Africa doesn't have to be expensive. These ten destinations deliver unforgettable experiences for under $50 a day — some for well under $35.
5 July 2025
Africa has a reputation for being expensive, partly deserved and partly myth. Safari camps in Botswana genuinely do cost $500–$1,500 per night. But Ethiopia, Uganda, Ghana, and Egypt can be explored for $30–50 per day with no meaningful sacrifice in experience.
Budget tiers used below: Budget (hostels, local food, public transport) / Mid-range (guesthouse or 3-star hotel, restaurants). All prices in USD per person per day.
Ethiopia is Africa's best-kept budget travel secret. Addis Ababa has excellent budget guesthouses, and local injera-based meals cost $1–3 at local restaurants. The historic circuit (Lalibela, Axum, Gondar, Simien Mountains) offers world-class sights at a fraction of East African prices.
Domestic flights are cheap and save long bus journeys. The $50 e-Visa applies equally to all nationalities. Internal transport is affordable. The only significant cost is the Simien Mountains National Park trekking permit.
Egypt is extraordinary value, particularly after the Egyptian pound's significant depreciation. Luxor guesthouses cost $10–20 per night. A Nile felucca ride costs a few dollars. Street food (fuul, ta'meya, koshari) feeds you for $1–3 per meal.
The main expense is entrance fees — the Pyramids, Karnak, and the Valley of the Kings each charge $10–20, but even a week of sightseeing rarely exceeds $100 in entrance fees total. An 8-day Egypt trip including budget accommodation, food, and all major sights typically costs $400–600.
Morocco punches well above its budget weight class. Medina guesthouses in Marrakech, Fes, and Chefchaouen run $20–40 per night and often include breakfast. Street food is exceptional and cheap — a tagine at a local restaurant costs $4–8.
The main tourist sites charge $2–5 entry. Shared taxis between cities are cheap. The Sahara desert trip from Marrakech to Merzouga costs $50–100 for a 3-day tour including camel ride and desert camp.
Uganda's day-to-day costs are very low. Kampala has excellent budget accommodation from $15/night, local restaurants serve large meals for $2–5, and boda-boda (motorcycle taxi) rides cost cents. Matatus and shared minibuses connect the country cheaply.
The big cost is gorilla trekking permits ($700 each) and chimp tracking ($150–200). Plan these as a separate budget item — the daily living costs around them are very affordable.
The "Warm Heart of Africa" is one of the continent's most underrated destinations and one of its cheapest. Lake Malawi is one of Africa's great gems — you can rent a beach chalet for $15–25 per night and spend days snorkelling over hundreds of cichlid fish species.
Blantyre and Lilongwe have cheap local markets and restaurants. Transport is inexpensive. Without expensive national park permits, Malawi is comfortably achievable on $30/day.
Madagascar is surprisingly affordable despite its Indian Ocean location. Budget guesthouses (bungalows) cost $10–20 per night. Local rice-based meals cost $2–4. The ring roads and taxi-brousse (shared bush taxis) keep transport cheap, if slow.
Park entry fees are the main expense: $10–20 per park, adding up if you visit several. But the wildlife — lemurs, baobabs, and completely unique ecosystems — is extraordinary for the price.
Tanzania has a reputation for expense, and luxury safari camps justify it. But budget Tanzania is very real: Zanzibar guesthouses from $20/night, street food from $1–3, and budget group safaris to the Serengeti that include accommodation and meals for $80–120/day.
Arusha budget guesthouses and the hostel scene make Tanzania very accessible for the backpacker who plans carefully.
Ghana offers an accessible West Africa experience at reasonable prices. Accra has a wide range of budget accommodation, and chop bars (local restaurants) serve hearty meals for $1–4. The Cape Coast Castle, Kakum National Park, and the Volta Region are all inexpensive to visit.
Ghana's stable currency, good English, and reliable infrastructure make budget travel genuinely comfortable.
Dakar is one of West Africa's most interesting cities, and you can experience it on a shoestring. Local restaurants (with thiéboudienne — the national rice and fish dish) cost $2–5. Guesthouses in Dakar from $15/night. Buses and sept-place (shared taxis) connect the country cheaply.
The pink Retba Lake, the beaches of Saly, and the island of Gorée are all very affordable to reach and visit.
Rwanda's day-to-day costs are modest. Kigali has excellent budget guesthouses from $15–25/night. Local food is cheap — $2–5 for a full meal. Transport within the country is inexpensive and efficient.
As with Uganda, the gorilla trekking permit ($1,500) is a separate investment. But the country itself is extremely affordable and everything works — buses run on time, roads are paved, and safety is not a concern.
These habits will stretch your budget in almost every African country:
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