Why this article exists
For most of the last twenty years, Cambodia’s used-car market ran on Japan. Vehicles auctioned at USS, exported through Yokohama, landed in Sihanoukville, registered in Phnom Penh. The supply chain was mature, the brands were familiar, the math worked.
Then the rules changed.
In July 2022, Cambodia’s Prime Minister confirmed the ban on right-hand drive (RHD) vehicle imports. Existing RHD cars get a five-year phase-out window. New RHD imports are simply not allowed (Khmer Times — PM confirms RHD ban).
Japan produces approximately 90% of its passenger vehicles in RHD configuration. China produces approximately 95% in LHD.
That single regulatory change rewrote the sourcing economics for every Cambodian dealer. This guide does the comparison honestly — not because we sell Chinese cars, but because the math itself has shifted and importers planning 2026 sourcing need to see it clearly.
The headline issue: RHD vs LHD
Cambodia drives on the right side of the road. That means all legally imported and registered passenger vehicles must be left-hand drive (steering wheel on the left).
| Source country | Domestic production orientation | Implications for Cambodia |
|---|---|---|
| Japan | ~90% RHD | Most domestic Japanese auction inventory cannot be legally registered in Cambodia |
| UK / Australia / New Zealand | RHD | Same problem |
| Thailand / Malaysia / Singapore | RHD | Same problem |
| China | ~95% LHD | Fully compatible — direct import path |
| Korea | LHD | Compatible |
| US / Europe | LHD | Compatible but freight cost much higher |
A Japanese exporter selling to Cambodia in 2026 has to do one of three things:
- Source from Japan’s small LHD inventory — mostly export-spec or re-imported vehicles, limited supply, higher price
- Source Japanese-brand cars from LHD countries — typically US or Middle East used market, with US freight running 2–3x Asian regional freight
- Skip Japan — and look upstream from a country that produces LHD natively
This is the structural reason Chinese sourcing has grown so quickly into Cambodia. It is not a marketing preference. It is a supply-chain constraint.
Pricing comparison: a real 2018 Camry, two source paths
Let’s compare the same vehicle — 2018 Toyota Camry 2.5L, mid-grade trim, ~60,000 km — from two sourcing paths.
Path A: Japan → Cambodia (LHD-spec, re-imported)
| Line item | USD |
|---|---|
| USS auction winning bid (LHD-spec, scarcer than RHD) | 9,500 |
| Japan-side handling + export prep | 800 |
| Ocean freight Yokohama → Sihanoukville | 1,500 |
| Insurance | 200 |
| CIF Sihanoukville | 12,000 |
| Cambodia customs duty 35% | 4,200 |
| Special tax 20% (2026 rate, ≤3000cc) | 3,240 |
| VAT 10% | 1,944 |
| Landed cost | 21,384 |
Path B: China (Shenzhen) → Cambodia (LHD-spec, native)
| Line item | USD |
|---|---|
| China dealer EXW (LHD-spec, normal supply) | 11,500 |
| Ocean freight Shenzhen → Sihanoukville | 900 |
| Insurance | 150 |
| CIF Sihanoukville | 12,550 |
| Cambodia customs duty 35% | 4,393 |
| Special tax 20% | 3,389 |
| VAT 10% | 2,033 |
| Landed cost | 22,365 |
For the same Camry, the two paths land within USD 1,000 of each other. The Japan path is slightly cheaper on the absolute number — but only when you can find LHD-spec Japan inventory at this price, which is a small and inconsistent supply.
Where the math actually breaks: LHD-spec used Camrys at Japanese auctions are routinely 15–25% more expensive than the RHD-spec equivalent, because export demand from LHD markets (Russia, Middle East, parts of Africa) bids the same scarce pool. The “Japan is cheaper” intuition was built on the RHD-spec auction price, which is no longer available to Cambodia importers.
Worked the other direction: if you compare a Japan-sourced LHD Camry against a China-sourced LHD Camry of the same age and mileage, the prices are close. Chinese sourcing wins on supply consistency and lead time, not on a dramatic price advantage. For mainstream Toyota/Honda/Nissan inventory in 2026, the price gap is real but small.
Where the prices actually diverge
The Camry is the closest comparison case. The further you move from “Japanese brand both ways,” the more the math tilts.
| Vehicle category | China sourcing | Japan sourcing | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mid Toyota / Honda used | Slight savings | Comparable | Either path works |
| Premium German used (BMW / Audi) | 20–35% cheaper | Higher (re-imports) | China has deep premium used market, Japan’s premium pool is smaller and pricier |
| Korean brands (Hyundai / Kia) | Available, growing | Limited supply | Chinese-market Korean used inventory is growing, Japan never had much |
| Chinese OEM brands (BYD / Geely / Wuling / Chery / Haval) | Native supply | ~Zero supply | Japan does not retail Chinese brands |
| Used electric vehicles | Substantial 2020-2023 vintage | Almost nothing | The single biggest gap — see EV section below |
| Pickup trucks (LHD) | Available | Almost all Japan-spec pickups are RHD | China-source for LHD pickups |
The “China wins on price” argument is real but specific. It applies most strongly to:
- Premium German used (BMW, Mercedes, Audi)
- Korean brands
- Anything where the buyer wants an EV
- LHD pickups and utility vehicles
For mainstream Camry/Accord/CR-V, the cost gap is closer to 5–10% than 30%.
