Cameroon
Phone Code
+237
Capital
Yaounde
Population
28.6 Million
Native Name
Cameroon
Region
Africa
Middle Africa
Timezone
West Africa Time
UTC+01:00
On This Page
Cameroon is a Central African country often called 'Africa in miniature' for the way it gathers rainforest, savanna, mountains, beaches and arid Sahel within a single set of borders, alongside more than 240 ethnic groups and the unusual distinction of being officially bilingual in French and English. Yaoundé is the political capital, set in the cool hills of the Centre Region; Douala on the Atlantic coast is the economic engine and main international gateway. The country combines extraordinary natural assets — Mount Cameroon, the Dja Faunal Reserve, Waza National Park, the beaches of Kribi and Limbe — with a deep cultural heritage of traditional kingdoms in the Bamiléké and Bamum highlands. Some northern and Anglophone regions currently fall under specific government travel advisories; check your foreign ministry's recommendations for your itinerary.
Visa Requirements for Cameroon
Most foreign nationals require a visa to enter Cameroon, with the principal exceptions being citizens of the Central African Economic and Monetary Community (CEMAC: Chad, Central African Republic, Republic of Congo, Equatorial Guinea, Gabon) under regional free-movement protocols. Visa-on-arrival is not generally available for tourists; applications are made in advance through Cameroonian embassies or consulates. Standard requirements are a completed application form, passport with at least six months' validity and blank pages, passport photographs, a yellow fever vaccination certificate (mandatory and checked at entry), travel itinerary, proof of accommodation (hotel booking or invitation letter), evidence of sufficient funds, and the visa fee. Processing usually takes 5–10 business days; some posts require an invitation letter from a Cameroonian sponsor. An e-visa platform was rolled out in 2023 — confirm current procedures with the embassy that handles your jurisdiction.
Common Visa Types
Tourist Visa
For foreign nationals visiting Cameroon for tourism, sightseeing or visits to friends and family.
Business Visa
For business travellers, conference attendees and commercial activities in Cameroon.
Transit Visa
For travellers transiting through Cameroon to a third country by air or land.
CEMAC Entry (Regional)
For citizens of Central African Economic and Monetary Community states under regional free-movement arrangements.
Practical Travel Information
Travel Guide
Cameroon earns its 'Africa in miniature' reputation honestly: in a single country travellers find tropical rainforest, sahel savanna, the highest active volcano in West Africa, white-sand Atlantic beaches and more than 240 ethnic groups speaking some 280 languages. Mount Cameroon (4,095 m), an active volcano rising directly from the Atlantic coast, is one of the few peaks in the world where one can hike from sea level to crater rim through five distinct vegetation zones in two or three days. The Dja Faunal Reserve (UNESCO World Heritage) is one of the largest and best-preserved blocks of intact rainforest in Africa, home to chimpanzees, western lowland gorillas, drills, mandrills and forest elephants. To the far north, Waza National Park offers classic Sahel savanna safaris — elephants, lions, giraffes, hippos — without the crowds that fill East African parks. The Bamiléké chiefdoms of the Western Highlands and the Bamum sultanate at Foumban guard living royal traditions, elephant-mask ceremonies and the unique Bamum script. Kribi on the Atlantic, with the Lobé Falls cascading directly into the sea, completes the picture.
Ways to Experience This Destination
Climbing Mount Cameroon (4,095 m), the highest peak in West Africa and an active volcano whose last eruption was in 2012, is one of the most distinctive treks on the continent. The standard route from Buea climbs through five vegetation zones in two to three days — coastal cocoa plantations, montane forest, cloud forest, alpine grassland and finally the cinder-scarred lava plain near the summit. Local Bakweri guides are mandatory and arrange porters and overnight huts.
The Dja Faunal Reserve (UNESCO World Heritage), almost entirely encircled by a horseshoe bend in the Dja River, is one of Africa's last great blocks of intact lowland rainforest. It shelters chimpanzees, western lowland gorillas, drills, mandrills, forest elephants, bongo antelope and over 100 mammal species in some 5,260 km². Access is via the southern town of Somalomo, with permits and Baka guides arranged in advance through the Ministry of Forestry.
