Live Africa fares, stays, tours, visas, and AI planning in one place.Request a custom trip

South Africa

Cape Town and the Winelands, Kruger-area safari, and Johannesburg connections—huge variety in one country.

At a glance (facts from REST Countries)

Capital
Pretoria
Population
63,100,945
Region
Africa, Southern Africa
Languages
Afrikaans, English, Southern Ndebele, Northern Sotho, Southern Sotho, Swazi, Tswana, Tsonga, Venda, Xhosa, Zulu
Currencies
ZAR — South African rand (R)
Time zones
UTC+02:00

Open map

Zuriflight essentials

Use caution in major cities; plan transfers and neighborhoods with care.

Airports: CPT, JNB, and DUR cover most leisure routing patterns.

US country travel information

Excerpts from CA Data API · SF · Last Updated: August 11, 2025

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

See the Department of State’s Fact Sheet on South Africa for information on U.S.-South Africa relations.

Entry & exit requirements

Helpful resources South Africa Department of Home Affairs Embassy of South Africa Visa Information South Africa Health Information Consulates General of South Africa in the U.S. Dual Nationality Prevention of International Child Abduction Customs Regulations Entry and exit into South Africa South Africa strictly enforces entry and exit requirements and other immigration laws. If you don’t follow local laws, you may be denied entry, could be detained or deported. The South Af…

Health

Health resources South Africa Traveler Health Information Medical Tourism information International Air Quality Index Insurance Coverage Overseas South Africa Health Information List of Hospitals and Doctors in South Africa Emergency numbers Dial 10111 for medical emergencies. Ambulance Services Ambulances are scarce or unreliable in most areas, except in major cities, and lack advanced medical equipment. Ambulances and emergency crews often lack training. In an emergency, t…

Safety & security

Emergency phone numbers Local authorities are responsible for investigating and prosecuting crimes. Dial 10111 for all emergencies. Dial +(27)(12) 431-4000 or 012-431-4000 to contact the U.S. Embassy in Pretoria and report crimes or emergencies (after calling local authorities). Embassy of South Africa Alerts Civil unrest and demonstrations Demonstrations happen often and are unpredictable. They often occur at or very near the U.S. embassy and consulates. Strikes and demonst…

Travel & transportation

Road conditions and safety Road conditions are good in South Africa. Traffic deaths are much higher than in the United States. High traffic deaths are caused by bad driving, weak traffic law enforcement, road rage, aggressive driving, distractions, and drunk driving. Avoid driving at night. Traffic lights are frequently out of order. Border delays in South Africa can occur due to closures or reduced services, causin…

Local laws & special circumstances

Criminal penalties U.S. citizens must follow local laws. If you break a law, even by mistake, authorities can expel, arrest, or jail you. You may be prosecuted in the U.S. for crimes committed abroad regardless of local laws. For more information, read crimes against minors abroad and Department of Justice resources. Arrest notification If you are arrested or detained, ask police or prison officials to inform the U.…

U.S. embassy & consulate

Embassy Name: U.S. Consulate General Johannesburg Street Address: 1 Sandton Drive (oppositeSandton City Mall)Johannesburg 2196South Africa Phone: +(27)(11) 290-3000 (from South Africa 011-290-3000) Emergency Phone: +(27) 79-111-1684 / 079-111-1684 (from within South Africa) Fax: +(27)(11) 884-0396 / 011-884-0396 (from within South Africa) Email: ACSJohannesburg@state.gov Web: https://za.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).

South Africa sprawls—from Cape's cosmopolitan ocean-and-mountain tableau to Gauteng hubs, Durban's humid coast, safari reserves near Kruger, and the stark beauty of Namaqualand bursts. Wines, gastronomy lane fine dining and township braai coexist. Inequality visibly shapes skylines beside informal settlements—travelers traverse worlds within an hour.

Culture & etiquette

Eleven official languages circulate; English often bridges business encounters. Conversations weave rugby, cricket, politics, Afrikaans slang, township jazz. Tipping norms run ~10%+ in eateries if service charge absent. Dress layers—Cape weather shifts hourly; Gauteng thunderstorms brew summer afternoons.

Safety & situational awareness

Property crime statistics stay serious—particularly around Johannesburg corridors and township peripheries—but millions travel safely employing routines: don't leave bags visibly in parked cars at trailheads or scenic overlooks ("smash-and-grab"). Prefer ride-hiking apps or hotel shuttles evenings. Electricity load-shedding schedules affect lifts and traffic lights—bookmark schedules. Nature reserves still mean wild predators—never exit vehicles except at designated overlooks.

Money, transport & connectivity

Tap-to-pay matured in malls; township cash persists. Toll roads accept cards inconsistently—small rand reserves help. Domestic flights crisscross; book flexible tickets when thunderstorms threaten.

Health & documents

HIV/AIDS context remains medically significant—needle discipline and clinician counsel matter. Tick bite fever possible bush-side. Bilharzia in some freshwater exposures—prefer swimming pools oceans official.

Traveling respectfully

Apartheid-linked heritage sites merit contemplative pacing. Choose ethical safari operators conserving land rights alongside biodiversity.

Verify with official advisories

Check advisories for specific provinces; crime hotspots cluster—consult recent traveler forums plus official warnings.

What to do

  • Reserve Table Mountain ascents mornings when wind cancellations less likely.
  • Carry adapters—Type M plugs—and voltage-friendly chargers.
  • Split cash across hotel safe and concealment—not single wallet bursts.
  • Pair wine tastings with spittoon discipline if altitude driving awaited.
  • Plan Kruger lodges early for peak biodiversity windows.
  • Keep windows up in urban slowdowns—young opportunistic snatching happens.
  • Tip petrol attendants rounding small denominations.
  • Download offline Gautrain or MyCiti schedules if commuting Cape Town corridors.
  • Carry fleece even summer—Southern Ocean chill surprises.
  • Support Black-owned lodges and eateries meaningfully—not token.

What to avoid

  • Don't walk Sea Point Promenade headsets oblivious evenings alone.
  • Don't discuss race crassly—tone matters in healing nation.
  • Don't self-drive township tours without credible community partners.
  • Don't ignore baboons at Cape—they steal aggressively.
  • Don't swim alone remote Eastern Cape rips unrecognized.
  • Don't photograph border posts or police without authorization.
  • Don't accept unsolicited help at ATMs—you risk card switching scams.
  • Don't assume Uber regions identical—localized bans occurred historically.
  • Don't litter—fine culture tightening.
  • Don't feed wildlife roadside—illegal and dangerous.

Search flights Plan my trip Plan a custom trip