Looking for advice and opinions on a 5-week itinerary in Madagascar
FR

Translated into English.

Original post
LE
Hi everyone! I’ve put together an itinerary for Madagascar and would love to get your feedback if you can help—thanks!

December 6–9: Antananarivo 3 nights, sightseeing Andasibe-Mantadia National Park Rova of Antananarivo (Ambohimanga Fort) Lemurs’ Park

December 9–11: Fianarantsoa, 2 nights Ranomafana National Park

Ambalavao, December 11–13, 2 nights Andringitra National Park

December 13–15: Ranohira or Ilakaka, 2 nights Monkey Canyon visit Isalo National Park

December 15–18: Tulear, 3 nights Reniala Reserve visit Beach time, possible diving Antsokay Arboretum Ifaty Forest

December 18–19: Full day—take a flight to the capital and stay overnight Then on December 19, take the bus to Morondava

December 19–23: Morondava, 4 nights Kirindy Mitea National Park Avenue of the Baobabs Tsingy de Bemaraha National Park

12:30-hour bus ride from Morondava to the capital

Antananarivo, December 23–24 11:30-hour trip from the capital to Mahajanga

Mahajanga/Majunga, December 24–27, 3 nights Ankarafantsika National Park visit

Ambanja District, 3 nights December 27–30 Tsaratanana Nature Reserve visit Maromokotro trek

Nosy Be Island, December 30–January 7, 2026, 8 nights diving, beach time, relaxation, walks, hiking, snorkeling

Antsiranana, January 7–11, 4 nights Ambavanibe Bay visit Montagne d’Ambre National Park

Return to the capital for a flight home or a 28-hour bus ride

1 or 2 nights in Antananarivo depending on the return trip

January 13: Departure for France Arrival in Paris, France the next day
AS Astaffort Regular ·
hi good luck to you—way too many things to do in such a short time, and I still have over 35 years of travel in Madagascar under my belt two small remarks: I hope you’re planning to rent a car with a driver for the trip down to Tulear, otherwise it’s totally impossible for Majunga in a 4x4, personally, without wasting time (just bathroom stops), we took exactly 14 hours and 20 minutes 10 months ago don’t thank me—it’s free!
jipi
LE Levoyageurr Regular ·
Hi! Thanks for the info you’ve already shared. Could you help me plan a rough itinerary for about 39–40 days? I’ll be using public transport most of the time, with a few domestic flights here and there to save time. If needed, I can stretch it to 45 days max. Would you be able to help me refine my route—either here on the forum or via DM? Thanks!
LE Levoyageurr Regular ·
For travel times using public transport, it's still doable, but you have to go back through the capital. I have an app that gives me all the details, precise schedules, and prices for buses and flights—Rome2Rio on the Android Play Store. Otherwise, I don’t have a driver’s license.
AS Astaffort Regular ·
Five weeks traveling only by bush taxi is totally impossible, even with return flights from Diego or Nosy Be, and Tulear or even Morondava. Plan to book your tickets in advance—prices can double. Avoid night travel, it’s very dangerous (dahalo or highway robbers on NR, RN6, and even RN7 and 34 toward Morondava). Plus, from Belo Tsirinina to the Tsingy in Behamara, you’ll need a private vehicle—sharing with others is possible. For bush taxis (public transport), it’s 50 to 70% more expensive than a private car. From Tana to Majunga, it’s 18 hours by first-class minibus or 20 hours by bush taxi (and it only stops for bathroom breaks).

