Benin
Phone Code
+229
Capital
Porto-Novo
Population
13.4 Million
Native Name
Bénin
Region
Africa
Western Africa
Timezone
West Africa Time
UTC+01:00
On This Page
Benin is a West African country of about 13.4 million on the Gulf of Guinea, bordered by Togo, Burkina Faso, Niger and Nigeria. Porto-Novo is the official political capital, but Cotonou — twenty-five kilometres west on the coast — is the de facto capital, the largest city, the location of all foreign embassies and the country's main international gateway via Cadjèhoun Airport. Benin is the historic heartland of the Vodun religion (still officially recognised and practised by a large share of the population), the seat of the Kingdom of Dahomey whose Royal Palaces at Abomey are a UNESCO World Heritage site, and home to a rich set of travel destinations: the heritage town of Ouidah, the stilt-village of Ganvié on Lake Nokoué, the Pendjari National Park in the north (one of West Africa's last great wildlife reserves), and the Atakora highlands. The e-visa system at evisa.gouv.bj is straightforward and well-functioning.
Visa Requirements for Benin
All foreign nationals need a visa to enter Benin, except citizens of ECOWAS (Economic Community of West African States) who travel visa-free for up to 90 days. The e-visa is the standard route for most other travellers — applied for in advance through the official portal at evisa.gouv.bj, processed within 3–5 business days, and requiring a passport scan with at least six months' validity, passport-style photo, travel itinerary, accommodation confirmation and yellow fever vaccination certificate (mandatory and checked at entry). Visa-on-arrival is available at Cadjèhoun Airport in Cotonou and at certain land borders for some nationalities. Traditional embassy visa applications remain available for nationalities not covered by the e-visa or for stays beyond the standard tourist period. Yellow fever vaccination is mandatory for entry regardless of visa type.
Common Visa Types
E-Visa (Tourist / Business)
Electronic visa applied for in advance through the official portal at evisa.gouv.bj. Suitable for tourism, family or friends visits and short business trips. Requires a passport scan, passport photograph, travel itinerary, accommodation confirmation and yellow fever vaccination certificate.
Visa on Arrival (Cadjèhoun Airport)
Available for some nationalities at Cadjèhoun International Airport in Cotonou and at certain designated land borders. The e-visa is the more reliable route — confirm your eligibility before relying on visa-on-arrival.
ECOWAS Visa-Free Entry
Citizens of ECOWAS member states (Benin, Burkina Faso, Cape Verde, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Senegal, Sierra Leone, Togo) enter visa-free under the regional free-movement protocol.
Embassy Visa (Tourist / Business)
Traditional visa obtained in advance through a Beninese embassy or consulate. For nationalities not eligible for the e-visa, for travellers entering at land borders, or for business stays requiring an invitation letter from a Beninese host or company.
Long-Stay Visa & Residence Permit
For stays beyond the initial tourist period — work, study, family reunification, retirement. The long-stay visa is issued at the embassy abroad; the residence permit (carte de séjour) is then obtained in-country through the Direction de l'Émigration et de l'Immigration in Cotonou.
Transit Visa
For travellers transiting through Cadjèhoun Airport on the way to a third country, or transiting overland. Requires proof of onward travel and yellow fever certificate.
Practical Travel Information
Travel Guide
Benin packs an unusual amount of cultural depth and natural variety into a small country. Vodun (the official Beninese spelling of voodoo) is a recognised state religion and a living tradition throughout the south — visitors to Ouidah's Temple of Pythons, the annual Vodun Festival on 10 January, and the Vodun shrines along the coast encounter not folklore but active practice. The Royal Palaces of Abomey (UNESCO World Heritage) preserve the architectural heritage of the Kingdom of Dahomey, including the famous painted bas-reliefs in lime and palm-oil. Ganvié, the stilt-village of about 20,000 people on Lake Nokoué, is sometimes called the Venice of West Africa — a unique aquatic settlement where everyone moves by pirogue. In the far north, the Pendjari National Park — managed since 2017 by African Parks — is one of West Africa's last intact savanna ecosystems, with elephants, lions, hippos and over 460 bird species. Cotonou itself, with the vast Dantokpa Market (one of the largest open markets in West Africa) and the chaotic energy of zémidjan moto-taxis, is the country's lively urban heart.
Ways to Experience This Destination
Ouidah, on the Atlantic coast forty kilometres west of Cotonou, is the spiritual capital of Beninese Vodun. The Temple of Pythons opposite the basilica houses live royal pythons venerated as living deities; the Sacred Forest of Kpassè preserves ancient ritual sites; and the annual Vodun Festival on 10 January draws practitioners and visitors from across West Africa and the diaspora for processions, ceremonies and dance. Ouidah also holds the Maison du Brésil (with Afro-Brazilian heritage from returned descendants in the nineteenth century), the Door of No Return memorial on the beach (a memorial to the trans-Atlantic deportation, with a 4-km commemorative route running through the town), and the Portuguese Fort housing the Ouidah Museum of History.
