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Ethiopia

Rock-hewn churches, Simien peaks, coffee heartland, and Addis Ababa as a growing East Africa hub.

At a glance (facts from REST Countries)

Capital
Addis Ababa
Population
111,652,998
Region
Africa, Eastern Africa
Languages
Amharic
Currencies
ETB — Ethiopian birr (Br)
Time zones
UTC+03:00

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Zuriflight essentials

Check regional advisories; domestic flights and vetted drivers help on long highland legs.

Airports: ADD (Addis) is the main hub; many safari and regional tickets connect here.

US country travel information

Excerpts from CA Data API · ET · Last Updated: August 21, 2023

For US travelers. These are shortened plain-text excerpts. Medical, legal, and entry rules change—read the full pages on Travel.State.Gov and confirm with official sources.

Destination overview

Learn about the U.S. relationship to countries around the world.

Entry & exit requirements

Please visit the Embassy's COVID-19 page more information on entry/ exit requirements related to COVID-19 in Ethiopia. Requirements for Entry: Passport Visa World Health Organization (WHO) card with yellow fever vaccination if coming from country with risk of yellow fever transmission (countries with risk of YF transmission) Visas: All U.S. citizens are required to obtain a visa to legally enter Ethiopia. Do not travel to Ethiopia unless you have an approved e-Visa. Traveler…

Health

Consult the CDC website for Ethiopia prior to travel. For emergency services in Ethiopia, dial the following numbers: Addis Ababa Police Commission Emergency: 991/922 Fire (Addis Ababa): 939 Traffic Police (Addis Ababa): 945 Ambulance (Ethiopian Red Cross Society in Addis Ababa): 907 Medical care is extremely limited and health care facilities are only adequate for stabilization and emergency care. There is a shortage of physicians and other qualified medical personnel, as w…

Safety & security

Terrorism: Al-Qa’ida and its regional affiliate, Somalia-based al-Shabaab, maintain a presence throughout East Africa. In late 2020, Ethiopian security officials announced the arrest of al-Shabaab and ISIS members who were accused of planning attacks in Addis Ababa and other parts of Ethiopia. Current information indicates that terrorist organizations continue to plan terrorist attacks against U.S. citizens and Western targets and interests in East Africa, as well as against…

Travel & transportation

U.S. government officials and their families are advised to travel between major cities by air. They are prohibited from using inter- or intra-city bus transportation and travelling by road outside urban areas at night. Road Conditions and Safety: Traffic accidents occur regularly in Addis Ababa and throughout the country. Roads are ill maintained, inadequately marked, and poorly lit. Excessive speed, erratic drivin…

Local laws & special circumstances

Criminal Penalties: You are subject to local laws. If you violate local laws, even unknowingly, you may be expelled, arrested, or imprisoned. Please note that in the event you are arrested and then released on bail, standard practice is that the police will retain foreign passports pending a final hearing. Individuals establishing a business or practicing a profession that requires additional permits or licensing sh…

U.S. embassy & consulate

Embassy Name: U.S. Embassy Addis Ababa Street Address: Entoto StreetPO Box 1014Addis Ababa, Ethiopia Phone: +251-11-130-6000 Emergency Phone: 011-130-6000 Fax: +251-11-124-2435 and +251-11-124-2419 Email: AddisACS@state.gov Web: https://et.usembassy.gov/

Full country information

Highlights

Culture, safety & practical playbook

Editorial depth below; when your OpenAI key is set, Zuriflight refreshes this block with a structured AI briefing (cached on the server).

Ethiopia feels like altitude, coffee ceremony time, and layers of history—Orthodox rock churches in the north, Simien escarpments, volcanic lakes, and Addis as a diplomatic and airline hub. Internal distances reward flying; road journeys can be beautiful but long. Calendar and clock conventions sometimes differ from Western norms—confirm meeting times explicitly.

Culture & etiquette

Greetings are warm and often involve a gentle handshake; elders deserve first acknowledgment. Shoulders and knees covered helps at churches and rural towns. Coffee ceremonies are social glue—accept small cups if offered; rushing looks rude. English works in many tourism and business circles; Amharic phrases delight locals.

Safety & situational awareness

Regional conflict and unrest have affected parts of the country—advisories change quickly by zone. Avoid improvising travel to flagged areas; use vetted operators for Tigray-adjacent or border-adjacent routing when permitted. Petty theft occurs in crowded markets; keep phones zipped. Altitude in Addis and trekking zones can trigger headaches—pace yourself the first 48 hours.

Money, transport & connectivity

Ethiopian Airlines anchors the network; mobile money is growing but cash still king outside Addis. Wi-Fi improves in business hotels; buy a local SIM for serious connectivity.

Health & documents

Yellow fever certificate rules depend on where you arrive from—verify. Malaria risk exists in lower areas; altitude reduces risk in Addis. Routine travel vaccines and typhoid discussion with your clinician are wise.

Traveling respectfully

Choose operators who pay guides and drivers fairly; heritage sites are living faith spaces—dress and behave accordingly.

Verify with official advisories

Re-read advisories within days of departure—Ethiopia regional guidance shifts faster than many African peers.

What to do

  • Carry USD cash in excellent condition—some change desks reject worn notes.
  • Book domestic flights early; bags and seats fill on popular legs.
  • Pack layers—days can be warm, nights cold at elevation.
  • Respect church photography rules; many interiors forbid flash entirely.
  • Use licensed guides at Lalibela and Axum to decode context respectfully.
  • Carry hand sanitizer—soap availability varies roadside.
  • Keep digital scans of visas and onward tickets.
  • Tip drivers and guides in birr where practical.
  • Confirm road security with your embassy operator before long drives.
  • Try injera etiquette—eat with the right hand where tradition matters.

What to avoid

  • Don't ignore government "do not travel" regions—risk is not abstract.
  • Don't photograph government buildings or protests.
  • Don't discuss domestic politics loudly in taxis.
  • Don't assume ATMs work outside major towns.
  • Don't trek Simiens without a guide where required.
  • Don't drink untreated tap water.
  • Don't skip altitude acclimatization before strenuous hikes.
  • Don't haggle over pennies with subsistence vendors.
  • Don't enter active church services as a tourist spectacle.
  • Don't promise aid deliveries without NGO coordination.

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