Niger
Phone Code
+227
Capital
Niamey
Population
25 Million
Native Name
Niger
Region
Africa
Western Africa
Timezone
West Africa Time
UTC+01:00
On This Page
Niger is a landlocked West African republic of around 25 million people, covering 1.27 million square kilometres — larger than Texas and California combined — and bordering Algeria and Libya to the north, Chad to the east, Nigeria and Benin to the south, and Burkina Faso and Mali to the west. Approximately 80% of the country lies within the Sahara, with the southern fringe in the Sahel and the very south on the Niger River. The country is named after the Niger River, the third-longest in Africa, which loops through Niamey and gives the southern agricultural belt its rice paddies, the Boubon pottery villages and the Kouré Giraffes Reserve (the last West African giraffe population in the wild). The official language is French; ten languages have national status, of which Hausa (the lingua franca of trade across the southern border with Nigeria), Zarma-Songhai (the language of the Niamey region and the Songhai-empire heritage of Gao and Timbuktu), Tamasheq (the language of the Tuareg of Agadez and the Aïr) and Fulfulde (the language of the Wodaabe and other Fulani pastoralists) are the most widely spoken. Niger has two UNESCO World Heritage Sites — the Aïr and Ténéré Natural Reserves (inscribed 1991, on the List of World Heritage in Danger since 1992 due to the long political turbulence of the region; the geography itself, the largest wilderness reserve in Africa at 7.7 million hectares, remains one of the planet's great desert landscapes) and the Historic Centre of Agadez (2013, with the iconic 27-metre conical earthen minaret of the Grand Mosque of Agadez, rebuilt in 1844 on 16th-century foundations, and the Sultan's Palace) — and shares the W-Arly-Pendjari transboundary natural site (2017, with Burkina Faso and Benin), the Niger W National Park being the only place in the West African Sahel where elephant, lion, manatee, hippo and over 350 bird species coexist. Two UNESCO Intangible Heritage entries celebrate the country's cultural specificity: the Cure Salée festival of the Tuareg and Wodaabe at In-Gall (inscribed 2019, the great September gathering after the rains for the salt cure of the herds, with the Wodaabe Gerewol courtship dance — the most photographed pastoral festival in West Africa) and the practices and craftsmanship of Tuareg silversmithing (2013, the Agadez cross — croix d'Agadez — and the great inadan smith tradition). Visa policy: visa-free entry for citizens of the 15 ECOWAS member states (Benin, Burkina Faso, Cabo Verde, Côte d'Ivoire, the Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Togo and Niger itself); embassy visa required for almost all other nationalities, with yellow-fever vaccination certificate mandatory. Currency is the West African CFA Franc (XOF), permanently pegged to the euro at 655.957 XOF = 1 EUR — useful for francophone European travellers. Travellers should consult the current travel advisory of their home country's foreign ministry before booking — security context in the Sahel evolves and the official advice is the working baseline for itinerary, insurance and timing decisions.
Visa Requirements for Niger
Niger requires an embassy visa for almost all non-ECOWAS nationalities. Tourist visa applications go through Niger embassies and consulates abroad — the principal European missions are in Paris, Brussels and Berlin (Berlin accredited additionally to Austria and Switzerland), with consular sections also in Geneva (UN multilateral) and Rome. Standard requirements are passport with at least 6 months' validity from entry, two passport photos, a completed application form, a letter of invitation or hotel confirmation, a copy of the return air ticket or itinerary, the yellow-fever vaccination certificate (mandatory for entry), and the visa fee, typically equivalent to USD 50–150 depending on duration and nationality; processing time is normally 5–15 working days. ECOWAS-protocol visa-free entry covers citizens of the 15 ECOWAS member states (Benin, Burkina Faso, Cabo Verde, Côte d'Ivoire, the Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Togo) for stays generally up to 90 days, with the yellow-fever certificate still required. Business visas require an invitation from a Niger-registered company; work visas require an employment contract and a labour-permit pre-clearance. Transit visas (48–72 hours) are available for some nationalities transiting Niger by land. The yellow-fever vaccination certificate (issued at least 10 days before departure) is the single non-negotiable health document — Niger lies in the WHO yellow-fever transmission zone and the certificate is checked at all points of entry. Travellers should always consult the travel-advisory and consular information from their home country's foreign ministry — UK FCDO, US State Department, Australian Smartraveller, German Auswärtiges Amt, Swiss EDA, Austrian BMEIA, French Ministère de l'Europe et des Affaires étrangères, Italian Farnesina, Spanish MAEC and Canadian GAC all maintain Niger pages with current advice on regional accessibility, consular support availability and itinerary recommendations.
Common Visa Types
Tourist Visa (Embassy Application)
Tourism, family visit and short business travel for almost all non-ECOWAS nationalities — applied for in advance through the nearest Niger embassy or consulate.
