Senegal Travel Guide 2026: Dakar, Saint-Louis, Gorée, Casamance & Pink Lake
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Senegal Travel Guide 2026: Dakar, Saint-Louis, Gorée, Casamance and Pink Lake Complete Guide
TL;DR
I planned my Senegal trip expecting one type of West African trip and came home having lived three. Dakar pulses with music, color, and Atlantic salt. The African Renaissance Monument rises 49 metres above the city, completed in 2010. The Île de Gorée sits a 20-minute ferry from the capital, inscribed by UNESCO in 1978 on the first World Heritage List, holding the House of Slaves and the Door of No Return as a memorial that asks visitors to listen, not consume. Saint-Louis, the colonial capital founded by France in 1659, earned its UNESCO inscription in 2000 and still wears Faidherbe Bridge as a working artery.
South of Dakar, Casamance opens green and quiet, separated from the north by The Gambia. Cap Skirring beach, Ziguinchor town, and the Saloum Delta mangroves (UNESCO 2011) reward travelers who push past the obvious itinerary. Lac Rose, the Pink Lake, glows strawberry-milk under midday sun thanks to Dunaliella salina algae thriving in water roughly 40 percent salt, ten times saltier than the ocean. Niokolo-Koba National Park (UNESCO 1981) hides remaining lions in the southeast; the Bandia private reserve offers a closer day option.
Senegal counts as one of West Africa's most stable democracies. The 2024 presidential transition, which brought Bassirou Diomaye Faye to office at 44, passed peacefully. French is official; Wolof carries everyday life. The currency is the West African CFA franc (XOF), pegged to the euro at 1 EUR = 655.957 XOF. Indians, Americans, and most Europeans enter visa-free for up to 90 days (always verify before booking). Yellow fever vaccination is mandatory; malaria prophylaxis is sensible March through October. Plan dry season (November to February) for the best weather, and brace yourself emotionally before Gorée.
Why Senegal in 2026
I picked Senegal for 2026 because the country sits at a hopeful inflection point. The March 2024 election, which moved Bassirou Diomaye Faye from prison to the presidential palace within ten days, gave Senegal its fifth peaceful transfer of power since independence in 1960. That democratic record is rare anywhere; in West Africa, it's exceptional. Streets feel calm, security forces are professional, and the tourism ministry is actively rebuilding flows.
The African Renaissance Monument turned 16 in 2026, still the tallest statue on the continent at 49 metres. Critics argued about its cost when it opened; I found it impossible to ignore as a symbol of how Senegal sees itself, rising from a hill in Ouakam.
Music is the other reason I came. Senegal is the African music capital in any honest count. Youssou N'Dour, Baaba Maal, Ismaël Lô, Orchestra Baobab, and Akon (born in Dakar) all trace their craft to mbalax rhythms and Wolof griot tradition. Live shows happen across Dakar nightly, and the Saint-Louis Jazz Festival in May draws international acts.
Connectivity is also better in 2026. Air Senegal, Royal Air Maroc, Turkish Airlines, Brussels Airlines, and Qatar Airways all fly into Blaise Diagne International (DSS). Toll roads connect the airport to the city and onward to Mbour, Saly, and Saint-Louis. The currency peg to the euro removes exchange-rate guessing. For travelers willing to look past tired clichés about West Africa, Senegal in 2026 is ready and welcoming, and the warmth of teranga (the national value of hospitality) is real.
Background
Senegal's territory belonged for centuries to Wolof, Serer, Fulani, Tukulor, and Mandinka kingdoms. The Jolof Empire dominated from the 14th century until splintering in the 1500s into Wolof states (Cayor, Baol, Walo) and the Sine and Saloum Serer kingdoms. Sufi brotherhoods (Mouride, Tijaniyya) took root inland and still shape spiritual life.
Europeans arrived in 1444 when Portuguese navigator Dinis Dias reached the Cap-Vert peninsula. Portuguese, Dutch, English, and French traders rotated control of the coast for two centuries. The transatlantic slave trade ran from roughly 1525 to 1866; current estimates put around 12.5 million Africans deported across the Atlantic, with about 6 million leaving from the West and West Central African coast that includes Senegal. Gorée Island became one of many departure points.
France founded Saint-Louis in 1659 at the mouth of the Senegal River, the oldest European settlement in West Africa. It grew into the capital of French West Africa (AOF) until the seat moved to Dakar in 1902. Senegal won independence on August 20, 1960, under poet-president Léopold Sédar Senghor. Abdou Diouf succeeded him in 1981, Abdoulaye Wade won a historic opposition victory in 2000, Macky Sall took over in 2012, and Bassirou Diomaye Faye claimed the presidency in March 2024. Through every transition, the army stayed in barracks.
Tier-1 Destinations
Dakar, the African Renaissance Monument, IFAN Museum and Soumbedioune
Dakar wraps around the Cap-Vert peninsula, the westernmost point of mainland Africa. I gave it three nights and wished for four. The African Renaissance Monument was my first stop. Standing 49 metres on a hill in Ouakam, completed in 2010 under President Wade and built by a North Korean firm, the bronze trio of man, woman, and child looks toward the Atlantic. Climb the 198 steps from the base, then take the elevator inside the man's head for a viewing platform that frames the coastline.
The IFAN Museum of African Arts (Musée Théodore Monod) in central Dakar holds one of the oldest ethnographic collections in West Africa, founded in 1936 under the Institut Fondamental d'Afrique Noire. Masks from across the continent, agricultural tools, musical instruments, and ceremonial textiles fill rooms that are honest, lived-in, and not slick. Allow 90 minutes.
Soumbedioune fishing village, just south of the city center on the Corniche, becomes a market every afternoon when colorful pirogues drag in the catch. Women clean fish on the sand; buyers haggle over thiof (white grouper) and capitaine; restaurants behind the beach serve thieboudienne (the national dish of fish and rice) at honest prices. Sunset from the Soumbedioune cliffs is reliably good.
Beyond these three anchors, I walked Plateau (the colonial-era downtown), watched a free djembe rehearsal at the Village des Arts, and ate yassa poulet at Chez Loutcha in Medina. Stay in Almadies (beachy, upmarket) or Plateau (central, walkable). The seafront Corniche drive at sunset is unmissable.
Île de Gorée, UNESCO 1978, House of Slaves and Door of No Return
Some places I visit for pleasure. Gorée I visited for memory. The 20-minute ferry leaves from the Embarcadère in Dakar harbor (about 5,200 XOF round trip for foreigners). The island is 900 metres long, walkable in 30 minutes, and was inscribed by UNESCO in 1978 on the first World Heritage List ever published.
The House of Slaves (Maison des Esclaves), built around 1776 by a Dutch trader and later restored as a memorial, is the moral center of the visit. Curator Joseph Ndiaye, who served from 1962 until his death in 2009, established the site as a place of reflection. The Door of No Return frames the Atlantic and the trip that millions did not survive. Historians debate Gorée's exact volume in the trade (numbers were lower than once claimed; many enslaved Africans passed through other ports), but Gorée's symbolic weight is uncontested. Popes, presidents, and Nelson Mandela have stood at this door. I went quiet and stayed quiet.
Beyond the House of Slaves, the island carries the IFAN Historical Museum in Fort d'Estrées, the Women's Museum (Henriette Bathily), and pastel colonial houses draped in bougainvillea. I ate grilled fish at a terrace, watched kids leap off the jetty, and caught the late ferry back. Bring water, modest dress, and time. Respectful framing matters; loud groups and posed selfies at the Door read poorly. Go with a guide for historical layers; go alone for silence.
Saint-Louis, UNESCO 2000, Faidherbe Bridge and the Senegal River
Saint-Louis sits 270 km north of Dakar on an island in the Senegal River, connected to the mainland by the Pont Faidherbe (built 1897, often credited as a Gustave Eiffel design though documentation is mixed) and to the sandbar Langue de Barbarie by a smaller bridge. Founded by France in 1659, it served as the capital of French Senegal and then of French West Africa until 1902. UNESCO inscribed the island in 2000 for its colonial urban fabric.
Driving in feels like time travel. Faded pastel facades, wooden balconies, narrow grid streets, and the Pont Faidherbe span the brown river. I stayed two nights at a small auberge on the island. Walk the entire grid in a morning. Visit the Photography Museum, the Quai des Pêcheurs, and the Place Faidherbe. The annual Saint-Louis Jazz Festival in May fills bars and squares with international and Senegalese acts; book ahead.
Day trips from Saint-Louis are strong. The Djoudj National Bird Sanctuary (UNESCO 1981) lies 60 km north and shelters millions of migratory birds (November to April peak). Pelicans, flamingos, and herons cover the wetlands; a boat trip is the way in. Langue de Barbarie National Park, south along the sandbar, protects sea turtle nesting beaches. Saint-Louis rewards a slower pace; it's not a stop, it's a stay.
