Chad

Save

Advertisement

Introducing Chad

Long seen by travellers as a place to get through rather than visit, few visitors in Chad do more than spend a couple of days in N’Djaména, the busy, broken-down capital, on their way between Niger and Cameroon. And as the government increasingly loses its grip on the nation, travellers are getting fewer and further between. Even many NGO workers dread drawing this assignment.

Travelling here certainly poses many problems: few roads are paved, it gets hot as hell in summer, the costs are among the continent’s highest, and the police and soldiers are quite nervous these days. But, of course, there are rewards in this struggling but interesting country for those who take the Chadian challenge and you will soon discover a wealth of warmth and culture beneath the rough exterior.

Show full overview

Advertisement

In our shop

Hotels & Hostels

Check out all our reviewed and recommended accommodation and book online.

Find Hotels & Hostels

Travel Services

Travel insurance

You'll be glad you got it.

Get a quote

Flights

Leave on your kind of jet plane.

Compare flights
See all travel services

Advertisement

Road between N'Djamena and Mango.
View gallery

Road between N'Djamena and Mango.

Lonely Planet photographer
  • Anthony Ham
  • Lonely Planet photographer
  • Cotton harvest, Southern Chad.
  • Main street.
  • Road between Zakouma National Park and Sarh.
  • Building at Camp Tinga, Zakouma National Park.
  • Man outside building in Gaoui village.
View gallery