer. You just need an audience that wants to travel.

travelpayouts

Why it Works in Cambodia

Unlike many other affiliate platforms, Travelpayouts accepts sign-ups from Cambodia. You can register with your Cambodian company, or as an individual. It doesn’t block you for living here, and it doesn’t require a foreign bank account or PayPal.

Travelpayouts pays reliably through Payoneer. And Payoneer works fully in Cambodia.

You can link your Payoneer account to local banks like ABA, Acleda, Canadia, or most others. Withdrawals usually take one or two working days. You can also opt to be paid in USDT or through WebMoney, but for most people, Payoneer to ABA is the smoothest option.

What You Can Promote

You can promote flights to and from Cambodia, hotels in Phnom Penh, activities in Siem Reap, or even ferry tickets to Koh Rong. There are options for expats, digital nomads, tourists, and locals. If someone can book it online, you can probably earn from it.

Some of the most popular programs include booking.com, Trip.com, Klook, Viator, GetYourGuide, and WayAway. There are also regional airlines and insurance companies.

You can also build your own flight engine or hotel search site using their white-label tools. That means you don’t need to build anything from scratch. You just customise the branding, connect your domain, and let people book directly.

travelpayouts

Getting Started

  1. Sign up for a free account using the referral link:
    https://www.travelpayouts.com/?marker=641366
  2. Connect your Payoneer account
  3. Choose which travel programs to activate
  4. Add links or widgets to your blog, newsletter, or social media
  5. Get paid when bookings are made through your content

If you’re using WordPress, there’s a plugin that makes it easier to embed tools directly into posts. You can also create destination landing pages or set up a full travel search site if you’re building something more ambitious.

Why We Recommend It

We’ve tested a lot of platforms over the years. Most either don’t pay here, have ridiculous thresholds, or get shut down without warning. Travelpayouts is not just consistent, but it’s one of the few that fits the reality of blogging from Cambodia, which is not all that easy.

It works with Cambodian companies. It pays through Payoneer, which works with Cambodian banks. It supports the kind of content people actually produce here. And it doesn’t expect you to generate millions of views to get a payout.

If you’re serious about turning your site into something more than just a passion project, Travelpayouts is a tool that actually delivers.

Cambodia
https://www.cambodialifestyle.com
+855 9 678 01791

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Gareth Johnson
Author: Gareth Johnson

Gareth Johnson is the founder of Young Pioneer Tours and has visited over 180+ countries. His passion is opening obscure destinations to tourism and sharing his experience of street food.