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About Zanzibar
Zanzibar is a semi-autonomous archipelago off Tanzania's coast that delivers a genuinely rare combination: Indian Ocean beaches that rival the Maldives, a UNESCO-listed old town with 500 years of Swahili-Arab-Portuguese history, and a spice-trading past you can actually taste and smell on a farm tour. Stone Town's labyrinthine coral-stone alleys, where the call to prayer echoes over rooftops at dawn, feel nothing like any other East African destination. Most Americans overlook it, which keeps prices reasonable and the vibe authentic compared to overrun beach destinations in Southeast Asia or the Caribbean.
The beaches are the main draw, and they vary wildly by location. Nungwi and Kendwa in the north have calm, swimmable water year-round and a lively bar scene. The east coast — Paje, Jambiani, Bwejuu — gets strong seasonal winds that have turned it into one of East Africa's best kitesurfing spots, with flat lagoons at low tide and dramatic white-sand stretches. The south and west coasts are quieter and less touristed. Snorkeling and diving around Mnemba Atoll is world-class, with dolphins, turtles, whale sharks (seasonally), and pristine coral that rivals anything in the Red Sea.
For Americans, the logistics are the biggest hurdle — there's no nonstop service from the US, and you're looking at 18-26 hours of travel depending on your connection hub. The most common routing goes through Doha (Qatar Airways), Amsterdam (KLM), Addis Ababa (Ethiopian Airlines), or Dubai (Emirates), with a short onward hop from Dar es Salaam or Nairobi to ZNZ. The effort is absolutely worth it for a two-week trip. Pair it with a mainland Tanzania safari for a bucket-list combo that few Americans manage to pull off.
Zanzibar sits firmly in the mid-range for East Africa — not cheap like Southeast Asia, but not eye-wateringly expensive like the Maldives. A solid mid-range trip with a nice beach bungalow, fresh seafood, and day tours runs $150-250/day per person. The local food scene in Stone Town is genuinely excellent and cheap — Forodhani Gardens night market is one of Africa's best street food experiences. Tipping is expected and impactful here; porters, drivers, and restaurant staff rely on it significantly.
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Track Zanzibar flights →Airport to City: How to Get There
Abeid Amani Karume International Airport (ZNZ) is 6km north of Stone Town — genuinely easy to navigate. Official taxis from the airport to Stone Town cost a fixed Tsh 25,000-35,000 ($10-14) and take about 15 minutes; negotiate before getting in and pay the agreed fare. Dalla-dallas (shared minibuses) run from just outside the airport perimeter for about Tsh 500 ($0.20) but are crowded and not practical with luggage. Most beach resort hotels offer pre-booked transfers — expect to pay $30-60 for Nungwi (1 hour north) or $40-70 for Paje (45 minutes east); worth booking in advance for peace of mind, especially on arrival.
Neighborhoods & Where to Stay
The historic center of Zanzibar City and a UNESCO World Heritage Site — coral-stone buildings, carved wooden doors, and maze-like alleys where you'll get happily lost. Stay here for culture, the Forodhani night market, House of Wonders, and the slave market memorial. Best mid-range picks include Emerson Spice (rooftop dining is unmissable) and 236 Hurumzi; budget guesthouses like Karibu Inn start around $40/night.
The most developed beach village on the north tip of the island with calm, swimmable water year-round (no tide-dependent lagoons like the east coast) and a proper bar-and-restaurant strip. It's the liveliest area outside Stone Town — good for travelers who want beach plus nightlife. Doubletree by Hilton and Nungwi Beach Resort anchor the area; boutique options like Z Hotel offer genuinely good value at $120-200/night.
A quieter 10-minute walk west of Nungwi with the same calm water but a more laid-back vibe and fewer hawkers. Famous for the Kendwa Rocks full moon party, which draws a fun international crowd. Mid-range guesthouses and small resorts dominate — Sunset Kendwa and Kendwa Rocks Hotel are solid choices at $80-150/night.
The kitesurf capital of East Africa on the southeast coast, with a wide sandy beach, flat turquoise lagoon at low tide, and a young backpacker-to-mid-range crowd. Kite lessons through Airush or Xtreme Kite Zanzibar cost around $350-400 for a full 9-hour IKO beginner course. Budget bungalows start at $30/night; places like Kijiji Paje and Moa Bungalows are perennial backpacker favorites.
A quiet, largely upscale stretch on the northeast coast facing Mnemba Atoll — the best jumping-off point for world-class diving. Matemwe Lodge and Azura Retreats sit at $400-800/night but deliver an intimate, almost private-island feel. Very few budget options here; this is where honeymooners and serious divers go to disconnect completely.
A long, traditional fishing village on the southeast coast south of Paje — more authentic and less touristed than Nungwi, with guesthouses run by local families and a slower pace. Red Monkey Lodge and Shamba Beach Resort offer great value at $40-80/night. The tide-dependent lagoon means you need to check tide tables before planning beach swims.
