Dakar has a particular quality of light in the late afternoon. The Atlantic sun beats on the pastel-facade houses of the peninsula, the pirogue fishermen return with their catch into Soumbédioune bay, and the mosque call-to-prayers layer over the radio playing mbalax from a neighbourhood restaurant. That's the hour when expats finish their working day, close their laptops and go out — to the Corniche Ouest, to the Médina terraces, to the beaches of Almadies. West Africa has something the other zones don't: a raw, immediate human warmth that takes hold of you in the first hours and never really lets go.
This final part covers West Africa's three major francophone and anglophone destinations, then answers the question this series has been building toward: concretely, which Africa for which profile? With the rankings, budgets and recommendations the previous parts have prepared.
Living in Senegal: West Africa's francophone gateway
Senegal is the African country that comes up most often when francophone expats look for a West African base. Not by chance. Dakar combines things that are hard to find simultaneously: notable political stability (Senegal has never experienced a coup since independence in 1960 — a rarity in West Africa), a French-speaking population with a relatively high education level, an Atlantic coastline with beaches accessible twenty minutes from the city centre, and a cultural and artistic scene among the continent's most vibrant.
The Almadies neighbourhood, at the westernmost point of the African continent — literally the furthest west point in Africa — is the heart of Dakar's expat community. Villas with pools, French restaurants, fine food shops, international schools, gyms. And five minutes' walk away, the Atlantic Ocean, surfers catching the waves at N'Gor, coconut sellers on the beach, and grilled fish restaurants serving thiéboudiène — the national dish, fish and rice, one of Africa's great cuisines.
6:30am: jog along the Corniche Ouest, the coastal road that follows the Atlantic for 8km, sun rising over the island of Gorée offshore. 9am: coworking at CTIC Dakar, West Africa's reference tech incubator — $80/month, decent fibre. Noon: thiéboudiène at a neighbourhood restaurant for $4, the best dish at that price in francophone Africa. 3pm: video call with a London client — zero time zone difference in winter, 1 hour in summer. 6:30pm: kitesurfing or surfing at N'Gor, 10 minutes by taxi, one of West Africa's best breaks. Dinner: terrace restaurant for $15–$22, grilled fish, bissap (hibiscus juice) or local Flag Beer.
Day-to-day quality of life
Dakar is an intense, colourful city, sometimes chaotic in its rush-hour traffic (the traffic jams are legendary), but never oppressive. Senegalese people have a quality of human contact that every expat agrees on — a hospitality rooted in the cultural value of "teranga" (hospitality in Wolof), which isn't a tourism buzzword but a real practice visible at every level of society. The market vendor who hands you a mango to taste, the neighbour who invites you to share a meal, the taxi driver who takes a detour to show you Léopold Sédar Senghor's house — that's Dakar.
Senegalese cuisine is one of the richest in West Africa. