
The landmarks in every guidebook — and the tours that tell you what guidebooks don't.
Nouakchott was barely a village before 1957, when Mauritanian independence planners selected this coastal site as the location for a new national capital, to be built from scratch on flat sand between the Sahara Desert and the Atlantic Ocean. The name translates from the Berber as 'place of winds,' which anyone who spends a day here will confirm as accurate. The city was designed to house 15,000 people. Due to severe droughts in the 1970s and 1980s that pushed nomadic and semi-nomadic populations off the land and into the capital, Nouakchott now holds nearly a quarter of Mauritania's entire population, around 1.5 million people, a demographic transformation that happened within a single generation and that the city's infrastructure has never fully caught up with.
The visual culture of Nouakchott is that of a Saharan city doing commerce with the Atlantic: men in traditional Mauritanian daraa robes in blues, greys, and whites, women in melhafas of printed fabric wrapped with elaborate technique, camels occasionally visible in the outer neighborhoods where the desert begins at the city's eastern edge.
The Fifth District market near the central mosque is the commercial heart, with stalls of dates, dried fish from the fishing port, silver jewelry, and the tie-dyed fabric that Mauritanian craftswomen work with extraordinary skill. The Mauritanian tea ceremony, three rounds of strong sweet mint tea poured from height to create foam, is the essential social ritual and accompanies every meeting, negotiation, and friendship.

Before you walk.
The main commercial areas and central market districts are generally safe for daytime walking with standard urban awareness. Nouakchott is not a major tourist city so you will attract attention as a foreign visitor, which is generally friendly curiosity. Keep valuables secure in the busiest market areas and ask your accommodation for current local advice.
Taxis (yellow shared taxis called taxi-brousse) and private taxis are the main transport options. Rideshare apps have limited availability. The city's flat terrain makes walking practical for short distances in the center but the scale of the urban area means a taxi is necessary for crossing from one district to another.
Most nationalities require a visa to enter Mauritania. Visas on arrival are available at Nouakchott International Airport for many passport holders. Check current requirements for your nationality well before travel. The French and Arabic languages are used throughout the country, with Hassaniya Arabic as the dominant spoken language.
The fishermen's beach at Plage des Pecheurs in the late afternoon as the pirogues return is the most visually striking experience in the city. The Fifth District market for Mauritanian silver jewelry and fabric is the best shopping. The three-glass Mauritanian tea ceremony, if you are invited to participate in one, is the most culturally essential experience you will have in the country.
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4.8 across the App Store and Google Play. Here's a few we keep coming back to.
This tour was such a great way to see the city. The stories were interesting without feeling too scripted, and I loved being able to explore at my own pace.
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