The first time you land in Nairobi at night, you're struck by the same thing: the lights. Lights everywhere, a city overflowing its perimeter toward the horizon, with that same concentrated energy of every emerging capital that knows it's becoming something. Then the next morning, forty minutes' drive away, Nairobi National Park — the only national park in the world inside a capital city's boundaries — with giraffes silhouetted against the skyline. East Africa is like that: it plays on two timelines simultaneously, the ultra-modern and the ancestral, and it does it better than anywhere else in the world.
This part covers destinations that have nothing in common with each other — a Rwanda that looks like Singapore's African counterpart, a Zanzibar that smells of vanilla and spice, a Namibia almost empty under a starlit sky with zero light pollution, a South Africa with its painful contradictions. What they share: they all offer something exceptional for the expat who knows why they're going.
Moving to Nairobi in 2026: East Africa's Silicon Valley
You have to understand what Nairobi actually is for a developer, entrepreneur or tech nomad in 2026. This is not a picturesque African city with a colourful market and running-water issues. It's a city of 5 million people with a startup and venture capital scene that draws investors from San Francisco, London and Dubai. Safaricom — the Kenyan operator — invented M-Pesa, the world's most-used mobile payment system, before the West had even understood what that meant. Kenyans skipped the chequebook and bank card stage and went straight to mobile payments in the early 2000s. That technological head start isn't anecdotal — it says something about a country's mindset.
Westlands, Nairobi's main commercial neighbourhood, looks like any international capital's business district: glass towers, restaurants from every world cuisine, ultra-modern coworkings, supermarkets stocked with imported goods. Java House (the ubiquitous Kenyan coffee chain) serves excellent coffee for $2.50 with reliable Wi-Fi. Galito's does grilled chicken for $5. And in the evenings, the Aloft Hotel rooftop gives you the Nairobi skyline with a cocktail for $8.
Monday morning: Zoom meeting from your Kilimani apartment — $850/month, 100 Mbps fibre included. Lunch: ugali (maize polenta) and nyama choma (grilled meat) at the local restaurant for $4. Wednesday: coworking at iHub — the incubator that launched dozens of major African startups — $80/month, hot desk. Thursday evening: tech networking afterwork at Nairobi Garage, local Tusker beer at $1.80. Saturday: day safari at Nairobi National Park, 7km from the CBD, for $60 all-in — giraffes, zebras, rhinos, with the city skyline behind them. Sunday: Maasai Market for crafts. Full week budget excluding rent: ~$180.
Quality of life — the essentials and the nuances
Nairobi is a city of two faces that you have to accept from day one. The face you experience depends on where you live. Karen (the upmarket neighbourhood in the southwest — yes, that Karen Blixen's farm), Westlands, Kilimani, Lavington and Runda are secure, residential neighbourhoods with tree-lined streets, decent restaurants and clean markets. The expat community there is large and active. Children can grow up well there, with quality international schools accessible.
Outside those zones, the reality is different. Nairobi has a significant crime rate — bag-snatching, carjackings and break-ins exist and aren't isolated incidents. That's not a reason not to go. It's a reason to go prepared: windows up at night, no phone on display in the street, vigilance on public transport. Expats who've lived in Nairobi for years have all internalised these rules as second nature and live perfectly well. Those who arrive unprepared or with casual European habits can have unpleasant surprises.
Kenya is also one of the most spectacular destinations on the continent for weekends. From Nairobi, you're 5 hours from the Masai Mara (Africa's most famous safari), 6 hours from Diani Beach (white-sand beaches on the Indian Ocean), 3 hours from Lake Nakuru (thousands of flamingos). Living in Kenya means living in a country where your weekend can look like a BBC Natural History documentary.
Tax & crypto in Kenya
Kenya is a fascinating and unstable case. Nairobi hosts an active crypto scene — local exchanges, trader communities, regular blockchain conferences. The government attempted to introduce a 3% crypto transaction tax in 2023, then suspended it under pressure. In 2026, no stable, definitive legal framework exists. In practice, many traders operate without determined tax liability — but that's a legal grey area, not a guaranteed exemption. Legislative change can come quickly. Validation from a Kenyan accountant recommended before any tax-based structuring.