Casamance, Cap Skirring, Ziguinchor and the Saloum Delta UNESCO Mangroves
Casamance is the south of Senegal, geographically separated from the north by The Gambia. The region is greener, wetter, ethnically Diola (Jola) more than Wolof, and culturally distinct. After decades of low-level separatist tension, a 2022 peace agreement between the government and the MFDC stabilized the area; foreign affairs ministries generally rate Casamance safe for tourism in 2026, with normal precautions.
Cap Skirring, on the Atlantic near the Guinea-Bissau border, has the country's best beach. Long, palm-fringed, almost empty mid-week, with small hotels and a Club Med at one end. Flights from Dakar to Cap Skirring (CSK) take about an hour on Air Senegal.
Ziguinchor, Casamance's capital, sits on the Casamance River. The covered market, the Saint Antoine de Padoue Cathedral, and riverside seafood restaurants make a satisfying day. Pirogue trips through the bolongs (tidal mangrove channels) leave from villages like Élinkine and Cap Skirring. I spent a half-day on the water with kingfishers, mangrove monkeys, and silence.
The Saloum Delta, north of The Gambia (technically not in Casamance), was inscribed by UNESCO in 2011 for its 5,000 sq km of mangroves, shell mounds, fishing villages, and biodiversity. Toubacouta and Missirah are the entry villages. Pirogue overnight trips through the delta count among my favorite Senegal memories. Stilted lodges, baobab silhouettes, fish grilling on driftwood, no Wi-Fi.
Lac Rose (Pink Lake), Niokolo-Koba and Bandia
Lac Rose (Lake Retba) sits 35 km northeast of Dakar, an easy half-day or full-day trip. The lake's pink color comes from Dunaliella salina, a salt-loving algae that produces a red pigment to protect itself from intense salinity. The water carries roughly 40 percent salt (about ten times saltier than the ocean), comparable to the Dead Sea. The pink shows strongest at midday in the dry season (November to February) when sun and wind concentrate. In rainy season or low light, the color fades to dusty rose.
Salt harvesters wade in waist-deep, scraping the bottom with poles and loading pirogues with white salt. Shea butter protects their skin against the saline burn. The better experience is sitting at a shore restaurant with a thieboudienne while watching the work. The lake hosted the finish of the Paris-Dakar Rally from 1979 to 2007.
Niokolo-Koba National Park, in the far southeast on the Guinea border, was inscribed by UNESCO in 1981. It protects 9,130 sq km of Sudano-Guinean savanna, the last West African lions (population in low double digits), Derby elands, chimpanzees, and over 350 bird species. The park requires three to four days, a 4x4, and a guide; it's not casual.
For travelers short on time, the Bandia private reserve, 65 km south of Dakar near Saly, offers a half-day game drive: giraffes, rhinos (introduced), zebras, antelope, and ancient baobabs. Bandia is curated, not wild Africa. Go for an introduction.
Tier-2 Destinations
Lompoul Desert and Dunes: Halfway between Dakar and Saint-Louis, a Sahara-style dune field rises from coastal scrub. Berber camps offer overnight stays, camel rides, and sandboarding. Pair with Saint-Louis on the drive north.
Toubacouta and Sine-Saloum Birdlife: Toubacouta is the gateway village for Saloum Delta pirogue trips. Pelicans, flamingos, egrets, and the rare African darter populate the bolongs. Stilted-lodge stays; mosquito nets essential.
Fadiout, the Island of Shells: A small island 1.5 hours south of Dakar, connected by a wooden footbridge to Joal. Every path and square is paved with millions of bivalve shells. The Catholic-Muslim shared cemetery on the next island is one of the most quietly moving sites in Senegal.
Touba and the Mouride Brotherhood: The holy city of the Mouride Sufi brotherhood, founded by Cheikh Amadou Bamba in 1887. The Great Mosque, completed in 1963, is one of the largest in Africa. The annual Grand Magal pilgrimage draws 4 to 6 million people. Modest dress is mandatory; women must cover hair. This is a living spiritual capital, not a tourist site.
Kaolack and the Peanut Belt: Senegal's peanut basin runs through Kaolack, the country's fourth-largest city. Hot, flat, working-class, with a covered market among West Africa's largest. Worth a half-day stop en route to Niokolo-Koba or Tambacounda.