ECOWAS Visa-Free Entry
Citizens of the 15 ECOWAS member states (Benin, Burkina Faso, Cabo Verde, Côte d'Ivoire, the Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Togo and Niger itself) under the regional free-movement protocol.
Business, Work & Residence Visa
Business activity, employment, study and residence — used by personnel in the uranium and oil sectors, NGOs and development cooperation, diplomatic missions and academic exchange.
Transit Visa
Travellers transiting Niger by land between neighbouring countries — historically relevant for the trans-Saharan route between Algeria/Libya in the north and Nigeria/Benin in the south, and for the regional W-Park circuit.
Important Travel Information
Travel Guide
Niger is one of the great Sahara destinations of West Africa — the largest country in francophone Africa, covering 80% sand and rock from the Aïr massif in the north to the Ténéré and the Bilma erg, with the Niger River and its irrigated southern belt providing the country's agricultural and population centre of gravity around Niamey. The capital, Niamey (around 1.5 million), sits on the right bank of the Niger River in the south-west and is the main international gateway via Diori Hamani International Airport (NIM), with regional flights from Casablanca, Algiers, Lomé, Cotonou, Abidjan, Dakar, Addis Ababa and historically Paris (the Air France direct route is the historical reference for francophone European travellers; current routings vary and depend on the security context — consult your home country's travel advisory). The Niamey itinerary centres on the Niger River corniche, the National Museum (Musée National Boubou Hama, with Niger's most important archaeological and palaeontological collections including the Sahara dinosaur fossils excavated by the Paul Sereno expeditions in the 1990s and 2000s and the famous tree of Ténéré stump preserved here), the Grande Mosquée, the Petit Marché and the Boubon pottery villages just outside town. The Kouré Giraffes Reserve, 60 km south-east of Niamey, is the world's last refuge of the West African giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis peralta — around 600 individuals as of recent counts) and the easiest wildlife day trip in the country. The W National Park, 150 km south-east of Niamey near the tri-border with Benin and Burkina Faso (the W-Arly-Pendjari transboundary UNESCO World Heritage Site, 2017), is the only place in the West African Sahel where elephant, lion, manatee, hippo, cheetah, leopard and around 350 bird species coexist; the dry season (December to May) is the standard window. The cultural and Saharan heart of Niger is in the north, around Agadez and the Aïr. Agadez (UNESCO 2013) is one of the great Saharan caravan capitals — the historic centre is built around the 27-metre conical mud-brick minaret of the Grand Mosque of Agadez (the most photographed structure in the country, rebuilt in 1844 on 16th-century foundations and one of the iconic earthen-architecture buildings of the Islamic world), the Sultan's Palace, the seventeen-arch Vieux Quartier, the Tuareg silver bazaar (the Agadez cross, croix d'Agadez, is the most distinctive piece of West African silverwork) and the springboard for Saharan expeditions. North of Agadez, the Aïr Mountains (with Mount Bagzane at 2,022 m, the highest point in Niger) rise as sandstone massifs from the Sahara — the historic Tuareg homeland, with the prehistoric Dabous Giraffes petroglyphs (the largest rock-engraved giraffe figures in the world, around 8,000 years old, on a sandstone outcrop near Iférouâne), the small oasis towns of Iférouâne, Timia and Tabelot, and the date-palm-and-citrus gardens of the Aïr's hidden valleys. East of the Aïr, the Ténéré Desert (the great absolute sand sea — a name in Tamasheq meaning 'where there is nothing') is the iconic Saharan landscape of dunes, the legendary Tree of Ténéré (l'Arbre du Ténéré, the lone acacia that for decades was the most isolated tree in the world; the original was felled by a truck in 1973 and replaced by a metal sculpture, with the dead trunk preserved at the National Museum in Niamey), the Bilma salt caravans (the historic Hausa-Tuareg trans-Saharan trade route from Agadez to the Kawar oasis with its salt-pans, still partially active as a cultural/photographic subject) and the Termit-Tin Toumma Reserve (the rare addax antelope, scimitar-horned oryx and the dama gazelle). The Cure Salée festival (UNESCO Intangible 2019) takes place each September around In-Gall (north of Tahoua) — the great gathering of Tuareg and Wodaabe pastoralists for the post-rains salt cure of the herds, with the famous Wodaabe Gerewol courtship dance (young men in elaborate face paint and feathered headdresses competing in the eyes of the unmarried women, the most photographed cultural festival in West Africa). The Niger River side of the country (Niamey, the Boubon pottery villages, the Tilabéri region, the Liptako sandstone country) has its own quieter pastoral and agricultural rhythm. Cuisine — riz au sauce arachide (rice with peanut sauce, the everyday Niger meal), tô (millet porridge, the staple), ragoût d'agneau, brochettes of grilled meat, hibiscus juice (bissap), millet beer, the Touareg green-tea ceremony — anchors the food side. Niger's hospitality, particularly the Tuareg three-glass tea ritual and the Hausa southern-trade sociability, is consistently the strongest first impression for travellers who reach the country.
