How the .kh domain registration process works
Second-level .kh names sit within a structured hierarchy of category subdomains. Understanding the eligibility, the documentary basis and the renewal cycle is essential for anyone building online presence in Cambodia.
The .kh country-code top-level domain is administered under a category structure — .com.kh, .org.kh, .gov.kh, .edu.kh and others. Applicants register at the third level under the appropriate category based on their nature and activity.
Category selection
Commercial entities register under .com.kh, non-profit organisations under .org.kh, government bodies under .gov.kh and educational institutions under .edu.kh. Choosing the correct category is a threshold requirement — a commercial entity applying under .gov.kh will be refused.
Eligibility evidence
The applicant must generally demonstrate a legitimate connection to the requested category — for example, a commercial registration certificate for .com.kh or a ministerial authorisation for .gov.kh. Foreign applicants may register through an authorised local presence.
Application content
The application includes the applicant's identification, the requested domain, technical contact details and the nameservers that will host the domain's DNS. Applicants should have their DNS ready before submitting the application.
Renewal and lapse
Domains carry a validity period and must be renewed to remain active. Lapse can result in resolution failure for the associated services — mail, web and any other DNS-dependent function — so the internal calendar should treat domain renewal as a critical event.
Disputes
Disputes over .kh names — for example, allegations of bad-faith registration of a trademarked term — are handled under the applicable dispute resolution framework. Trademark owners should monitor the namespace and act promptly if abusive registrations appear.
Legal and regulatory basis
The framework governing registering a .kh country-code domain rests on the Law on Telecommunications (2015), its implementing sub-decrees and a series of Prakas issued by the Ministry of Post and Telecommunications (MPTC). Day-to-day administration sits with the Telecommunication Regulator of Cambodia (TRC), which interprets and applies these instruments through published notices, application forms and technical circulars.
Practitioners approaching .kh domain registration should always identify the precise legal instrument that anchors the requirement before responding to a request or drafting an internal procedure. Reliance on informal guidance or historical practice is a common source of non-compliance, particularly where instruments have been updated since a filing was last prepared.
Where a matter also touches on customs, investment, cybersecurity or personal data, additional instruments issued by the Ministry of Economy and Finance, the Council for the Development of Cambodia or specialised agencies may apply in parallel. Coordinating between overlapping regimes is often more demanding than the underlying technical work.
Practical scope and application
In practice, registering a .kh country-code domain is not a purely formal exercise. TRC assesses submissions against the substance of the applicant's operations, including network topology, coverage plans, equipment inventory, customer segmentation and interaction with other licensed operators. Superficial or template-based submissions are frequently returned with requests for clarification, extending the overall timeline.
Whether .kh domain registration applies to a specific project turns on the nature of the service, the equipment involved, the frequency bands used, the customer base and, in some cases, the identity of counterparties. Boundary cases—private networks with limited external connectivity, in-building systems, temporary deployments and pilots—should be documented and, where useful, confirmed in writing with TRC before commitments are made.
Applicants operating across multiple sites or business units should map the scope carefully. A single notification or licence rarely covers heterogeneous activities, and TRC increasingly expects distinct filings for materially different operations even where they sit within one corporate group.
Documentation and evidence
A well-prepared submission on .kh domain registration typically includes a cover letter identifying the applicant and the requested action, corporate documents (business registration, tax patent, memorandum and articles), authority to sign, technical descriptions and any supporting third-party evidence such as test reports, manufacturer declarations, coverage predictions or interconnection specifications.
TRC expects consistency between commercial and technical documents. Discrepancies between coverage claims and radio parameters, between customer categories in marketing materials and licence scope, or between imported equipment lists and type approval certificates are all common triggers for follow-up questions.
Retention of the underlying evidence file—not merely the approval letter—is essential. Renewals, modifications, inspections and disputes almost always require the original technical file to be produced, sometimes years after issuance.
Timeline, fees and procedural expectations
Realistic timelines for .kh domain registration depend on completeness at the point of filing. Straightforward submissions with complete documentation typically move faster than the statutory maximum; incomplete files can extend the process significantly, particularly where technical clarifications require input from foreign manufacturers or accredited laboratories.
Applicable fees combine application fees, technical evaluation fees and, where relevant, annual or usage-based charges. Fee schedules are periodically updated by Prakas and should be verified at the time of filing rather than assumed from prior transactions.
Communication style also matters. TRC prefers concise, well-organised written submissions in Khmer or bilingual form, with technical annexes clearly cross-referenced. Verbal representations should be confirmed by follow-up correspondence to create a durable record.
Common pitfalls and risk points
The most frequent pitfalls in .kh domain registration include underestimating scope, relying on outdated templates, submitting foreign-language documents without appropriate translation, and failing to align technical parameters with commercial descriptions. Any of these can convert a routine matter into a protracted dialogue with the regulator.
Another recurring issue is fragmented internal ownership. Where regulatory, technical, procurement and legal teams work in isolation, obligations fall between the gaps—particularly ongoing reporting, renewals and change notifications. A single accountable owner, supported by a shared calendar of regulatory deadlines, materially reduces this risk.
Finally, applicants sometimes treat approvals as static. In fact, regulatory expectations evolve, and conditions attached to approvals may be updated at renewal or through subsequent Prakas. Periodic review of live approvals against current requirements is a low-cost, high-value discipline.
Ongoing compliance and record-keeping
Approval is only the starting point. Sustained compliance in relation to registering a .kh country-code domain requires periodic reporting, prompt notification of material changes, cooperation with inspections and prompt payment of recurring fees. Failure on any of these tracks can jeopardise the original approval, even where the underlying activity remains lawful.
Operators are expected to maintain organised, retrievable records: correspondence with TRC, approval certificates, technical files, payment receipts, incident logs and internal decision memoranda. In practice, a simple structured folder—physical or digital—organised by matter and by year is sufficient, provided it is actually maintained.
Where responsibilities are outsourced (for example, to distributors, integrators or hosting providers), contractual arrangements should mirror the regulatory obligations, with clear allocation of reporting duties, indemnities and audit rights.
Lex Civora perspective
In our experience advising operators, equipment suppliers and investors on .kh domain registration, the most successful filings are prepared as if they will be read by a reviewer with no prior context. Clear structure, concise technical explanation and pre-emptive answers to likely questions consistently shorten review cycles.
We recommend that clients treat regulatory engagement as a continuing relationship rather than a series of isolated transactions. Investment in a well-organised regulatory file, disciplined internal ownership and periodic review against evolving Prakas typically pays back many times over when time-sensitive matters arise.
Where a matter carries strategic or reputational weight, early informal engagement with TRC—before positions are locked in—often produces materially better outcomes than a purely formal approach. Lex Civora is available to support that engagement and to prepare the underlying filings to a standard appropriate to the stakes involved.
This explainer is provided for general information only and does not constitute legal advice. For advice on a specific matter, please contact Lex Civora.
