Cambodia has a surprisingly active business chamber ecosystem for a country of its size. From the powerful European umbrella body to smaller, highly active national chapters, there's a chamber for virtually every professional background. For expats in particular, these organizations are often the fastest route to legal advice, local introductions, and the kind of practical knowledge that doesn't appear in any government brochure.
"Joining a chamber in Cambodia is not just about networking. It's about understanding the rules of the game before you play."
The Major Chambers
Here are the key players, ranked by size, influence, and relevance for the international business community in Cambodia.
EuroCham Cambodia
European Chamber of Commerce in Cambodia
Founded in 2011 by the existing French, German, and British business associations, EuroCham is the largest and most influential international chamber in Cambodia. With over 400 members and 7 national chapters representing 23 European countries, it acts as the primary voice of European business interests vis-à-vis the Royal Government of Cambodia.
EuroCham operates a full suite of advocacy committees — from agribusiness and healthcare to digital technology and green business — and publishes the widely-read Business Pulse quarterly report. Its Professional Training Academy is also one of the most active in Phnom Penh.
AmCham Cambodia
American Chamber of Commerce in Cambodia
Founded in 1996, AmCham Cambodia is the reference body for American business interests in the Kingdom. Unusually for a country where the US has historically complex diplomatic ties, AmCham is a genuinely active and open organization — its membership includes both American and Cambodian companies, and it hosts dozens of events per year, from topical forums and webinars to networking nights and its annual CSR Excellence Awards.
AmCham's advocacy committees cover real estate, education, ICT, law, tax, and trade logistics. For anyone doing business with or in the US market, or seeking to understand Cambodia's regulatory environment, AmCham is an essential contact.
CCI France Cambodge
French Chamber of Commerce and Industry — CCIFC
One of the oldest international chambers in Cambodia, the CCIFC was founded in 1998 and now counts over 230 members. It operates as a national chapter within EuroCham while maintaining its own independent programming — making it a particularly well-connected option for French-speaking businesspeople and companies.
The CCIFC publishes the annual Entrepreneurship in Cambodia guide, organizes regular events, and maintains a local chapter in Siem Reap opened in 2018. For French speakers navigating Cambodia's business environment, this is the essential first contact.
BritCham Cambodia
British Chamber of Commerce in Cambodia
BritCham is one of the oldest business associations in Cambodia, founded as the British Business Association in 1995 and officially registered as a Chamber of Commerce in 2013. Housed within the British Embassy in Phnom Penh, it operates closely with the Embassy and is a founding member of EuroCham.
BritCham events are known for their quality — exclusive gatherings at the Ambassador's Residence and the Raffles Hotel Le Royal are among the more distinctive networking opportunities in Phnom Penh. BritCham is also part of BiSEA (Britain in South East Asia), connecting members across the region.
Other Active Chambers
AusCham · CanCham · NordCham · ItaCham · Benelux · CEEBAC
Cambodia also hosts a number of smaller but active national chambers. AusCham (Australian) and CanCham (Canadian) serve their respective business communities with regular events and advocacy. Within the EuroCham umbrella, NordCham (Nordic countries), ItaCham (Italy), Benelux, and CEEBAC (Central and Eastern Europe) each operate national chapters.
The CCC (Cambodian Chamber of Commerce) and IBCC (International Business Chamber of Cambodia) are also worth noting for those working closely with the local business community.
Quick Comparison
| Chamber | Founded | Members | Languages | Key strength |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EuroCham | 2011 | 400+ | EN, FR, DE + more | Largest network, most committees, strongest advocacy |
| AmCham | 1996 | 200+ | EN | US trade links, active events calendar |
| CCIFC | 1998 | 230+ | FR, EN | Best resource for French speakers, Siem Reap chapter |
| BritCham | 1995 | N/A | EN | Oldest chamber, Embassy access, UK network |
| AusCham | 2008 | 100+ | EN | Practical, open events, Australian business community |
How to Choose
If you're European, start with EuroCham — the breadth of its network and the quality of its advocacy work make it the most useful umbrella body. If you're French-speaking specifically, add CCIFC for the language and the tighter community feel.
If you're doing business with the United States or have US partners, AmCham is worth the membership fee for its regulatory intelligence alone. If you're British, BritCham's Embassy access is a genuine advantage that's hard to replicate elsewhere.
And if you're none of the above? Most chambers are open to non-nationals. EuroCham in particular explicitly welcomes members regardless of citizenship — what matters is the connection to the relevant business community.
"Most chambers will let you attend one or two events as a guest before committing. Always take that option — the room tells you more than the brochure."
Practical Tips
Before You Join
Attend a free event first. Most chambers host open networking nights — EuroCham's monthly events, BritCham's New Members' Evenings, AmCham's Meet and Mingle series. The atmosphere and caliber of attendees will tell you whether it's the right fit.
Membership Costs
Annual fees vary significantly. Individual memberships typically start around $150–300/year; corporate memberships range from $500 to several thousand depending on company size and chamber. Most chambers offer a directory listing and event discounts that make the fee worthwhile relatively quickly.
What to Expect
Chambers in Cambodia are generally well-run and professionally staffed. Events are regular — typically 2–4 per month per chamber. The quality varies: flagship annual dinners and major advocacy forums are genuinely worthwhile; smaller networking events depend heavily on who shows up on the night.