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About Livingstone
Livingstone is the adventure capital of southern Africa and the primary Zambian base for visiting Victoria Falls — one of the seven natural wonders of the world. Unlike its Zimbabwean neighbor Victoria Falls town across the border, Livingstone feels less packaged and more authentic, with a colonial-era downtown, real local markets, and a growing crop of boutique lodges that draw serious safari travelers. Americans who make it here tend to be the kind who've already done Kenya and Tanzania and are ready for something rawer and less crowded.
The Falls themselves are the anchor attraction, but the Zambezi River turns Livingstone into an activity hub year-round. White-water rafting on Grade 5 rapids, bungee jumping off the Victoria Falls Bridge at 364 feet, sunset cruises, microlight flights over the gorge, and elephant-back safaris all operate out of town. You can pack five days here easily without repeating yourself. The dry season (May–October) is peak time: the river drops, rapids open up, and wildlife concentrates around water sources in nearby Mosi-oa-Tunya National Park.
For Americans used to East African safari prices, Zambia is a genuine value play. A mid-range lodge room in Livingstone runs $120–$200/night versus $400+ in the Maasai Mara. The Falls entry fee is $20 for Zambian-side access. Most activities are priced in US dollars — which the economy is heavily dollarized around — and many operators accept USD cash directly, making budgeting straightforward. The catch: getting here requires at least two connections from the US, and the routing through Johannesburg or Nairobi adds serious travel time.
The best-kept secret is pairing Livingstone with the Kafue National Park (a 3-hour drive north) or the Lower Zambezi National Park (a charter flight away), both of which offer Big Five wildlife with tiny crowds compared to East Africa. Livingstone serves as a logical hub for assembling a southern Africa multi-destination trip combining Botswana's Okavango Delta, Zimbabwe's Hwange, and Zambia's Kafue — all within a reasonable driving or light-aircraft circuit.
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Track Livingstone flights →Airport to City: How to Get There
Livingstone Harry Mwanga Nkumbula International Airport (LVI) is about 6km north of the city center and 7km from the Victoria Falls entrance — you can't get much more conveniently located. Option 1: Taxi from the official taxi rank outside arrivals costs K150–200 (~$7–9 USD) to central Livingstone or most lodges; negotiate before getting in. Option 2: Your lodge almost certainly offers a complimentary airport transfer if you ask when booking — most mid-range and luxury properties include this. Option 3: Shared minibuses run from the airport area toward town for K10–15 (~$0.50) but require local knowledge and aren't practical with luggage. For the Falls entrance itself, a short taxi ride runs K80–100 ($4).
Neighborhoods & Where to Stay
The stretch of road running from central Livingstone toward the Falls is where the top-end lodges concentrate — Royal Livingstone Hotel sits literally on the Zambezi riverbank with zebras grazing the lawn, and Avani Victoria Falls Resort is steps from the Falls entry gate. If budget allows, staying here eliminates taxi costs and puts you on the river for sundowners every evening. Rates run $200–500/night.
The colonial downtown around Mosi-oa-Tunya Road and Akapelwa Street has the Fairmount Hotel, a handful of guesthouses in the $60–120/night range, and all the practical infrastructure — ATMs, the Shoprite supermarket, the Zambia National Tourist Board office, and the train station. Fez Bar and Olga's Italian Corner are walkable, and it's a short $4 taxi ride to the Falls. Noisy and lively but authentic Zambia.
A cluster of backpacker lodges and activity operators sits about 3km north of town along the river, anchored by Jollyboys Backpackers and Maramba River Lodge. Dormitory beds run $15–20/night and private rooms $50–80. This area is where the 20-something overland truck crowd congregates — it's social, safe, and within walking distance of several activities booking desks. Grab dinner at the Waterfront Restaurant for a riverside meal under $25.
