Investment · Daily life · The Gambia

Resident services in The Gambia

Last reviewed on May 2, 2026.

If you are moving to The Gambia for longer than a holiday — for a project, a job, retirement, or because the country has called you home — you'll need to navigate the same set of practicalities most newcomers run into: residence, banking, schools, health, housing, transport. This guide is a plain-English orientation. Each procedure should be confirmed with the relevant institution before you act.

Residence and immigration

The Gambia Immigration Department, under the Ministry of Interior, owns the residence framework. The categories most newcomers encounter are:

The right path depends on your nationality, your work situation, and whether you are arriving as part of an organisation or independently. Engaging a competent local immigration adviser early is usually money well spent.

Banking

Several commercial banks operate in the country, with the largest branch presence in the coastal corridor. To open an account you'll typically need:

Mobile money operates alongside the banking sector and is widely used. The money and payments guide goes deeper into day-to-day handling.

Housing

Most newcomers rent, at least initially. The coastal corridor — Bakau, Fajara, Cape Point, Brusubi, Kololi, and parts of Brufut — has the broadest mix of furnished and unfurnished homes. Practical points:

Schools

For families moving with school-aged children, the main paths are:

Visit several before deciding. Term dates broadly follow a September–July rhythm but vary across systems.

Healthcare

The healthcare system mixes public hospitals, NGO-run facilities, and a private sector concentrated in the coastal area. Practical realities:

The health and safety guide covers visitor-level basics.

Transport

Many residents in the coastal area use a mix of:

For longer-term residents, a vehicle in good condition is often more reliable than relying entirely on taxis. Driving is on the right; an international driving permit is widely accepted while you obtain a local licence.

Setting up a household

Building a network

Settling in is easier with a network. Useful starting points include:

A short checklist for the first thirty days

Common mistakes

What to read next

This page is general background, not legal, immigration, or medical advice. See the disclaimer.