Travel · The Gambia

Where to stay in The Gambia

Last reviewed on May 2, 2026.

The Gambia is small enough that the choice of base shapes the whole trip. Most visitors stay along a roughly fifteen-kilometre coastal strip near the capital. A smaller number stay upriver or inland for a different kind of experience. This guide compares the main areas so you can pick the right one for the trip you actually want.

The coastal strip

From north to south, the coast covers Banjul, Bakau, Fajara, Kotu, Kololi, Senegambia, and the southern beaches around Brufut and Tujereng. They blend into one another and most are within a 15–30 minute taxi ride of each other.

Banjul

The capital, on a small island at the river's mouth, is small and architecturally interesting but offers limited tourist accommodation. It is best as a half-day visit rather than a base — Albert Market, Arch 22, the National Museum, and the ferry terminal sit close together. The Banjul city guide covers the half-day walk in detail. Stay here only if you want a city feel and are happy to take a taxi to the beach.

Bakau and Fajara

Just south of Banjul, Bakau is a quieter, more residential area with a strong local feel, the Kachikally Crocodile Pool, and direct beach access. Fajara, immediately south, has wide streets, embassies, and the Fajara Golf Club. Both areas suit travelers who want fewer crowds, a less-packaged feel, and easy access to local restaurants. Hotels are smaller and more independent than further south.

Kotu

Kotu sits between Bakau and Senegambia and is one of the most popular bases. The beach is wide, there is a long parade of restaurants, and the small Kotu Stream and bird-rich wetlands behind it are within walking distance. Kotu is a sensible default for a first visit.

Kololi and Senegambia

This is the busiest area, with a tight cluster of hotels, restaurants, supermarkets, and the so-called "Senegambia strip" of bars and clubs. It suits travelers who want the most amenities in walking range, and is generally the easiest base for families on a first trip. It is also the loudest area in peak season.

Brufut, Tujereng, and the southern beaches

South of Senegambia, the coast becomes quieter. A few smaller hotels and beach lodges along Brufut and Tujereng beaches suit travelers who want emptier sand and a slower pace. You will rely on taxis for most outings; restaurants are fewer.

River lodges

If your trip is built around birding, the river, or quieter time in nature, look at lodges along the river. Their advantage is location: you can wake up by the water, take an early-morning boat trip, and be back for breakfast.

River lodges are typically simpler than coastal hotels — fans rather than air-conditioning is common, and Wi-Fi is patchy. That is part of the appeal.

How to choose

For a first visit with mixed interests

A coastal base in Kotu or Senegambia, with one or two day trips upriver, is the simplest formula. You get reliable infrastructure, plenty of food options, and short hops to the airport.

For a quieter, more local feel

Bakau, Fajara, or Brufut. You will spend slightly more on taxis but eat with more locals and see less of the package-tour cycle.

For birding or nature

Two or three nights coastal followed by two or three nights upriver is a good split. Tendaba, Bintang, and Janjanbureh each offer something different. Many tour operators arrange the upriver leg with a driver.

For a longer stay

Renting an apartment in Bakau, Fajara, or Cape Point gives you a kitchen, a quieter neighbourhood, and a real address. This works well for stays of two weeks or more.

What to ask before you book

Common mistakes

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