Visa & residency
Kenya launched an online eVisa available to most nationalities — issued in 48–72 hours for $51, valid 90 days, renewable in-country. For longer-term residency, Kenya offers several routes: the Class G Permit (investors and entrepreneurs), the Class K Permit (retirement or foreign-income residents), or a work permit for employees. Administrative timelines are real (2–4 months) and a Kenyan immigration lawyer is recommended for long-term applications. Conditions subject to change — verify with Kenya's Department of Immigration Services.
One of East Africa's strongest destinations for tech, nomad, entrepreneur and employed expat profiles. Nairobi's cost of living ($1,200–$1,800/month for standard comfort) remains lower than most comparable African capitals. The city has a unique energy. Weekend safaris or Indian Ocean beaches are unrivalled. Crime requires adaptation — not avoidance. Overall expat score: 7.5 / 10.
Moving to Rwanda: living in Kigali, the African miracle nobody explains properly
There's something unsettling about arriving in Kigali for the first time. The streets are clean — genuinely clean, not "clean for Africa", clean like Zurich or Tokyo. No plastic bags on the ground (banned since 2008 — the world's strictest law on single-use plastics). Moto-taxi riders wear helmets and so do their passengers. Government officials reply to emails. Construction projects meet their deadlines. A Western visitor who arrives with preconceptions about Africa has to revise them entirely — not at the margins, in depth.
Kigali is living proof that total reconstruction is possible. In 1994, the genocide against the Tutsi killed 800,000 people in 100 days — one of the fastest and most devastating tragedies in modern history. In 2026, Kigali is a city of 1.5 million with infrastructure that many European capitals would envy: roads in good condition, modern hospitals, universal running water, reliable electricity, high-speed internet. The Ibrahim Index of African Governance, which measures governance quality across all 54 African countries every year, regularly places Rwanda among the continent's best-managed countries. This isn't propaganda — it's measurable, verified, and experienced daily by the tens of thousands of expats who live there.
7am: morning run through Kigali's hills — the city is built on hills and the early morning walks with views over the misty sleeping city are breath-taking. 8:30am: breakfast at Question Coffee café, a Rwandan coffee cooperative roasting on-site — $2.50 for coffee grown 10km away. 10am–5pm: remote work from your apartment or the Hive Collaborative coworking — $70/month. Lunch: isombe (cassava leaves, beans, plantain) at a local restaurant for $3. 6pm: drinks on the Repub Lounge terrace in Kimihurura, views over the surrounding hills, local Primus beer at $1.50. Weekend: gorilla trekking in Volcanoes National Park, 2.5 hours' drive — $1,500 for the permit, but an experience nothing else on earth replicates.
Quality of life — what nobody tells you
Rwandan coffee, according to several independent rankings, is among the world's finest. The volcanoes in the country's north, on the DRC-Uganda border, produce high-altitude arabicas of a flavour complexity that the best baristas in Vienna or Melbourne pay top dollar to import. Living in Rwanda means drinking that coffee every morning for $2 in the city where it was grown a few hours' drive away.
Rwandan cuisine doesn't have the international reputation of Moroccan or Ethiopian food, but it's solid, healthy and affordable. Isombe, brochettes, mizuzu (fried plantain), beans — food that respects local produce and costs almost nothing. International restaurants have multiplied in Kigali in recent years — Japanese, Lebanese, Indian, Ethiopian — at reasonable prices and decent quality.
The nature around Kigali is extraordinary. Lake Kivu, 2.5 hours away, is one of the most beautiful lakes in the Great Lakes region — beaches, fishing villages, tea-covered hills. Volcanoes National Park is home to mountain gorillas — a critically endangered species of which only a few hundred remain on earth, observable from 5 metres in their natural habitat. Akagera Park is the only place on earth where you can see the Big Five within an hour's drive of the capital.