The EV gap
This is where the comparison stops being close.
Japan’s domestic EV adoption is slow — under 3% of new car sales in 2024. That means there is no meaningful Japanese used EV market for 2018-2022 vintage vehicles. Exporters selling to Cambodia simply do not have used EV inventory to offer.
China is the opposite. EV sales hit ~38% of new car sales in 2024. The 2020-2022 first-owner cycle is rolling off now. Used BYD Han, BYD Atto 3, Geely Geometry C, Wuling Bingo, Chery Omoda — all sitting in Shenzhen, Shanghai, Guangzhou dealer lots, ready to ship.
Combined with Cambodia’s January 2026 EV tax cut (special tax from 30% → 10% for passenger EVs — our detailed Cambodia duty breakdown), the EV math from China hits a 40% effective tax burden versus 78% for the same-CIF Camry. Same buyer cash. Much better unit economics.
For any Phnom Penh dealer thinking about adding EV inventory in 2026, Japan is not a viable source. China is the only viable source at scale. See our deeper analysis in Why Chinese EVs Are Flooding Southeast Asia.
Where Japan still wins
Honest balance — Japan-source advantages that survive in 2026:
1. Quality and documentation rigor. Japanese auction grading (USS, TAA, JAA) is the global gold standard. A grade 4 auction sheet is internationally trusted in a way no Chinese dealer report yet matches. For a buyer who weights inspection certainty above all other factors, Japan still wins.
2. Maintenance ecosystem familiarity. A 30-year-old Phnom Penh mechanic has worked on Camrys, Hilux, and Corollas his whole career. He has not worked on a BYD Han. Parts for Toyota are everywhere. Parts for a 2021 BYD have to be ordered from China with 4-week lead times. This gap will close, but it is real in 2026.
3. The over-15-year-old market. Older used vehicles (12+ years) are abundant in Japan’s domestic market and very cheap. China simply does not have an equivalent old-vehicle supply because the Chinese auto market only matured 2008–2012. For dealers serving the cheapest end of the Cambodian market (sub-$8,000 landed), Japan still has supply that China does not.
4. Specific niche models. Hi-roof Hiace vans, kei trucks, agricultural and utility vehicles — Japan-specific build configurations that China does not produce or import at scale.
What this means for Phnom Penh dealers in 2026
A balanced 2026 sourcing mix for a Phnom Penh dealer probably looks something like:
| Source | Allocation | Vehicle types |
|---|---|---|
| China — LHD-native | 50–65% | Mid Toyota/Honda LHD, premium German, all EVs, Chinese brands, LHD pickups |
| Japan — LHD-spec | 20–30% | Older vintage (12+ years), niche utility, buyer-trusted Toyota |
| Korea + US | 10–20% | Hyundai/Kia, US-spec premium, specific high-value units |
A year ago, the same dealer was probably 60–80% Japan. The shift is not because Chinese cars suddenly got better. It is because:
- The RHD ban took 90% of Japan’s domestic supply off the table
- The 2026 Cambodia tax cuts unlocked the EV math
- Chinese-side dealer infrastructure for export got dramatically more professional 2023–2025
- Chinese OEMs are pricing exports aggressively to win share
What this article does not cover
- Vehicle age limits. Cambodia has age restrictions on certain categories. Always confirm with a licensed customs broker.
- Specific HS code rates. We’ve used the standard 35% duty band. Some categories vary.
- Resale value in 5 years. Honest answer: nobody knows yet how 2021–2023 Chinese EVs will hold value in ASEAN. Toyota’s 5-year residual is more predictable today.
- Brand-by-brand reliability data. Long-term reliability data on Chinese brands in tropical climates is still being established.
How UCarsea operates
We source from both China and Japan, but our core sourcing infrastructure is in China — Shenzhen, Guangzhou, Shanghai, Kunming dealer networks for LHD inventory, plus partner relationships for Japan-side LHD-spec auction bidding when a specific buyer asks for Japan-source.
For Cambodian dealers, our typical workflow:
- You send us a target list (model, year band, mileage, budget)
- We return per-VIN options from both sources with landed-cost sheets
- You choose, we ship
- HS code pre-clearance, third-party inspection, full documentation
If you want to compare a specific vehicle from both sources for your next deal, send us your spec and we will return a side-by-side option sheet within 24 hours.
Sources
- Cambodia PM confirms all right-hand drive vehicles are banned — Khmer Times
- Right-hand drive vehicles no longer allowed after June 2022 — Phnom Penh Post
- Japan Used Car Market Report 2025–2026 — Provide Cars (USS auction data)
- Cambodia Customs Duty & Tax Rates: 2026 Tariff Reductions — DFDL
- Cambodia’s Regulatory Framework for Importing Used Cars from China — AutoCango
This article is part of a series on cross-border used-car sourcing decisions for Southeast Asian dealers. Related: Cambodia Used Car Import Duty 2026 — full breakdown · Why Chinese EVs Are Flooding Southeast Asia.