Central African Republic
Phone Code
+236
Capital
Bangui
Population
5.5 Million
Native Name
Ködörösêse tî Bêafrîka
Region
Africa
Middle Africa
Timezone
West Africa Time
UTC+01:00
On This Page
The Central African Republic (CAR) is a landlocked nation in the geographic heart of the continent, bordered by Chad, Sudan, South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the Republic of the Congo and Cameroon. Its single most extraordinary destination is the Dzanga-Sangha Special Reserve in the far southwest, one of Africa's great wildlife stages: the Dzanga-Bai forest clearing where dozens of forest elephants gather on a mineral-rich opening, habituated groups of western lowland gorillas tracked through dense rainforest, and the cultural depth of the Ba'Aka forest communities. Beyond the rainforest belt, the capital Bangui sits on the wide Oubangui river facing Zongo on the Congolese side, the Sangha river system carries traffic and traders deep into one of the most remote forest regions on Earth, and the northern savannas around Manovo-Gounda St. Floris hold the country's UNESCO World Heritage protected area. CAR remains a specialist destination, served almost entirely by humanitarian operations, conservation projects and small expedition-style itineraries; entry requires an embassy-issued visa secured in advance, and travellers should review their government's current travel advice before booking.
Central African Republic visa system overview
The Central African Republic operates a strictly embassy-issued visa system: there is no visa-on-arrival, no online e-visa portal, and arrival without a pre-issued visa results in refused entry. Applications are filed at one of the country's small global network of embassies — most commonly Washington D.C., Paris, Brussels, Berlin or selected African capitals — or, in countries with no CAR diplomatic presence, through the French embassy or consulate, which represents CAR consular interests in many territories. Standard documentation is consistent across missions: a passport valid at least six months beyond the planned departure date with at least one blank page, the completed application form, recent passport photographs, a yellow fever vaccination certificate (mandatory for all travellers, no exceptions), proof of accommodation or an invitation letter, return or onward travel tickets, evidence of sufficient funds for the stay, and the visa fee paid in the form specified by the issuing mission. The system distinguishes between short-stay visas of up to ninety days for tourism and business, long-stay visas for residency exceeding ninety days, work permits requiring Ministry of Labour approval and an in-country sponsor, and the titre de séjour residence permit which any foreigner staying beyond three months must obtain in Bangui regardless of original visa class. Processing times vary widely between missions, from a few business days at well-staffed embassies to several weeks elsewhere; allow at least four to six weeks before travel and check fee structures and payment methods directly with the chosen consulate before submitting.
Common Visa Types
Tourist Visa
Short visits centred on Dzanga-Sangha forest elephants and lowland gorillas, the Ba'Aka cultural programme run with conservation partners, the Sangha and Oubangui river systems, and brief stays in Bangui. Applied for in advance at a CAR embassy or, where none exists locally, at the French diplomatic mission representing CAR interests; itineraries are normally arranged through a specialist operator with on-the-ground logistics.
Business Visa
Meetings, contract negotiations, project assessments and short technical assignments — common for forestry, mining, telecommunications, conservation NGOs, UN agencies and humanitarian organisations operating in CAR. Requires the standard tourist documentation plus a written invitation from a registered CAR-based entity, a letter from the home-country employer setting out the purpose of travel, and any sector-specific paperwork the inviting organisation provides.
Long-Stay Visa
Stays beyond 90 days for extended NGO and UN postings, multi-month conservation deployments, family reunification, ongoing development projects or business set-up. Holders must report to the immigration authorities in Bangui shortly after arrival to begin the titre de séjour residence-permit process; the long-stay visa itself does not constitute permission to remain in country indefinitely.
Transit Visa
Issued for travellers passing through CAR territory en route to a third country who need to leave the airport, change carriers overland, or briefly connect via Bangui. Requires a confirmed onward ticket and, where applicable, the visa for the next destination. Yellow fever certification remains mandatory even for short transits.
Work Permit
Required for any paid employment in CAR. The local employer or organisation initiates the process with the Ministry of Labour, providing the signed contract, business registration, justification for engaging a foreign hire, and the supporting documents listed by the ministry. Common employer profiles are international NGOs, UN agencies, mining and forestry companies, faith-based organisations, telecoms operators and specialist consultancies. Permits are tied to a specific employer; changing roles requires a fresh application.
Residence Permit (Titre de Séjour)
Mandatory for every foreigner staying in CAR longer than three months, whatever the underlying visa. The application is filed in person at the immigration directorate in Bangui after arrival, and requires the long-stay visa or work permit, accommodation evidence, financial means, vaccination records, a police clearance certificate from the country of previous residence and a medical examination by an approved CAR practitioner. The card must be carried and produced on demand and is renewable annually.
Practical information for Central African Republic travel
Travel Guide
The Central African Republic does not work as a casual destination: it is a country where almost every visit is purpose-built around one specific experience, supported by people who know the terrain, the seasons and the logistics. That single experience — for most international travellers — is Dzanga-Sangha in the far southwest. The reserve is part of the trinational Sangha protected complex shared with Cameroon and the Republic of the Congo, a UNESCO-listed rainforest mosaic where mineral-rich forest clearings, slow rivers and old-growth tropical forest meet. Forest elephants gather at the Dzanga-Bai opening in numbers that have no real equivalent anywhere else on the continent, western lowland gorilla groups have been habituated by conservation researchers over decades of patient work, and the Ba'Aka — the original people of this forest — share a tracking and forest-knowledge tradition that visitors can engage with respectfully through community-led programmes. Beyond Dzanga-Sangha, the capital Bangui rewards a couple of days for the Oubangui riverfront, the central market and the Boali Falls a short drive away; the Sangha and Oubangui rivers themselves are the country's transport arteries and a destination in their own right; and the northern savannas hold Manovo-Gounda St. Floris, a UNESCO World Heritage site that speaks to the scale of CAR's wild interior. Trips are best built around the dry season (roughly December to April) and through a specialist operator who can handle access permissions, internal logistics and contingency planning end to end.