Costs in XOF, USD and INR
The West African CFA franc (XOF) is fixed to the euro at 1 EUR = 655.957 XOF. At early 2026 rates, roughly 1 USD = 600 XOF and 1 INR = 7.2 XOF. ATMs in Dakar, Saint-Louis, Saly, and Ziguinchor work with Visa and Mastercard; rural areas need cash.
| Item | XOF | USD | INR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mid-range hotel double, Dakar | 45,000-75,000 | 75-125 | 6,250-10,400 |
| Boutique hotel Saint-Louis | 35,000-60,000 | 60-100 | 5,000-8,300 |
| Cap Skirring beach hotel | 50,000-90,000 | 85-150 | 7,100-12,500 |
| Thieboudienne meal local | 2,500-4,000 | 4-7 | 350-580 |
| Mid-range restaurant dinner | 8,000-18,000 | 13-30 | 1,100-2,500 |
| Gorée ferry round trip (foreign) | 5,200 | 9 | 720 |
| House of Slaves entry | 1,000 | 1.70 | 140 |
| African Renaissance Monument entry | 6,500 | 11 | 900 |
| Bandia Reserve game drive | 35,000-50,000 | 60-85 | 5,000-7,000 |
| Saloum Delta pirogue half-day | 25,000-40,000 | 42-67 | 3,500-5,500 |
| Lac Rose tour from Dakar | 30,000-50,000 | 50-85 | 4,200-7,000 |
| Domestic flight Dakar-Cap Skirring | 90,000-160,000 | 150-270 | 12,500-22,200 |
| Long-distance shared taxi (sept-place) | 5,000-15,000 | 8-25 | 700-2,100 |
| Bottled water 1.5L | 500-800 | 0.85-1.35 | 70-110 |
Budget travelers can manage 35,000-50,000 XOF (60-85 USD) per day. Mid-range comfort runs 75,000-120,000 XOF (125-200 USD). Beach resorts and private guides push past 150,000 XOF (250 USD) per day.
Planning Senegal: Six Things to Know
Best season: November through February is the dry, cool window (daytime 25-30°C, low humidity). March through May turns hot and dusty with the Harmattan wind. June through October is the rainy season; the Saloum and Casamance turn lush green but roads degrade and mosquitoes intensify. I went in late January and February; the weather was effortless.
Casamance window: Casamance is at its best November to May. The June-October rains complicate access and bring more mosquitoes. The 2022 peace deal stabilized the region; check your foreign ministry advisory before booking, but tourism flows resumed years ago.
Touba Magal: If you travel during the Grand Magal pilgrimage (date set by Islamic lunar calendar; falls roughly 48 days after the Islamic New Year), expect packed roads to Touba and full hotels in Diourbel and Mbacké. Avoid Touba area travel during Magal unless you're going for the pilgrimage.
Visa for Indians and others: Senegal grants visa-free entry for 90 days to citizens of India, the United States, the United Kingdom, the EU, Canada, Australia, and many other countries. Always verify on the Senegalese embassy website before booking. Carry yellow fever certificate.
Yellow fever and malaria: Yellow fever vaccination certificate is mandatory at entry. Malaria is present year-round; risk is higher in the south and during the rainy season. Speak with a travel clinic about prophylaxis (doxycycline, atovaquone-proguanil, or mefloquine). Use DEET-based repellent and nets.
Language: French is the working language for government, business, and most signage. Wolof is the lingua franca of daily life (about 80 percent of Senegalese speak it). Outside Dakar and tourist areas, English is rare. Brushing up basic French before arrival pays off every single day.
FAQs
Is Gorée Island emotionally heavy? How do I prepare?
Yes, and I think that's the point. Read briefly about the Atlantic slave trade before you go (Wikipedia's overview is fine). Plan a quiet meal or coffee afterward; don't rush back to a packed itinerary. Go with a small group or alone; large tour groups disrupt the contemplative tone. Bring water, modest clothing, and patience. The visit is essential; the framing matters.
When is Lac Rose actually pink?
Strongest pink shows November through February when sun is high and rainfall is low, concentrating salinity and stressing the Dunaliella salina algae into producing more red pigment. Midday light (11 am to 3 pm) is best. After heavy rain or in low light, the color fades to pale rose or gray-pink. Manage expectations; not every visit catches peak pink.
Is vegetarian food available?