Ways to Experience This Destination
Agadez (UNESCO World Heritage 2013) is one of the great Saharan caravan capitals and the cultural gateway to Niger's north. The historic centre is built around the 27-metre conical mud-brick minaret of the Grand Mosque of Agadez — the most photographed structure in the country, rebuilt in 1844 on 16th-century foundations and one of the iconic earthen-architecture buildings of the Islamic world. The Sultan's Palace (Palais du Sultan), the seventeen-arch Vieux Quartier, the Tuareg silver bazaar (where the inadan smith caste produces the famous croix d'Agadez and the great Tuareg leatherwork) and the springboard role for Saharan expeditions to the Aïr and Ténéré make a 2–3-day stay. The city was for centuries the southern terminus of the trans-Saharan caravans from Tripoli, Ghadamès and Tamanrasset, and the cultural heart of the West African Tuareg.
The Aïr Mountains north of Agadez — sandstone massifs rising from the Sahara to Mount Bagzane at 2,022 m, the highest point in Niger — are the historic Tuareg homeland and the wilderness counterweight to the city. The prehistoric Dabous Giraffes (around 8,000 years old, the largest rock-engraved giraffe figures in the world, near Iférouâne) anchor the petroglyph circuit; the small oasis towns of Iférouâne (the regional Tuareg cultural centre), Timia (a date-palm-and-citrus oasis), Tabelot and the Bagzane Plateau offer trekking and 4×4 access; the Aïr is part of the Aïr and Ténéré Natural Reserves, a UNESCO World Heritage Site (1991) covering 7.7 million hectares — the largest wilderness reserve in Africa.
East of the Aïr stretches the Ténéré (a Tamasheq word meaning 'where there is nothing') — the great absolute sand sea of Niger, with the iconic dunes, the legendary l'Arbre du Ténéré (the lone acacia that for decades was the most isolated tree in the world, around 400 km from any other tree; the original was felled by a truck in 1973 and replaced by a metal sculpture at the same site, with the original trunk preserved at the National Museum in Niamey), the historic Bilma salt caravans of the Hausa-Tuareg trans-Saharan trade (the route from Agadez to the Kawar oasis with its salt-pans), the Termit-Tin Toumma Reserve (rare addax antelope, scimitar-horned oryx and dama gazelle) and the Adrar Madet petroglyph zone. The Ténéré is the Sahara at its most absolute and the iconic landscape of any Niger photographic itinerary.
Niamey (around 1.5 million), the capital on the right bank of the Niger River in the south-west, is the country's main international gateway and a comfortable 2–3-day arrival base. The river corniche, the National Museum (Musée National Boubou Hama — with the Sahara dinosaur fossils excavated by the Paul Sereno expeditions in the 1990s and 2000s, the famous original trunk of the Tree of Ténéré, and the country's most important ethnographic collections), the Grande Mosquée, the Petit Marché (the central craft and food bazaar) and the Boubon pottery villages along the Niger River 25 km out of town anchor the city circuit. The Kouré Giraffes Reserve, 60 km south-east of Niamey, is the world's last refuge of the West African giraffe (Giraffa camelopardalis peralta — around 600 individuals as of recent counts) and the easiest wildlife day trip in the country.
The W National Park, 150 km south-east of Niamey near the tri-border with Benin and Burkina Faso, is the Niger third of the W-Arly-Pendjari transboundary UNESCO World Heritage Site (2017). Named for the W-shaped meander of the Niger River that defines its boundary, the park is the only place in the West African Sahel where African forest and savannah elephant, West African lion, manatee, hippo, leopard, cheetah, roan antelope, hartebeest, kob and around 350 bird species coexist. The dry season (December to May) is the standard wildlife-viewing window. Niger's W-Arly-Pendjari section is the most accessible from the Niamey side and runs in cooperation with the Benin and Burkina Faso protected areas as the largest contiguous wilderness corridor in the West African Sahel.
The Cure Salée (UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage 2019) is the great September gathering of Tuareg and Wodaabe pastoralists at In-Gall, north of Tahoua — the post-rains salt cure of the herds when the saline pastures around In-Gall replenish the cattle, camels and goats after the long dry season. The festival's most photographed element is the Wodaabe Gerewol courtship dance: young Wodaabe men, in elaborate face paint, white teeth contrast and feathered headdresses, line up and dance for hours before the unmarried women, who choose partners on the basis of beauty, voice and grace. The Gerewol is the most photographed pastoral festival in West Africa and a fixture of National Geographic and ethnographic documentary work since the 1970s.