Waza National Park near Maroua in the Far North offers classic Sahel-savanna game viewing — elephants, lions, giraffes, roan antelope, kob, hippos and over 380 bird species — across grasslands and acacia parkland that empty into the Logone floodplain in the wet season. Far from the East African circuits, Waza receives a fraction of the visitors and feels genuinely wild. Verify access conditions with your embassy as the Far North region currently carries specific travel advisories.
The Western Highlands around Bafoussam, Bandjoun, Bafut and Bamenda hold over a hundred Bamiléké chiefdoms (chefferies), each with its own palace compound, sacred bamboo groves, throne rooms and royal regalia. The annual elephant-mask dances of the Kuosi society, royal funeral celebrations and the elaborate wood-carving and beadwork traditions make this one of the most living royal cultures in Africa. The Chefferie of Bandjoun and the museum-palace of Bafut are the most visitor-ready entry points.
Kribi, two hundred kilometres south of Douala on the Atlantic, has the most welcoming beaches in Cameroon — long white sand, palm-shaded coves and the unique Lobé Falls (Chutes de la Lobé) just south of town, the only sizeable falls in Africa to drop directly into the ocean. Fresh-grilled barracuda, prawns and lobster at beachfront restaurants, plus pirogue trips upriver to visit Bagyeli pygmy communities, make Kribi the country's natural beach base.
Foumban, in the Western Region, is the seat of the Bamum sultanate and one of the most striking royal sites in West-Central Africa. The Sultan's Palace (built in the early twentieth century in a fusion of Bamum and German colonial styles), the Royal Museum, the bronze-casting and beadwork ateliers along the Rue des Artisans, and the Bamum script invented by Sultan Njoya in 1896 — a complete pictographic-then-syllabic writing system devised by an African ruler for an African language — make this a destination of unusual cultural weight.
Money & Currency
Central African CFA franc (XAF)
Currency code: XAF
Practical Money Tips
Central African CFA Franc (XAF) — Pegged to the Euro at a Fixed Rate
Cameroon's currency is the Central African CFA franc (XAF), pegged to the euro at a fixed rate of 1 EUR = 655.957 XAF — the same rate that has held since 1999. This makes exchange rate calculation straightforward for European travellers but less convenient for those arriving with US dollars, British pounds, or other currencies. Exchange USD, GBP, or other currencies at banks in Yaoundé or Douala before heading upcountry. Avoid street money changers — rates are often poor and transactions unsafe.
ATMs in Yaoundé and Douala — Very Limited Elsewhere
Reliable ATMs exist in Yaoundé (the capital) and Douala (the commercial hub) — look for Ecobank, Afriland First Bank, UBA, and SGBC branches. Outside these two cities, ATMs are rare to nonexistent. Carry sufficient XAF cash before travelling to Bafoussam, Limbe, Kribi, or the Adamawa Plateau. Most ATMs dispense XAF and accept Visa and Mastercard; daily withdrawal limits are typically XAF 200,000–300,000 (approx. USD 320–480).
Cards Accepted Only in Major Hotels and Upscale Venues
Card payments (Visa and Mastercard) are accepted in a small number of hotels and restaurants in Yaoundé and Douala catering to business travellers and expatriates. Outside these establishments, cash is the only option. Mobile money — MTN Mobile Money and Orange Money — is widely used by locals for everyday payments but requires a local SIM and Cameroonian ID to register. Apple Pay and Google Pay are not available.
A Very Affordable Country — Cash Is King Everywhere
Cameroon is one of Central Africa's more accessible destinations and very affordable by international standards. Street food (ndolé, plantains, brochettes): XAF 300–800. Local restaurant meal: XAF 1,500–4,000. Budget guesthouse: XAF 8,000–20,000/night. Cold beer: XAF 500–800. Always carry XAF notes in small denominations — change for large notes is often unavailable, especially outside the major cities.
Note: Always check current exchange rates before traveling. Currency exchange is available at airports, banks, and authorized money changers.
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