The other side — to be named clearly
Rwanda has been governed by Paul Kagame since 1994 in a regime that combines remarkable administrative efficiency with tight political control. Freedom of expression is very limited: independent press is virtually absent, political opposition is monitored and sometimes imprisoned, and genocide memory is managed by the state in a way that tolerates no nuance. For a foreign expat who has come to work and live without local political activity, the daily impact is minimal — many expats describe Kigali as the most pleasant African city to live in precisely because everything works. But it would be dishonest not to name this context, and everyone must assess their own ethical position regarding residency in this country.
The African destination that most positively surprises those who have never been. Kigali works, is safe, clean, green and efficient. The coffee is exceptional, the surrounding nature spectacular, the cost of living reasonable. The shadow of the political context is real and cannot be ignored — but for many profiles, Kigali is the most liveable city in sub-Saharan Africa. Overall expat score: 7.8 / 10.
Digital nomad in Zanzibar and living in Tanzania: where Africa smells of spice
Stone Town, Zanzibar's old city, is a medieval Arab city built on a tropical island off the East African coast. The alleyways are so narrow two people can barely pass each other. The carved wooden doors — some centuries old, studded with brass nails and Islamic motifs — are a form of art in their own right that museums worldwide have tried to copy. In the evenings, the smell of spices (cloves, cinnamon, vanilla, cardamom — Zanzibar was the spice island that supplied the entire world in the 19th century) mingles with the smell of grilled seafood at Forodhani Gardens, the waterfront street market where dozens of vendors cook fresh fish, grilled octopus and meat skewers for $2–$4 a portion.
Zanzibar is one of Africa's most compelling destinations for an expat who wants an island, history, culture and stunning natural beauty without paying Mauritius or Seychelles prices. The beaches of Nungwi (north) and Paje (east, for kitesurfing) are among the finest in the Indian Ocean. The water is warm year-round. The marine life around the island is among the richest in the region.
Apartment in Stone Town, 5 minutes' walk from Forodhani Gardens: $550/month. Morning: coffee and chapati at Darajani market for $1. Day's remote work with a view over the Arab medina alleyways — decent fibre, $45/month. Lunch: grilled fish and pilau rice by the harbour for $5. Thursday: spice tour — a half-day in the clove and vanilla plantations, hands still smelling of spice two days later, for $15. Friday: drive to Paje, kitesurfing or snorkelling in the lagoon for the night. Sunday: visit Prison Island and its century-old giant tortoises — $10. Zanzibar is one of those destinations where every day feels like a mini travel documentary.
Dar es Salaam: the serious urban alternative
If Zanzibar is the dream island, Dar es Salaam is Tanzania's major city for those who want a serious urban life. Sub-Saharan Africa's fourth most populous city, Dar is a commercial and regional hub with adequate infrastructure for professional expats. Less romantic than Zanzibar, less tech-focused than Nairobi, but with its own strengths: active diplomatic and NGO community, strategic commercial port, easy access to Kilimanjaro (Africa's highest peak, 5 hours by road) and the Serengeti.
Arusha is the reference city for expats who want decent urban life combined with immediate access to the world's most celebrated safaris: the Serengeti, the Ngorongoro Crater, Kilimanjaro National Park. Several hundred expats — safari guides, tourism entrepreneurs, NGO workers — are settled there very comfortably for $900–$1,400/month.
Zanzibar is one of Africa's finest island destinations for a nomad or retiree who wants beauty, history and a reasonable budget. Dar es Salaam and Arusha are solid for professional profiles. Access to the world's greatest natural parks is the region's incomparable bonus. Overall expat score: 7.2 / 10.
Madagascar: the radical budget option for those who accept the conditions
Madagascar is a continent-island apart — 87% of its animal and plant species are endemic, making it one of the five most important biodiversity hotspots on the planet. The lemurs, baobabs, giant chameleons, primary forests that exist nowhere else — Madagascar is what the whole world looked like before humans started modifying everything. For someone who comes to live there on foreign-currency income, it's also the cheapest destination in this entire series.
But the conditions have to be stated honestly. Madagascar is one of the world's poorest countries — 75% of the population lives below the poverty line according to World Bank criteria. Road infrastructure would make your GPS useless on many routes. Specialist medical access barely exists outside Antananarivo. Internet is slow and expensive by African standards. The power grid is unstable in many regions. This is not a destination for a remote worker who needs technical reliability or someone who wants an active international social life.