Difficult but possible. Senegalese cuisine centers on fish (thieboudienne) and meat (yassa poulet, mafé, dibi). Vegetarians can do well in Dakar (Indian, Lebanese, and French restaurants abound) and in higher-end hotels. Outside major cities, expect rice with vegetables. Vegans should self-cater partially. Carry snacks for travel days.
Is Senegal safe for women solo travelers?
Generally yes, with normal precautions. Dakar, Saint-Louis, Saly, and Cap Skirring see steady solo female travelers. Street harassment is mild compared to several neighbors. Dress modestly outside beach zones, avoid solo walking in unlit areas after dark, and use registered taxis or Yango at night. Casamance is safe but rural; pair with a guide for remote travel.
Is French essential?
Functionally yes. Hotel staff in tourist zones speak some English; outside that, French carries the day. Learning a few Wolof greetings (Salaam aleikum, Jërejëf) opens doors. If you don't speak French, hire a guide or use a translation app.
What's the food I must try?
Thieboudienne (fish and rice, the national dish), yassa poulet (chicken in onion-lemon sauce), mafé (peanut stew), dibi (grilled lamb), and pastel (fried fish pastries). Drink bissap, bouye (baobab fruit), and ginger juice.
Is ride-hailing available?
Yango works in Dakar and is easiest for tourists. Yellow-and-black taxis are everywhere; agree on the fare before getting in (no meters). Sept-place shared taxis (Peugeot 504/505 with seven seats) connect cities; uncomfortable but cheap.
Cash or card?
Both. ATMs in Dakar, Saint-Louis, Saly, Cap Skirring, and Ziguinchor dispense XOF on Visa and Mastercard. Carry cash for rural travel, small restaurants, and tips. Always keep backup cash.
Wolof and French Phrases
Wolof essentials:
- Salaam aleikum / Maleikum salaam (universal greeting / response, borrowed from Arabic)
- Nanga def? (How are you?)
- Mangi fi rekk (I'm fine)
- Jërejëf (Thank you, the most important word you can learn)
- Bul ma jaay! (Please leave me alone, useful with persistent vendors)
- Ndokk gaan (Welcome, said to visitors)
- Sant nga? (What's your last name?, a traditional first question)
- Teranga (Hospitality, the national value)
French essentials:
- Bonjour / Bonsoir (Good morning / Good evening)
- Merci beaucoup (Thank you very much)
- S'il vous plaît (Please)
- Pardon / Excusez-moi (Sorry / Excuse me)
- Combien? (How much?)
- C'est trop cher (It's too expensive)
- Où sont les toilettes? (Where are the toilets?)
- Je ne parle pas français (I don't speak French)
Cultural Notes
Senegal is about 95 percent Muslim and 4-5 percent Christian, with strong African traditional practices woven through both. Sunni Islam dominates, organized through Sufi brotherhoods: the Mouride (centered on Touba), the Tijaniyya (centered on Tivaouane), the Qadiriyya, and the Layene. Brotherhoods influence politics, business, and daily rhythm. Interreligious harmony is genuine; the shared cemetery at Fadiout is the symbol.
Wolof is the ethnic majority and cultural lingua franca; Serer, Fulani, Tukulor, Mandinka, Diola, and Soninke fill the mosaic. The Diola of Casamance carry layered animist-Christian-Muslim traditions; the Serer of Sine maintain pre-Islamic shrines.
Food culture: thieboudienne is the national dish and was added to UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage list in 2021. Yassa, mafé, dibi, and ceebu yapp round out the table. Eat with the right hand from a shared platter when invited home. Bissap and bouye are the everyday drinks.
Music is the cultural superpower. The griot oral tradition (jeli in Mandinka) carries history and praise singing across generations. Mbalax, led by Youssou N'Dour from the 1980s, fuses Wolof percussion with Cuban son and jazz. Djembe and sabar drumming sit at the core. Akon, born in Dakar in 1973, took Senegalese hip-hop global; Baaba Maal and Ismaël Lô anchor the older guard.
Teranga, the Wolof word for hospitality, is the national identity. You will feel it within hours of landing. Reciprocate with patience, modest dress in religious settings, and a few words of Wolof.
Pre-Trip Preparation
Health: Yellow fever certificate is mandatory at entry. Get vaccinated 10+ days before travel. Routine vaccines should be current (MMR, Tdap, polio, hepatitis A and B, typhoid). Speak with a travel clinic about malaria prophylaxis (year-round risk; higher in rainy season and the south). Carry DEET repellent, oral rehydration salts, broad-spectrum antibiotics for travelers' diarrhea (per doctor advice), and any personal medications in original packaging.