Daily Budget: What to Expect
$25 dorm or basic guesthouse (Paje or Jambiani), $20 food (Forodhani market dinner $5, local rice-and-fish lunch $3, coffee/snacks), $10 dalla-dalla local transport, $10 one activity or entrance fee
$100 boutique bungalow or beach hotel, $50 food (two restaurant meals plus drinks, local lunch), $25 private taxi or scooter rental, $25 daily activity (snorkeling trip, spice tour, or dive)
$350 luxury resort room (Matemwe, Six Senses, or The Residence), $100 food and drinks (resort dining, fresh lobster dinners), $50 private transfers, $100 premium activities (Mnemba dive, private dhow sunset cruise, spa)
What to Eat in Zanzibar
Forodhani Gardens Night Market grilled seafood — this Stone Town waterfront market is legitimately one of Africa's best street food scenes. Arrive after 6pm when vendors fire up charcoal grills loaded with octopus, prawns, kingfish, and Zanzibar mix (a spiced crepe-like snack) — a full plate-plus-drink costs $3-6. Don't miss the Zanzibar pizza, a fried doughy pocket stuffed with egg, cheese, and meat that has nothing to do with Italian pizza.
Urojo (Zanzibar Mix Soup) — a bright yellow, tamarind-spiked soup layered with fritters, potato, boiled egg, coconut chutney, and mango pickle. It's a Stone Town institution sold from street carts near Darajani Market for Tsh 2,000 ($0.80). The flavor profile is unlike anything you'll find elsewhere — sour, savory, and complex.
Pilau rice at a local Swahili restaurant — rice slow-cooked with whole spices (cardamom, cloves, cinnamon, cumin, black pepper) in a method that traces back to the Arab trade era. Try it at Lukmaan Restaurant on Baghani Street in Stone Town, where a generous plate with beef stew costs about $4 and the clientele is 90% local.
Grilled octopus on the east coast — local fishermen sell whole octopus at beach shacks along Paje and Jambiani, tenderized by bashing on rocks (you'll see this in the morning), then grilled over coals with lime and chili. It costs Tsh 8,000-15,000 ($3-6) and is phenomenally fresh. Upendo Restaurant in Jambiani does an excellent version.
Spiced Zanzibar coffee — thick, cardamom-heavy Arabic-style coffee served in tiny cups from roadside carts throughout Stone Town, sometimes with ginger and cloves added. Buy from the carts near Darajani Market for Tsh 500 ($0.20) a cup, not from tourist cafes charging $4 for the same thing. Pair it with a mkate wa ufuta (sesame seed flatbread) for a proper local breakfast.
Flying from the US to Zanzibar
Airlines & Routes
- →Qatar Airways via Doha (best overall option — widest seat selection, good prices, QR flies from JFK, IAD, ORD, LAX, ATL, DFW, MIA, and more into DOH, then DOH-DAR or DOH-ZNZ)
- →Ethiopian Airlines via Addis Ababa (often cheapest fares — flies from JFK, IAD, LAX, ORD to ADD, then short hop to ZNZ; Africa's most reliable carrier)
- →KLM via Amsterdam (solid business class product — JFK, LAX, ATL, ORD, IAH, MIA to AMS, then AMS-ZNZ or AMS-DAR-ZNZ)
- →Emirates via Dubai (strong premium cabin — JFK, LAX, ORD, SEA, IAH to DXB, then DXB-DAR or DXB-ZNZ)
- →Turkish Airlines via Istanbul (good value, huge US network — most major US cities to IST, then IST-DAR-ZNZ)
- →Lufthansa via Frankfurt (reliable option from Midwest — ORD, MIA, JFK, LAX, SFO to FRA, then FRA-DAR-ZNZ)
Flight Duration
Safety Tips
Zanzibar is considerably safer than mainland Tanzania cities and generally safe for tourists, but specific precautions matter. Stone Town's alleys get dark and disorienting at night — use Google Maps (it works well here) and avoid walking alone after 10pm in poorly lit back streets; petty theft and bag snatching have been reported. Women travelers face persistent harassment in Stone Town — dress conservatively (cover shoulders and knees when in town, not just on the beach) as Zanzibar is majority Muslim and bare skin in the streets draws unwanted attention and occasional hostility. The 2015 acid attacks on female tourists were real, though isolated and years ago — remain aware. Don't swim at unfamiliar beach spots without checking for rip currents; the east coast in particular has strong currents that can catch swimmers off guard. Use licensed taxis with fixed negotiated fares; the airport and port have official taxi stands. Keep a photocopy of your passport and Tanzania tourist visa separate from the originals. Malaria is present — take prophylaxis (Malarone or doxycycline), use DEET repellent especially at dusk, and sleep under a net if your accommodation doesn't provide one. Tap water is not safe to drink; bottled water costs Tsh 500-1,000 at local shops. Carry small bills in TZS — many local vendors can't break large notes.
Book your Mnemba Atoll snorkel or dive trip directly through your hotel or a local operator in Matemwe village (like One Ocean or Bahari Divers) rather than through Stone Town tour agencies — you'll pay 30-40% less and get a smaller boat with fewer people. The minimum price for the Mnemba day trip at Stone Town agencies in 2026 runs $80-120/person; Matemwe-based boats charge $40-60 for the identical experience since you're launching 5 minutes from the atoll. Also: the 4:30pm sunset dhow cruise leaving from Stone Town waterfront charges tourists $30-50, but if you walk 400m south to the fishing beach near Mizingani Road and ask a local fisherman directly, you can arrange a private sunset sail on a working dhow for $10-15 per person — negotiate in Swahili basics (asante = thank you; ngapi? = how much?) for an immediate better price.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Visa requirements for Tanzania vary. US citizens should check the latest entry requirements with the US State Department before booking.
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