Recent from talks
Nothing was collected or created yet.
Administrative divisions of Cambodia
View on Wikipedia
This article needs additional citations for verification. (July 2025) |
| Administrative divisions of Cambodia |
|---|
| First-level |
| Second-level |
| Third-level |
| Fourth-level |
|
| Fifth-level |
|
Administrative divisions of the Kingdom of Cambodia have several levels. Cambodia is divided into 24 provinces (khaet; Khmer: ខេត្ត) and the special administrative unit and capital of Phnom Penh. Though a different administrative unit, Phnom Penh is at provincial level, so de facto Cambodia has 25 provinces and municipalities.
Each province is divided into districts. As of 2023[update], there are 162 districts throughout the country's provinces, including Phnom Penh. Each province has one capital district (known as either a city or town, krong; ក្រុង), e.g. for Siem Reap, it is Krong Siem Reap. The exceptions are the provinces of Banteay Meanchey, Kampong Speu, Kandal, Koh Kong, Mondulkiri, Oddar Meanchey, Ratanakiri, Takéo and Tboung Khmum, where the name of the province and the capital district does not match.
A provincial district (srok, ស្រុក) is divided into communes (khum, ឃុំ). Communes are further divided into villages (phum, ភូមិ).
Phnom Penh's 14 districts are called khan (ខណ្ឌ) and their subdivisions sangkat (សង្កាត់), which are smaller in the other provinces. Sangkat are further subdivided into phum, which are usually translated as villages, though they do not necessarily cover one single settlement.
Administrative units
[edit]Officially, Cambodia is divided into five administrative tiers, with different types of administrative unit on each tier:
| Level | 1st | 2nd | 3rd | 4th | 5th |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type | Autonomous municipality (រាជធានី reachtheani; lit. 'capital') |
Section (ខណ្ឌ khan) |
Quarter (សង្កាត់ sangkat) |
Village (ភូមិ phum) |
Block (ក្រុម krom) |
| Province (ខេត្ត khaet) |
Municipality (ក្រុង krong) | ||||
| District (ស្រុក srok) |
Commune (ឃុំ khum) |
Local administration
[edit]In addition to these subdivisions, there are also cities and towns, which take over some of the responsibilities of the districts and communes on the area covered by the municipality. These all have an elected board and an elected mayor.
There are three different levels of municipalities (Khmer: ក្រុង):
- krong (city): More than 50,000 citizens
- krong (town): More than 10,000 citizens - or a provincial capital
In addition to the population numbers, the municipalities need to have enough tax revenues for the administration to be able to execute the offices of administrations.
Towns and cities are divided into sangkat (communes), which are equivalent to khum of rural areas.
For areas which do not reach the mandatory conditions, they exist another lower level of local administration. These usually cover a complete subdistrict (Khum), but may also cover more than one subdistrict or share a subdistrict with a municipality.
Informal subdivisions
[edit]Kandal Province is informally included as part of Phnom Penh, as the urban sprawl of the capital has already spread into these areas.
There are several definitions of regions in Cambodia.
Cambodia Town, Long Beach, California, is sometimes jokingly referred to as the "25th province" of Cambodia, because of the high population of Cambodian Americans that live there.[citation needed]
Changes in recent years
[edit]As of the end of 2013, Cambodia comprised 25 provinces and the capital Phnom Penh, divided into 185 districts, which were subdivided into 1,621 communes and 13,694 villages.[1]
In the 2019 general population census, Cambodia had 24 provinces plus the capital district, P27 cities (krongs), 14 khans, 163 districts, 237 sangkats, 1409 communtes, and 14,545 villages.[2]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Jennifer Holligan and Tarik Abdulhak, 2013, Overview of the Cambodian History, Governance and Legal Sources, chapter 2.2, "Cambodia’s Legal and Governmental System. Constitutional and administrative set-up"
- ^ General Population Census of the Kingdom of Cambodia, 2019, National Report on Final Census Results, Figures at a Glance, p. x
External links
[edit]Administrative divisions of Cambodia
View on GrokipediaOverview of Structure
Hierarchical Levels
Cambodia's administrative divisions are organized in a hierarchical framework that balances central oversight with subnational autonomy, as outlined in the Organic Law on Administrative Management of Capital, Provinces, Municipalities, Districts, and Khans promulgated on May 22, 2008. This structure features four principal levels: the top tier of provinces and the capital, intermediate subdivisions such as districts and equivalent urban entities, third-level communes and sangkats, and the foundational villages.[5] The system accommodates rural-urban distinctions, with rural areas following a province-district-commune sequence and urban zones incorporating municipalities, khans, and sangkats.[4] Provinces (khett) and the capital municipality of Phnom Penh constitute the primary subnational level, directly under the national government. Provinces are subdivided into districts (srok), while Phnom Penh is partitioned into khans; autonomous municipalities (krong), such as those in Sihanoukville or Pailin, operate at this intermediate tier with statuses akin to districts but oriented toward urban administration. Districts and municipalities are then divided into communes (khum) for rural locales or sangkats for urban ones, per the law's delineation of territorial management.[5][4] Communes and sangkats form the third tier, regulated separately under the 2001 Law on Administrative Management of Communes/Sangkats, handling local services like civil registration and basic governance. These units encompass villages (phum) as the lowest level, which function as community clusters without independent administrative powers or elected bodies, serving primarily for demographic and service delivery purposes.[6][4] This base layer typically includes 3 to 30 villages per commune or sangkat, depending on population density.[7] The hierarchy ensures unified state administration through appointed officials at higher levels—such as provincial governors selected by the prime minister—while communes and sangkats incorporate elected councils for grassroots input, though central directives predominate in policy implementation.[4] This arrangement evolved from post-1993 constitutional reforms emphasizing democratic decentralization, yet retains hierarchical controls to prevent fragmentation.[5]Current Counts and Types
Cambodia maintains a hierarchical administrative system with 24 provinces (khett) and one autonomous capital municipality (reach thani), Phnom Penh, at the top level.[1][8] These top-level divisions oversee intermediate units comprising 163 rural districts (srok), 27 district-level municipalities (krong), and 14 urban sections (khan) primarily within Phnom Penh.[9] At the base level, rural communes (khum) total 1,409, while urban quarters (sangkat) number 237, each subdivided into villages (phum), which stood at 14,545 according to the 2019 census, though a 2023 agricultural census reported 14,201 enumerated villages, possibly reflecting boundary adjustments or enumeration differences.[9][10] The following table summarizes the current types and counts of administrative divisions as of the latest official enumerations:| Administrative Level | Type | Khmer Term | Count |
|---|---|---|---|
| Top-level | Provinces | Khett | 24 |
| Top-level | Capital Municipality | Reach Thani | 1 |
| Intermediate | Districts | Srok | 163 |
| Intermediate | Municipalities | Krong | 27 |
| Intermediate | Sections | Khan | 14 |
| Base-level | Rural Communes | Khum | 1,409 |
| Base-level | Urban Quarters | Sangkat | 237 |
| Base-level | Villages | Phum | 14,545 |