Personally, I’d stick to either Morondava or Tulear in the southeast and Diego and Nosy Be in the northeast, with a mandatory return flight. For my part, I’ve done eight two-month trips to cover your whole circuit!!!
jipi
LE Levoyageurr Regular ·
Thanks for your clearer advice—could you rephrase the 39-day itinerary for me, please, and make it even better? Either via DM or on the forum, thanks!
AS Astaffort Regular ·
first part Tana / Antsirabe / Morondava from Morondava, do your trip with a guide on Bakopaka for 5/6 days minimum—there’s at least one day for the outbound journey and one for the return trip on the road. Then rest in Morondava with the possibility of a round trip to Belo sur Mer over 4 days to build a traditional *boutre*. Return to Tana by plane. Then head north toward Ambanja and take a boat to Ankify for Nosy Be (expensive and a bit overrated in my opinion), then return to the main island and trip to Diego—watch out for two river crossings at Ifasy and Mahavavy (Ambilobe). Avoid the area between November 20th and the end of April due to the risk of road closures with random pirogue crossings. Return to Tana by plane. On the Madagascar Airlines website, which works well (recently improved), you can sometimes find flight tickets with "coup de cœur" (promo) deals—plan to arrive well in advance, as overbooking is common in Mada. That’s it, and I’ll repeat: absolutely avoid nighttime journeys!
jipi
JA Jasrymn Veteran ·
I agree with Jipi—trying to do all that in Madagascar in 5 weeks is crazy, or at least a real grind. Even if there are flights, taking them for the return trips—but can you really count on that? Your route covers over 6,000 km on roads where you average 30 km/h... Just doing the loop Tana-Tuléar-Morondava while taking a little time for all the sites already takes 5 weeks. Same for Majunga-Nosy Be-Diego...
Jacques. Dix ans de bourlingues à Madagascar à voir sur : https://www.myatlas.com/jasrymn
AS Astaffort Regular ·
hi everyone, totally agree with you jasrymn for flights, there’s been a clear improvement since the beginning of the year—the fleet has grown from 1 ATR72 to 5 ATR72s this year, plus some interesting promos. I got my return tickets from Sainte-Marie to Tana for October at 25 € per person—a promo that lasted 15 days. But they do pop up from time to time. On the other hand, the roads haven’t changed much, except for the RN2 from Tana to Tamatave—there’s been an improvement from Brickaville to Tamatave, according to my info. For the rest, it’s still a bit of a rollercoaster. Yeah, the southwest loop—Morondava, Tuléar, back via the RN7—takes 5 weeks if you want to explore and not just rack up the kilometers. cheers
jipi
JA Jasrymn Veteran ·
Hi! Yeah, it seems like things are improving for flights. I’ll have more to say next week—I’ve got a Nosy Be to Tana flight that I paid 114 € for, whereas last year it was 250 €! We’ll see if it actually takes off.
Jacques. Dix ans de bourlingues à Madagascar à voir sur : https://www.myatlas.com/jasrymn
OU Ours81 Regular ·
Hi! Since you’ll be passing through Ivato, could you (or anyone else!) let me know if the 90-day visas are still being issued? I’m planning to book my tickets in early July for my 23rd (or 22nd?) trip, and it’ll determine my travel dates. I used to get 90-day visas until 2017, which let me stay for 10–11 weeks. Starting in 2018, I switched to 60-day visas because I didn’t want to deal with Malagasy officials who were *too* "interested," and I had to travel 80 km to extend the visa. In 2024, with no info available, I booked a ticket for a 60-day stay, but when I arrived at Ivato in early October, the officer looked at my ticket dates and suggested I get a 90-day visa instead. What a nice surprise! Of course, for just 10 € more, I went for the 90-day option—especially since, at that time, Tsaradia flights still weren’t running *super* regularly! 🙂 Veloma! 🙂
JA Jasrymn Veteran ·
I can't reply to you—I'm a resident now. No more visa needed! Last year it was still 60 days, renewable for 30.
Jacques. Dix ans de bourlingues à Madagascar à voir sur : https://www.myatlas.com/jasrymn
AS Astaffort Regular ·
hi in 2022, 2023, 2024 it was 60 days max at the airport, but I didn’t try the "baksheesh" method, so for me it’s 60 days + 30 renewable in all major cities at the police station (with the possibility of baksheesh, as usual). Since 2022, I’ve only stayed 60 days—I don’t feel like dealing with the hassle!!
jipi
JA Jasrymn Veteran ·
It depends on the cities—sometimes it’s complicated, but other times it’s super easy. I’ve even had cases where I didn’t pay anything; the guy just stamped it without asking for money, just the return ticket. I still left a tip though!
Jacques. Dix ans de bourlingues à Madagascar à voir sur : https://www.myatlas.com/jasrymn
RO Rotsaka Globetrotter ·
Hi there, As has already been said and I won’t repeat, what you’re imagining doing under the conditions you want is pretty intense. And practically almost impossible.

As soon as you’re in a *taxi-brousse*, forget about travel times and leave room for the unexpected and flexibility. For example, a Morondava to Antsirabe trip took me 34 hours due to a breakdown. An extreme case, sure, but you get the idea.

You’ve got time, so don’t set a rigid schedule with exact days. Instead, make a general plan with the necessary time to allow for longer or shorter stops here and there. For the period you’re suggesting, you could do something like this:

Tana Ampefy (walks, hikes...) Antsirabe (Lac Tritriva, Betafo...) Morondava (Tsingy, Belo sur Mer...) Either continue the western loop via Manja, Tulear, etc., then head back up the RN7 Or return to Antsirabe Fianarantsoa (old town) Ambalavao (Tsaranoro, Parc Anja, Andringitra...) Back to Fianarantsoa, then head to Ranomafana (park, hot springs...) Mananjary (beach on the east coast isn’t great for swimming) Boat and *taxi-brousse* to head back up to Tamatave (several days on a *bateau-brousse* along the Pangalanes Canal and a bit of *taxi-brousse*) Tamatave Île Sainte-Marie Back to Tamatave Andasibe Tana If you’ve got time left, why not take a flight to any city that catches your eye: Fort Dauphin, Nosy Be, Diego, or even Antalaha for a much less touristy but still stunning spot right on the vanilla coast.

