Equatorial Guinea travel guide
Equatorial Guinea is one of the wealthiest places in Africa, with new ports, motorways and cities springing up in double time. European colonialism, a succession of attempted (and successful) coups and the 1996 oil boom have continually widened the gap between rich and poor – and yet you’ll find that many Equatoguineans meet this with a laidback friendliness that belies past upheavals.
Keep the stories of colonialism, electoral rigging and oil exploitation in mind, but also look beyond them to the volcanic peaks, rainforest communities and sea turtle beaches.
Africa’s only Spanish-speaking nation stretches across a pocket of continental Africa and five volcanic islands. On the mainland (called Rio Muni), tropical jungle and mangroves shelter some of the country’s last elephants, crocodiles, hippos and leopards. It’s also where you’ll find a new city rising above the forest canopy – Ciudad de la Paz, the omnipresent president’s capital in the making. The historical capital, Malabo, sits on Bioko Island. Sink south, and you’ll discover Moka Valley’s sky-high crater lakes and sacred ancestral rainforests, plus primate-heavy national parks. Find out more in our Equatorial Guinea travel guide.
Equatorial Guinea is/isn't
Equatorial Guinea is...
for curious travellers willing to peer beyond the news headlines.
Equatorial Guinea isn't...
an easy country to crack. Reading up on its history will give you a huge amount of understanding, especially when paired with the views of your tour guide.
Equatorial Guinea map & highlights
Bioko Island is the main port of call for most Equatorial Guinea holidays. It’s home to the Spanish-flavoured capital, Malabo, where rollerbladers whizz down the paseo marítimo and gothic churches crumble under the tropical weather. The scenery takes a dramatic turn as you head south, swooping into Moka Peak and Gran Caldera de Luba, where you’ll find waterfall-licked rainforests and the misty mountainside villages of indigenous Bubi communities. Ureca’s wild, dark-sand beaches swipe the southern tip of Bioko – a must-see during sea turtle season. Continental Equatorial Guinea (Rio Muni) is about a 45-minute flight south-east of Bioko. Holidays in Equatorial Guinea also combine well with the nearby island nation of São Tomé and Príncipe.
Arena Blanca
1. Arena Blanca
The beaches in Equatorial Guinea aren’t exactly cocktail and sunlounger types, but therein lies the charm. Bioko Island switches between volcanic black-sand coves, and beaches like Arena Blanca, which, as the name suggests, lays out long white sands, over which butterflies flit. Over on the mainland, Rio Campo Nature Reserve serves up a sandy, sea turtle-friendly coastline.
Luba
2. Luba
Luba is a pocket-sized port an hour’s drive southwest of Malabo. Despite the hillside mansions growing on a steady diet of oil and logging money, it’s the surrounding scenery that makes it worth the visit. You can hike through tangled rainforest to the Iladyi (Ilachi) Waterfalls, where three rivers meet before plunging down a 250-metre-deep gorge.
Malabo
3. Malabo
Malabo, the island capital, props itself on the rim of an ancient sunken volcano. Weathered buildings like the Government Building and tropic-gothic St. Elizabeth’s Cathedral reveal the city’s past, when it was under Spanish control. A walking tour of the grid streets won’t take more than a couple of hours. Just swap the spate of Hiltons and luxury malls for the central market’s fruit and fish stalls.
Moka Peak
4. Moka Peak
Moka Peak rises out of the misty centre of Bioko Island. Tangled forest and volcanic crater lakes carve the landscape, including Biao Lake – traditionally the HQ of the high priest of the Bubi tribes. At Moka Wildlife Centre you can learn about the native monkeys, sea turtles, tree frogs and 200-plus bird species. Oh, and if you see a helicopter overhead, it’s just President Obiang Nguema winging into one of his jungle palaces.
Rio Muni
5. Rio Muni
It’s easy to get waylaid by Bioko Island, but make time for the mainland (Rio Muni) too. The wetlands of Rio Campo Natural Reserve house sea turtles, crocodiles, pythons and leopards. Meanwhile, Bata mashes together high-rise luxury, hip hop bars, hawker cafés and a palm-lined prom. Ciudad de la Paz (Oyala) will be the new capital city: an eerily empty work in progress surrounded by thick jungle.
San Antonio de Ureca
6. San Antonio de Ureca
Sea turtles follow an unerring path to Ureca in the dry season, a vital nesting site on Bioko Island. If you take a night hike along the tide line, your reward is seeing these green and leatherback (and occasionally olive ridley and hawksbill) turtles deposit their eggs by the dozens. Chances are – apart from the villagers who have been guarding the beach against poachers for 20 years – you’ll be the only observers.
Our top trip
Equatorial Guinea small group holiday
The highlights of one of Africa's least known countries
From
£3199
10 days
ex flights
Small group travel:
2025: 12 Jan
2025: 12 Jan
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