Daily Budget: What to Expect
$18 dorm bed at Jollyboys, $15 food (local nshima lunch at K60 + street food), $7 transport (taxis around town), $25 one activity (Falls entry $20 or a short zip-line)
$130 mid-range lodge room, $40 food (breakfast included + dinner at Olga's or Fez), $10 taxis, $20 sundowner cruise or entry fees
$350 Royal Livingstone or Tongabezi lodge, $80 private guided game drive or helicopter flight, $60 fine dining, $60 spa or premium activities like Devil's Pool access
What to Eat in Livingstone
Nshima with kapenta at any local market — nshima is the thick cornmeal staple of Zambia served with dried Kariba sardines (kapenta); eat this at Livingstone Central Market for K30 ($1.50) and you'll understand what the country actually eats
Grilled crocodile skewers at the Waterfront Restaurant — genuinely good white meat that tastes like a cross between chicken and mild fish; order it with chips and cold Mosi lager for the full Zambezi experience
Freshly caught bream from the Zambezi prepared at Tongabezi lodge's bush dinner — if you're splurging on one meal, the private candlelit riverside dinner at Tongabezi ($120/person) is a legitimate once-in-a-lifetime experience
Braai (BBQ) feast at Fez Bar on a Friday night — Fez is the local expat and traveler gathering spot with a wood-fired grill doing excellent game meat including warthog sausage and beef ribs; budget K400–500 ($20-25) with drinks
Freshly baked buns and samosas from the morning street vendors outside Shoprite — the best $1 breakfast in Livingstone, eaten standing up while watching the town wake up; vendors appear from 6am and sell out by 9am
Flying from the US to Livingstone
Airlines & Routes
- →Ethiopian Airlines via Addis Ababa (JFK, IAD, LAX, ORD, IAH to ADD, then ADD-LVI — best overall routing with competitive fares)
- →Kenya Airways via Nairobi (JFK or IAD to NBO, then NBO-LVI through Lusaka — solid option with good connections)
- →South African Airways / Airlink via Johannesburg (any US gateway through JNB, then JNB-LVI on Airlink — most seat availability but longest total journey time)
- →Qatar Airways via Doha (any US gateway to DOH, then DOH-JNB or DOH-NBO, connecting to LVI — premium cabin deals often available)
- →British Airways via London (any US East Coast gateway through LHR, then LHR-JNB, JNB-LVI — expensive but good Business Class product for long-haul)
Flight Duration
Safety Tips
Livingstone is genuinely one of the safer cities in southern Africa for tourists, but standard precautions apply. Don't walk between the Falls and town — that 7km stretch on the main road has produced mugging incidents; take a taxi for K60-80 ($3-4). The town center is fine to walk during daylight but avoid it after dark, especially around the bus station. ATM skimming has been reported at some Livingstone ATMs — use the machines inside Shoprite or at major hotel lobbies rather than freestanding street ATMs. Keep your passport at your lodge and carry a photo copy for the Falls entry. The Zambia-Zimbabwe border crossing at Kazungula or Victoria Falls Bridge is well-managed but always get your KAZA Univisa before arriving if you plan to cross — border touts will offer to 'help' for a fee. Malaria is present year-round in Livingstone; take your prophylaxis, use DEET, and sleep under a net if staying at budget lodges. The Zambezi has hippos and crocodiles — no swimming outside designated areas regardless of what locals tell you.
Book the Devil's Pool experience directly through Tongabezi Lodge rather than through a third-party activity operator — Tongabezi manages the licensed access to the natural rock pool at the very lip of Victoria Falls on Livingstone Island, and booking directly (about $165/person including boat transfer and Falls entry) gets you a smaller group, a better briefing, and a Zambian guide who's swum that pool 2,000 times. The downstream operators sell the same experience at similar prices but with larger groups. Go in September or October when the water level is lowest and the pool is calmest — swimming 10 feet from the edge of the world's largest waterfall is genuinely the most surreal thing you'll do in Africa.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Visa requirements for Zambia vary. US citizens should check the latest entry requirements with the US State Department before booking.
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