Visa: Visa-free 90 days for Indian, US, UK, EU, Canadian, Australian, and many other passports. Verify on the Senegalese embassy website 30 days before travel. Carry yellow fever certificate (Carte Jaune) and passport with 6+ months validity and two blank pages.
Language: Functional French is the single biggest force multiplier. Apps like Duolingo and Pimsleur cover the basics in 6-8 weeks of daily practice. Learn 10 Wolof phrases on the flight.
Money: XOF is pegged to the euro at 1:655.957. Bring USD or EUR cash for backup. Notify your bank of travel dates. Carry one Visa and one Mastercard.
Safety: Senegal is one of the safer countries in West Africa. Check your foreign ministry advisory before booking. Tourist zones (Dakar, Saly, Saint-Louis, Casamance) are well-patrolled and routine for visitors. Petty theft happens in markets and crowded areas; standard urban precautions apply.
Three Itineraries
4 Days: Dakar Essentials, Gorée and Pink Lake
- Day 1: Arrive Dakar (DSS airport). Settle in Almadies or Plateau. Sunset on the Corniche. Dinner at a Plateau restaurant.
- Day 2: Morning African Renaissance Monument and IFAN Museum. Afternoon Soumbedioune fishing village and the market. Evening live mbalax music in Plateau.
- Day 3: Full day Île de Gorée. Take the 10 am ferry, return late afternoon. Quiet dinner, early night.
- Day 4: Half-day Lac Rose (Pink Lake) tour from Dakar. Return for late lunch, last shopping at Marché Sandaga or Marché Kermel, departure.
7 Days: Add Saint-Louis and Saloum Delta
Days 1-4 as above. Then:
- Day 5: Drive Dakar to Saint-Louis (about 4-5 hours by car, faster via toll road). Afternoon walk the colonial grid. Sunset on Pont Faidherbe.
- Day 6: Morning Djoudj National Bird Sanctuary (UNESCO 1981) pirogue trip. Afternoon Langue de Barbarie or Saint-Louis museums.
- Day 7: Drive south to Toubacouta in the Saloum Delta (about 6 hours). Afternoon pirogue through the mangroves. Stilted-lodge overnight. Return to Dakar the next morning for departure.
10 Days: Full Senegal Including Casamance and Niokolo-Koba
Days 1-7 as above. Then:
- Day 8: Fly Dakar to Cap Skirring (about 1 hour). Afternoon beach, fresh seafood dinner.
- Day 9: Pirogue trip through Casamance bolongs from Élinkine or Cap Skirring. Visit Diola villages. Return for sunset on the beach.
- Day 10: Half-day Ziguinchor (market, cathedral, riverside lunch). Fly back to Dakar, evening departure.
(Niokolo-Koba National Park requires 3-4 additional days and a 4x4 with guide; substitute Casamance days if wildlife is your priority, or extend the trip.)
Related Guides
- West Africa Travel Guide: Routes, Visas and Realities
- The Gambia Complete Travel Guide: Banjul, River and Beaches
- Morocco Complete Travel Guide: Marrakech, Fes and the Sahara
- Cape Verde Travel Guide: Islands, Music and Atlantic Air
- Côte d'Ivoire Travel Guide: Abidjan, Yamoussoukro and Beyond
- Ghana Travel Guide: Accra, Cape Coast and the Slave Forts
External References
- Senegal Ministry of Tourism - senegal-tourisme.com
- UNESCO World Heritage Centre, Senegal - whc.unesco.org/en/statesparties/sn
- US State Department Senegal Travel Information - travel.state.gov
- Wikipedia, Senegal - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Senegal
- IFAN Cheikh Anta Diop - ifan.ucad.sn
Last updated: 2026-05-13
References
Related Guides
- Best Senegal Multi-Region Travel Destinations
- Best Senegalese Destinations: Dakar, Gorée Island (UNESCO 1978), Saint-Louis (UNESCO 2000), Pink Lake Retba, Djoudj Bird Sanctuary (UNESCO 1981), Bandia & the Deep West Africa Heritage Tour
- Best Traditional Senegalese Gorée Island and West African Heritage Tour Destinations
- Senegal Complete Guide 2026: Dakar, Gorée Island, Saint-Louis, Pink Lake & Sine-Saloum Delta
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