Prepping for a North-to-South Africa backpacking trip for 8-9 months
FR

Translated into English.

Original post
KN
Hey everyone!

I’m diving into planning a trip I’ve dreamed of for a long time: crossing Africa from North to South solo, with a departure planned for October 2025 for about 8-9 months. I’m leaving from Paris with a starting budget of around 7,000 €, aiming to supplement it with work along the way.

My planned route: Senegal → Gambia → Sierra Leone/Liberia (if logistics work out) → Côte d'Ivoire → Ghana → Togo → Benin → Cameroon → Gabon → Kenya (Masai Mara) → Uganda (Bwindi gorillas) → Rwanda → Tanzania (Kili + Serengeti + Zanzibar) → Mozambique → Malawi → Zambia (Victoria Falls) → Botswana → Namibia → South Africa (Cape Town). Madagascar as a bonus if timing/budget allows from Mozambique.

I’m not a backpacking newbie—I’ve done several trips in Europe and I’m familiar with the lifestyle, hostels, local transport, etc. But Africa is my first big adventure on this continent, and I’ve got some very concrete questions I’d love feedback on from people who’ve been there.

🎭 My big dilemma: flexibility vs. pre-organized work

What matters most to me is NOT rushing through. If I feel good somewhere, I’ll stay longer. If a region doesn’t click, I’ll cut it short. That seems totally incompatible with having pre-booked work or volunteer gigs, yet I need that income to stretch my budget.

I’m torn between two approaches:

Option A: The mixed rhythm: 3-4 weeks of volunteering in a country (free accommodation, full immersion), then 1-2 countries in classic backpacker "vacation" mode, then another mission somewhere, etc. This gives a breathing rhythm and avoids burnout from non-stop volunteering.

Option B: The continuous flow: finding gigs as I go, from the previous country, contacting hosts 2-3 weeks in advance with a flexible date range. Keeping maximum spontaneity but never arriving anywhere without a safety net.

Have you tried either? What actually works on the ground in Africa?

🌍 What I’m really looking for in this trip

Not just the classic tourist spots. I want to see the country as it is—eating at local joints, taking local transport (bush taxis, minibuses, sept-places), staying with locals when possible. The big reserves and safaris are part of the plan (Masai Mara, Serengeti, Okavango), but just as much as hanging out in a residential neighborhood in Dakar, understanding how people really live.

Volunteering or work interests me for that reason too (not just for free lodging, but because it’s the deepest way to dive into a country). Working at a school in Ghana, a lodge in Kenya, a permaculture farm in Mozambique—I see it as an immersion that classic tourism can’t offer.

🎒 My concrete questions

About Workaway and Worldpackers: I’ve read a lot but would love on-the-ground feedback, especially for West and East Africa. Are hosts really flexible with dates for long-term travelers? Do the advertised gigs match reality? Are there alternative platforms you’d recommend for Africa specifically (I’ve heard of Help Exchange, WWOOF Africa, local networks…)?

About "off-platform" jobs: Is it really doable to find informal work on the spot (bars, restaurants, lodges) without prior contacts? In which countries/cities is this most accessible for a French speaker without a local work permit?

About logistics between countries: For those who’ve done the West Coast (Senegal → Ghana → Benin), how did you cross borders? Direct buses or local shared taxis at each border? And for the jump from Central Africa → Kenya, is a flight mandatory, or are there feasible overland routes?

About Madagascar: I’m considering adding it from Mozambique (flight Maputo or Beira → Tana). Those who’ve done it backpacker-style on a tight budget—is 3-4 weeks doable, or is it too short to be worth it?

I’m open to all tips, experiences, warnings, and pleasant surprises. And if you’ve got trusted local contacts (Workaway hosts, associations, community lodges), I’m all ears!

I’ve got tons of questions and I’m eager for any advice or experiences you can share!!
DJ Djalma Globetrotter ·
crossing North to South Africa solo, departure planned for October 2025 for about 8-9 months

Hi,

Did you mean 2026?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-XCOyB7WStI https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g2eI67iCbKY
KN Knicker ·
Hi, yes obviously, typo 🤪
DJ Djalma Globetrotter ·
About Madagascar: I'm considering adding it from Mozambique (flight Maputo or Beira → Tana). For those who've done it as backpackers on a tight budget, is 3-4 weeks doable or is it too short to be worth it?

Hi, In Madagascar, all budgets are possible as long as you stick to only bush taxis and stay in basic "hotely" (just four walls and a roof) and eat at local eateries (rice with sauce and greens). The journeys can be very long and uncomfortable (sometimes worse than African bush taxis). I once traveled in a "covered" 404 (for 50 km) where I counted 14 people! The condition of the "roads" has reportedly deteriorated significantly since the early 2000s. In 3-4 weeks, you can do a lot—it depends on what you're looking for. The country is as big as France plus the Benelux. Some areas are impassable during the rainy season due to road conditions. There are regions (the south) that are almost desert-like and sometimes affected by famine, while others are covered in dense forest (the east) where malaria is a risk.

I’ve also crossed quite a few West African countries without issues, but that was a long time ago. We crossed borders without visas for all the countries mentioned below, but that may no longer be the case (this was in 1978/79 and 1980): Mali, Niger, Benin, Togo, Ghana (bribes at the border!), Ivory Coast, Guinea, Senegal. I also went to Cameroon, but by plane. It’s a country I really loved, especially the Kapsiki region in the north (Rhumsiki near Mokolo). As for volunteering or working there, I don’t know much about that.

About Madagascar: I had a friend who stayed there for 3-6 months a year, working as a pastry chef in a backpacker "hotel" by the sea in Foulpointe, north of Tamatave (he was a professional pastry chef). Another friend settled in Belo sur Mer (west coast) and still runs bungalows with windsurfing boards and kayak rentals (ask for Philippe)—it’s far from mass tourism! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1AECO3BkSfQ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-XCOyB7WStI https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g2eI67iCbKY
VE Veve75020 Veteran ·
Hi, I’ll just share my experience from 9 months in West Africa, which is starting to feel like a while ago now. Volunteering: it’s best to check opportunities on the ground, especially in English-speaking countries, and make sure the organization is legit—there are a lot of shady ones. Work: in my opinion, it’s almost impossible unless you have a real skill set, and even then, you might only find something in very touristy areas. Your budget (under 1000 € per month) seems really tight. You mention seeing gorillas and other activities, but visas aren’t cheap, and they’ll eat into a big chunk of your budget. If you don’t have much financial wiggle room, you might end up cutting back on activities and even food to the bare minimum (and you’ll get tired of that fast). Africa isn’t particularly cheap, and nothing is free. Happy travels

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