The Royal Palaces of Abomey (UNESCO World Heritage), 140 km north of Cotonou, are the architectural legacy of the twelve kings of the Kingdom of Dahomey (1625–1900). The palace complex preserves earthen royal compounds, the famous painted bas-reliefs (cement-and-pigment panels narrating the kingdom's history), royal regalia, thrones and ritual objects, all displayed in the Historical Museum of Abomey set within the original palace walls. The site is one of the most important records of pre-colonial West African statecraft.
Ganvié is a town of about 20,000 people built entirely on stilts in Lake Nokoué, twenty kilometres north of Cotonou. Founded in the seventeenth century by the Tofinu people who took refuge on the lake, it remains a fully functional water-based settlement: floating market, school, church, post office, all reached by pirogue. A half-day pirogue trip from the village of Abomey-Calavi is the standard visit, ideally early morning when the floating market is in full swing.
Pendjari National Park in the far north-west, part of the trans-boundary W-Arly-Pendjari complex (UNESCO World Heritage), is one of West Africa's last intact savanna ecosystems. Since 2017 it has been managed by the conservation NGO African Parks, with significant gains in wildlife populations. Elephants, lions, leopards, cheetahs, hippos, buffaloes and over 460 bird species inhabit the park's grasslands, gallery forests and the Pendjari River escarpment. The park lodge at Tanguiéta is the standard base; a 4WD with a guide is essential.
Cotonou, the de facto capital and economic heart of Benin, is best known for the vast Dantokpa Market — twenty hectares of stalls selling everything from textiles and food to sacred Vodun fetishes (the famous Marché aux Fétiches). The Cathedral of Notre-Dame de Miséricorde with its red-and-white-striped façade, the Fondation Zinsou contemporary art museum, the Place de l'Étoile Rouge and the lively Akpakpa neighbourhood show the city beyond the markets. Zémidjan moto-taxis (recognisable by yellow shirts) are the universal way to move through the traffic.
The Atakora highlands in the north-west, around Natitingou and Boukoumbé, are home to the Tata-Somba — striking fortified two-storey clay dwellings of the Somba (Otammari) people, recognised on the UNESCO tentative list. The villages of Koussoukouingou and Kuitobo show this architecture in its living form. The landscape — sandstone cliffs, baobabs, terraced fields — provides one of Benin's most distinctive scenic regions, ideal for trekking and visits to traditional Tammari villages.
Porto-Novo, the official political capital, is a quieter counterpoint to Cotonou. Its Afro-Brazilian heritage — visible in the Grande Mosquée de Porto-Novo (an extraordinary church-style building converted into a mosque), the Songhaï Center for sustainable agriculture, the Honmé Palace Museum of King Toffa, and the Ethnographic Museum — reflects the return of formerly displaced descendants from Brazil in the nineteenth century. The Adjarra market, twenty kilometres outside the city, is famous for its traditional drums.
Money & Currency
West African CFA franc (XOF)
Currency code: XOF
Practical Money Tips
West African CFA Franc (XOF) — Euro Fixed at 655.957 XOF
Benin uses the West African CFA franc (XOF), shared with seven other UEMOA member states. The euro is pegged at a fixed rate of 655.957 XOF — French, Belgian, Canadian and other euro-zone visitors benefit from a guaranteed rate. USD holders should exchange to EUR or XOF before arrival; USD is rarely accepted and exchanged at poor rates. Exchange at BCEAO-affiliated banks (Ecobank, Orabank, UBA) in Cotonou. Avoid street changers.
ATMs Available in Cotonou — Limited in Porto-Novo and Very Scarce Upcountry
Ecobank, UBA, and BOA (Bank of Africa) have ATMs in Cotonou that accept international Visa and Mastercard. Porto-Novo has a few bank branches with ATMs. Beyond major cities — Abomey, Natitingou, Parakou — ATM coverage is sparse and unreliable. Withdraw sufficient XOF in Cotonou before travelling north or to rural areas. Machines can run short of cash on weekends. Always carry a cash reserve.
Mobile Money Dominant — MTN MoMo and Moov Money Widely Used
Card payments are limited to a few upscale hotels and restaurants in Cotonou. The real digital payment infrastructure is mobile money — MTN MoMo and Moov Money together cover the majority of commercial transactions. As a foreign visitor you cannot easily register for local mobile money, so cash is your primary tool. Apple Pay and Google Pay are not available. Carry XOF in mixed denominations.
Very Affordable West African Destination — Cotonou Markets and Ouidah
Benin is one of West Africa's more accessible travel destinations at very low cost. Street food (akara, amiwo): XOF 200–600 ($0.30–1 USD). Budget hotel in Cotonou: XOF 10,000–25,000/night ($17–43 USD). Mid-range restaurant in Cotonou: XOF 3,000–8,000 ($5–14 USD). Budget travellers can manage on XOF 15,000–30,000/day ($25–50 USD). Pendjari National Park fees are in XOF and must be paid in cash.
Note: Always check current exchange rates before traveling. Currency exchange is available at airports, banks, and authorized money changers.
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