Long-Term Rental Demand: Who Actually Rents in Phnom Penh
Real yield numbers on Cambodian real estate, how to model them, and where the actual opportunities sit.
Foreigners entering the Cambodian property market usually ask the same questions in a slightly different order. This piece is written for that person — someone who wants specifics, not marketing.
Phnom Penh is Cambodia's economic capital, home to roughly 2.3 million people, and the country's dominant property market. The city concentrates most of the strata-titled condo supply that foreigners can legally own.
Yield Reality
Gross rental yields on well-located Phnom Penh condos currently sit in the 5–7% range, with premium buildings in BKK1 and Riverside occasionally touching 8% for well-priced entry stock. Net yields — after service charges, management fee, vacancy and rental tax — typically land 150–250 basis points lower. Investors who model 5% net cash-on-cash are being realistic; anyone pitched 12% "guaranteed" should ask hard questions.
Where the Money Comes From
Cambodia is a dollar economy in daily life, and rental contracts are almost always denominated in USD. That eliminates currency risk for USD-based investors — a rare thing in emerging markets. It also means yields are directly comparable to US, GCC or Singapore instruments without a currency haircut.
What Actually Drives Rent
Rental demand is dominated by expatriate professionals, regional NGO workers, and a growing cohort of Cambodian upper-middle-class tenants who want new-build inventory. Location, elevator quality and the presence of a real gym drive rent more than a marble lobby does. A unit two blocks from Aeon Mall or Northbridge International School rents faster and for more than the equivalent unit in a fringe district.
Structuring the Investment
Direct strata title in the investor's own name is the cleanest structure. It's cheap to hold, the exit is simple, and inheritance is tractable. Investors buying multiple units sometimes layer in a Cambodian company for administrative convenience, but that only makes sense above a certain scale — the incremental compliance burden isn't free.
Exits and Liquidity
Days-on-market for well-priced Phnom Penh condos runs 90–150 days. Overpriced units sit indefinitely. The secondary market is real but shallow: buyers exist, but they compare aggressively against new supply, so exit pricing needs to reference the current developer sheet, not the price you paid three years ago.
Where to Go From Here
If you're actively considering Cambodia, two useful next steps: browse our current inventory in Listings to calibrate on real prices, and talk to our Concierge team — a 30-minute call routinely saves buyers weeks of research and a few thousand dollars of avoidable fees.