This gives you a western part, a highlands part, some east coast, *taxi-brousse* without excess, *bateau-brousse*, and a chill part in Sainte-Marie, which is ideal for that—especially Île aux Nattes. No need for a plane necessarily, but it could be an option. Occasionally, it might be worth renting a car to get to the Tsingy.

And it leaves you time to stay longer than planned in places you love—which happens often in Madagascar when you discover a great spot. Ambalavao, Sainte-Marie, Morondava, etc.: you might plan for one or two nights and end up staying for weeks.

Also, at the end of your trip in Tana, you could take a flight to another spot depending on your desires and any time you might have left.
OU Ours81 Regular ·
hi In 2022, 2023, and 2024, it was 60 days max at the airport, but I never tried the "baksheesh" method. So for me, it's 60 days and 30 renewable in all major cities at the police station (with the possibility of baksheesh, as usual). Since 2022, I’ve only stayed for 60 days—I don’t want the hassle!!

Hi, as mentioned above, I’m arriving on October 10, 2024, at 8:50 PM at Ivato with Air France, and I got a 90-day visa for 50 €. I’m asking to see if the 90-day visa will still be available in 2025! :) The 90-day visa was suspended in 2019 until early 2024 ;)
AS Astaffort Regular ·
On April 24, 2024, to be precise—no 90-day visa on arrival at the airport. From what I was told at immigration, you have to extend it at a police station after a 60-day visa. In October, it might be possible!! But based on my info from locals, there’s no 90-day visa at immigration—though anything’s possible in Madagascar with a good "bashish." That’s what I know
jipi
OU Ours81 Regular ·
.....in April 2024 on the 24th to be precise, no visa for 90.....

Hi there! 🙂 I asked "jarsym" since they were passing through Ivato, and since visa fees are displayed on big boards, if they had a chance to see them upon arrival. I sent an email yesterday to Ivato’s office to ask if the 90-day visa would still be valid until December 31, 2025, if obtained on arrival at the airport. I’m not too hopeful, though, because so far they’ve never replied to my emails. Anyway, despite their response, before booking my tickets in early July for October 5 to December 18 (in 2024, for the same dates, I got a 90-day visa on arrival at Ivato), I’ll try to get info from the people hosting me there! 🙂
JA Jasrymn Veteran ·
Well, if I see the sign, I'll let you know!
Jacques. Dix ans de bourlingues à Madagascar à voir sur : https://www.myatlas.com/jasrymn
JA Jasrymn Veteran ·
I found this on Facebook. Be careful, it's an e-visa, so prepare in advance.
Jacques. Dix ans de bourlingues à Madagascar à voir sur : https://www.myatlas.com/jasrymn
OU Ours81 Regular ·
I found this on Facebook. Be careful, it's an e-visa, so prepare in advance

Hi and thanks! 🙂 For 90 days it's 50 € or 175,000 Ar. I'm glad I kept 700,000 Ar from my 2024 trip because at today's exchange rate, 175,000 Ar is only 35 €! 😉
NO NomadyMada ·
Hi there, Your itinerary is way too packed to be doable. Don’t forget that Malagasy roads are in such bad shape that sticking to your timing is impossible. Second, you can forget about the tsingy in December—it won’t be accessible. I’d recommend scaling back your ambitions because you can’t explore all of Madagascar in 1 month. Pick 2 regions and that’s it. Either the east and the south or the south and the north. On the other hand, if you’re taking a *taxi-brousse*, good luck covering even 2 regions without rushing. And don’t forget that December and January are the rainy season. Nomady
Voyager, c est vivre mille vie en une seule
AS Astaffort Regular ·
hi there, watch out Madame Cabriah, this is a promotional post!!! normally not allowed here—you can share this kind of info in a private message!!
jipi
RO Rotsaka Globetrotter ·
Hi, I reported the 3 messages three times, and as if by chance, they were all about MadaAssist’s services, and the mod quickly deleted them. This happened some time ago with the exact same services. There’s plenty of space for allowed ads without coming to post them on one of the last remaining travel forums. With real travel content inside.
JA Jasrymn Veteran ·
Totally agree! The forum’s a bit gloomy these days—it hasn’t quite gotten its old spark back... Where’d all the regulars go?
Jacques. Dix ans de bourlingues à Madagascar à voir sur : https://www.myatlas.com/jasrymn
RO Rotsaka Globetrotter ·
Yeah, a lot of old-timers aren’t feeding the machine anymore, unfortunately, and on top of that, there are really very few new profiles popping up and participating beyond the occasional question.

Apparently, talking about travel is a bit of a outdated thing that’s fading into the mists of the Covid crisis, which dealt it the final blow.

Nowadays, an Instagram photo or a Tripadvisor review replaces the discussions of yesteryear.

But I’d rather keep playing the dinosaur anyway
AS Astaffort Regular ·
hi everyone I totally agree with you—lots of traveler friends treat TripAdvisor like their bible, even though it’s swarming with fake reviews. I stick to forums where the info stays personal and very often really interesting.
jipi

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