Tuareg silversmithing (UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage 2013) is one of West Africa's distinctive crafts — the inadan smith caste of Agadez has for centuries produced the croix d'Agadez (the geometric Tuareg silver cross with regional variants from each Aïr oasis), heavy silver bracelets, takouba sword decoration, the takamzhak earrings and the camel-saddle leatherwork that pairs with the silver. The Niger table is anchored by riz au sauce arachide (rice with peanut sauce, the everyday meal across the country), tô (millet porridge, the staple), ragoût d'agneau, brochettes of grilled meat, hibiscus juice (bissap), bouille de mil, the millet beer of the southern villages and the Tuareg three-glass green-tea ceremony (the first cup bitter as life, the second sweet as love, the third gentle as death). Niger's pastoralist hospitality — particularly in Tuareg and Wodaabe camps — is consistently the strongest first impression for international travellers.
Money & Currency
West African CFA Franc (XOF)
Currency code: XOF
Practical Money Tips
West African CFA Franc (XOF) — pegged to EUR at 655.957 XOF = 1 EUR (fixed rate); exchange EUR or USD to XOF at banks (Ecobank, BIA-Niger, BSIC, Sahel Finances) in Niamey; limited exchange options outside the capital; carry sufficient XOF for travel outside Niamey
Niger uses the West African CFA Franc (XOF), shared with seven other West African nations (Senegal, Côte d'Ivoire, Mali, Burkina Faso, Guinea-Bissau, Benin, Togo). The XOF is permanently pegged to the euro at 655.957 XOF = 1 EUR. Exchange EUR or USD at Ecobank, BIA-Niger, BSIC, or Sahel Finances in Niamey. EUR gives the best exchange rate due to the fixed peg. USD is also widely exchangeable. CHF, GBP, and other currencies should be converted to EUR before arriving. Outside Niamey, banking is extremely limited — exchange all needed XOF in the capital before travelling to Agadez, Tahoua, Zinder, or Dosso. Airport exchange counters (Niamey's Diori Hamani International Airport) are operational on international arrival flights.
ATMs limited to Niamey — Ecobank, BIA-Niger, and BHN ATMs accept Visa; Mastercard has limited acceptance; ATMs outside Niamey are rare or unreliable; withdraw sufficient XOF in Niamey for all travel; Wise and Revolut work at Ecobank ATMs in Niamey
ATM coverage in Niger is very limited. In Niamey, Ecobank, BIA-Niger (Banque Islamique du Niger), and BHN (Banque Habitat du Niger) have ATMs that accept Visa cards. Mastercard acceptance is inconsistent — confirm card acceptance before travel. Outside Niamey, ATMs are rare, unreliable, or non-existent. Agadez has some banking services but reliability for international cards is not guaranteed. Zinder, Tahoua, Dosso: minimal banking infrastructure. Strategy: withdraw all necessary XOF in Niamey before any regional travel. Wise and Revolut work at Ecobank Niamey ATMs. Fees: XOF 1,500–3,000 per withdrawal.
Card acceptance very limited — larger hotels and a few restaurants in Niamey accept Visa; most businesses, markets, transport, and all rural areas are cash-only; Apple Pay and Google Pay not available; XOF cash is essential throughout Niger
Card acceptance is very limited in Niger. A few larger hotels, the Gaweye Hotel Niamey, and select restaurants in Niamey may accept Visa cards. Mastercard acceptance is rare. Most businesses, markets, transport, local restaurants, and all services outside Niamey are cash-only. Apple Pay and Google Pay are not available. Mobile money (Orange Money, Airtel Money) is used by locals but not accessible to international tourists without a local SIM. Carry sufficient XOF cash at all times. USD cash is occasionally accepted at larger establishments in Niamey but XOF is universally usable.
Budget destination with limited infrastructure: mid-range hotel Niamey XOF 35,000–70,000/night (EUR 53–107); local restaurant meal XOF 1,500–4,000; Niamey–Agadez bus XOF 10,000–15,000; millet porridge (boule) XOF 200–500; bottled water XOF 250–500
Niger is an affordable destination by any measure, with low local prices, though visitor numbers are limited and tourist infrastructure is basic. Mid-range hotel in Niamey: XOF 35,000–70,000/night (EUR 53–107). Budget guesthouse: XOF 10,000–25,000/night (EUR 15–38). Local restaurant meal (rice with sauce): XOF 500–1,500. Mid-range restaurant (Niamey): XOF 3,000–8,000. Intercity bus Niamey–Agadez: XOF 10,000–15,000. Local transport (bush taxi): XOF 500–2,000 per trip. Bottled water 1.5L: XOF 250–500. Millet porridge (boule): XOF 200–500. XOF 1,000 note = approximately EUR 1.52.
Note: Always check current exchange rates before traveling. Currency exchange is available at airports, banks, and authorized money changers.
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