It is a destination for someone who wants incomparable natural beauty, a budget of $500–$700/month that buys a house, a housekeeper, a quiet life and permanent exploration of a unique natural world. The adventurous retiree, divers (the island's reefs are among the least explored and best-preserved in the Indian Ocean), writers and artists seeking creative isolation — Madagascar has a precise meaning for these profiles.
For a very specific profile: adventurous retiree, naturalist, diver, artist seeking isolation. Unbeatable budget, incomparable nature, simple quiet life. For any other profile: too many technical and medical constraints. Overall expat score: 5.0 / 10 (general) — 7.5 / 10 (targeted profile).
Living in South Africa: the great ambivalence
Cape Town is one of the most beautiful cities in the world. That's not an opinion — it's an international consensus. Table Mountain, which overlooks the city from a sandstone plateau at 1,086 metres, is listed among the Seven New Wonders of Nature. The beaches of Camps Bay and Clifton — with their pink granite boulders, cold Atlantic water (the Benguela current) and mountain backdrop — have no equivalent in Africa. The Stellenbosch wine route, 50 minutes' drive away, produces some of the finest wines in the Southern Hemisphere. The Cape Peninsula is home to a uniquely endemic floral biodiversity (the Fynbos — vegetation that exists only in this region). And an apartment with Table Mountain views in Green Point costs $900–$1,400/month.
Then there's the other side. South Africa has one of the world's highest violent crime rates. This is not journalistic exaggeration — it's documented, statistically verified, and felt daily by residents across all profiles. Carjackings, muggings and break-ins are everyday realities in many zones. The response from most expats: alarm-system housing with guards, cars with fast electric windows, constant vigilance in public spaces, and familiarity with the no-go zones. It's an adaptation many consider acceptable given the overall quality of life. Others find it too psychologically costly. Both positions are legitimate.
Apartment in Green Point, partial Table Mountain view: $950/month. Monday morning: coworking at Workshop17 V&A Waterfront, dedicated desk $140/month, with views over the harbour and Robben Island in the distance. Wednesday: hike up Table Mountain — 2 hours up, 360-degree plateau views over the Cape Peninsula, free except for the cable car ($18 return). Thursday: lunch at the Old Biscuit Mill market in Woodstock, one of the continent's best food markets — $12–$18. Saturday: Stellenbosch wine route, tastings at 3 estates for $8–$15 per estate, with cabernet sauvignons that rival Bordeaux. Saturday evening: home before dark, avoid quiet streets, lock the doors. That's Cape Town — extraordinary and vigilant simultaneously.
Johannesburg: the misunderstood business city
Johannesburg isn't beautiful. It's not a city you visit for looks — it's a city you live in for the energy, the business, the most dynamic contemporary African culture on the continent. The Sandton, Rosebank and Melville neighbourhoods are safe and lively, with a food, art and music scene that holds its own against Cape Town. Sub-Saharan Africa's most important contemporary art market is in Johannesburg. Most multinationals' African headquarters are in Johannesburg. For an employed expat or entrepreneur, Joburg is often more relevant than Cape Town — even if less spectacular.
South Africa offers one of Africa's finest qualities of life for those who accept and adapt to its security context. Cape Town is an extraordinary city. The wines, food, nature, medical infrastructure — all world-class. Permanent security vigilance is the one real constraint, and it is real. Overall expat score: 7.0 / 10 — but 8.5 / 10 for those who adapt well.
Living in Namibia in 2026: retirement and nomadism in the rough diamond
Namibia is the world's second least densely populated country — after Mongolia. 2.7 million inhabitants over an area nearly twice the size of France. That emptiness isn't a lack — it's a resource. Sand dunes 300 metres high in the Namib Desert (the world's oldest desert, 55 million years old). Starlit skies with zero light pollution for hundreds of kilometres. Straight roads that disappear to the horizon across a lunar landscape. Etosha National Park, one of Africa's finest wildlife parks, with herds of elephants, lions and rhinos gathering at waterholes at night.