Ways to Experience This Destination
The Dzanga-Bai is a natural mineral-rich clearing inside the Dzanga-Sangha reserve where forest elephants emerge from the rainforest to drink, dig and socialise — sometimes in groups of fifty or more on a single afternoon. From a raised wooden platform overlooking the bai, visitors can watch hours of unhurried family-group behaviour together with bongo, sitatunga and a dense list of forest-edge birds. The experience is run by the WWF-supported reserve administration with rangers and local guides.
Long-running research programmes in Dzanga-Sangha have habituated several family groups of western lowland gorillas, the species more closely associated with the Congo Basin than the better-known mountain gorillas of Rwanda and Uganda. Tracking takes place on foot through dense, often wet rainforest with experienced Ba'Aka and conservation trackers; sightings are quieter and more atmospheric than mountain-gorilla encounters and feel close to the animals' natural rhythms.
The Ba'Aka are the indigenous forest people of the Sangha basin, with a deep tracking, harvesting, music and storytelling tradition built on long residency in the rainforest. Community-organised programmes near Bayanga allow respectful day visits — net-hunting demonstrations, plant-knowledge walks, polyphonic singing sessions — all with revenue sharing built into the conservation model that protects the reserve.
Bangui sits on the north bank of the Oubangui river facing Zongo on the Congolese side. Two unhurried days are usually enough: the riverfront walk and ferry traffic, the Notre-Dame cathedral, the Boganda National Museum, the colourful central PK5 market and the Marché Central, plus a side trip out to the multi-stage Boali Falls roughly a hundred kilometres west. The city is small, the climate humid, and the rhythm slower than the regional capitals on the coast.
The two rivers that frame the country are the country: pirogues, motorised river-taxis and slow cargo boats are the way logistics, food and people move through the southern forest belt. Operator-led river segments — particularly between Bayanga, Lidjombo and the Sangha trinational border zone — pass riverside Ba'Aka villages, mist-covered mornings, fish camps and forest stretches that road travel cannot reach.
The Boali Falls on the M'Bali river, about two hours west of Bangui, drop roughly fifty metres in a wide curtain during the wet season and slow to braided channels in the dry months. The site is an easy day trip from the capital and combines comfortably with a stop at the small hydroelectric station and the surrounding plateau villages on the way back into town.
In the country's far north, the Manovo-Gounda St. Floris National Park is a UNESCO World Heritage site covering a mosaic of savanna, gallery forest and seasonal floodplain — historically one of the great wildlife landscapes of central Africa. Access today is highly limited and depends on conservation-partner logistics rather than commercial tourism, but the park remains a marker of the scale and ecological diversity contained within CAR's borders.
Money & Currency
Central African CFA Franc (XAF)
Currency code: XAF
Practical Money Tips
Central African CFA Franc (XAF) — Pegged to the Euro, But Deeply Cash-Dependent
The Central African Republic (CAR) uses the Central African CFA franc (XAF), pegged to the euro at a fixed rate of 1 EUR = 655.957 XAF. While the currency is theoretically stable, the country's severe banking infrastructure limits and ongoing security situation make accessing and using money extremely difficult outside Bangui. Bring USD or EUR cash — these can be exchanged at banks or licensed exchange offices in Bangui. XAF cannot be obtained outside the CEMAC region, so plan all currency logistics before departure.
Extremely Limited ATM Access — Even in Bangui
ATM availability in the CAR is among the most limited in Africa. A small number of ATMs exist in Bangui (the capital), primarily at BSCA Bank and BGFI Bank branches. These machines are unreliable — power outages, connectivity failures, and cash shortages are frequent. Outside Bangui, ATMs do not exist. Carry all the cash you will need for your entire stay. Bring USD or EUR notes in good condition (no tears, old series, or pen marks) as these are easiest to exchange.
Cards and Digital Payments Are Not Usable
Credit and debit card acceptance is virtually nonexistent in the CAR outside a handful of international NGO guesthouses and the most upscale hotels in Bangui. Apple Pay and Google Pay are not available. Mobile money services exist (Orange Money operates in Bangui) but require local registration and are inaccessible to short-term visitors. The CAR is a cash-only economy for all practical purposes.
An Extremely Difficult and Expensive Destination to Reach — Plan Finances in Full
Despite being one of the world's poorest countries by GDP, travel costs in the CAR are high due to limited infrastructure and the cost of security logistics. Permits and authorisations for national park access (Dzanga-Sangha) must be arranged in advance. All park fees, guide fees, and accommodation costs are payable in XAF cash. The Dzanga-Sangha forest gorilla and forest elephant experience is world-class — but requires thorough pre-trip financial planning.
Note: Always check current exchange rates before traveling. Currency exchange is available at airports, banks, and authorized money changers.
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