Windhoek, the capital, is one of the safest and cleanest cities in sub-Saharan Africa. It sometimes resembles a small German city transplanted to southern Africa — which is not a coincidence: Namibia was a German colony (Deutsch-Südwestafrika) until 1915, and the architectural and cultural influence is still very much present. Breweries produce Pilsner to 1901 recipes. Bakeries sell Schwarzwälderkirschtorte. And just next door, the Penduka craft market sells embroideries, sculptures and Himba jewellery of a craftsmanship you won't find anywhere else.
Friday 4pm: drive from Windhoek to Swakopmund, 3.5 hours on the B2 — dead-straight road across the central plateau, desert gradually closing in, air drying out. Swakopmund: a German colonial coastal city on the Atlantic, cold fog from the Benguela current, Wilhelmine architecture in pastel colours. Seafront apartment for the weekend: $80/night. Saturday morning: sandboarding down the Namib dunes — the same dunes that advance 10 metres per year and will slowly engulf the town over the coming centuries. Saturday evening: seafood restaurant (the cold Atlantic waters off Namibia are among the world's richest) — lobster, langoustine, fresh hake for $25. Sunday: drive back via Walvis Bay, flamingos in the lagoon, fur seals on the rocks. Windhoek–Swakopmund–Windhoek: $60 in fuel.
Crypto taxes in Namibia
Namibia has not adopted specific legislation on crypto assets. In the absence of a legal framework, crypto capital gains are not explicitly taxed for an individual resident — but this is a legal void, not a guaranteed exemption. The Bank of Namibia has issued risk warnings on crypto assets without banning them. Future regulation is possible. Do not base a residency decision solely on this legal void without consulting a Namibian tax adviser.
The most underrated African destination in this series. Exceptional safety, nature among the most spectacular in the world, quiet orderly life, reasonable cost. Ideal for retirees, outdoors lovers and profiles who want a peaceful life without administrative complexity. A car is essential — but it's to go see science-fiction landscapes. Overall expat score: 7.5 / 10.
Living in Botswana: the quiet stability
Botswana is the African story the world doesn't talk about enough. In 1966, one of the poorest countries on earth — no reliable drinking water, no paved roads, no visible resources. In 2026, one of the most stable, best-governed and most prosperous countries in sub-Saharan Africa, thanks to exemplary management of its diamond reserves since the 1970s — a development lesson that economists still cite as a model.
Gaborone, the capital, is a clean, safe and well-organised city, but without the romantic charm of Cape Town or the energy of Nairobi. It resembles a well-maintained administrative city — functional, pleasant, without rough edges. What surrounds it, however, is exceptional: the Okavango Delta, one of Africa's Seven Natural Wonders — an inland delta that forms each year in the middle of the Kalahari Desert, creating an explosion of plant and animal life of improbable fertility. The Chobe elephants, the world's largest elephant concentration. The San rock paintings, created by the region's first inhabitants tens of thousands of years ago.
Africa's most institutionally stable destination. Ideal for family, affluent retiree or employed expat profiles who want a quiet, safe, well-governed life with access to some of Africa's greatest natural spaces. Less dynamic than Nairobi or Kigali for nomad-tech profiles. Overall expat score: 7.0 / 10.
Why we're waiting on Ethiopia
Ethiopia would deserve its own complete analysis in another series — it's one of Africa's most fascinating countries, with 3,000 years of history, a unique cuisine (injera, berbere, lamb stews), a culture that was never colonised and a capital, Addis Ababa, that hosts the African Union headquarters. But in 2026, caution is required.
The conflict in the Tigray region (2020–2022) officially ended with the Pretoria Agreement in November 2022, but humanitarian and security aftershocks persist in several northern regions. Tensions remain active in Oromia and Amhara. The US State Department and European governments maintain travel warnings for several parts of the country. Addis Ababa itself is relatively stable, but the national context justifies deferring permanent settlement until the situation is more clearly stabilised. We'll revisit it — Ethiopia is too interesting not to deserve a serious analysis when conditions allow.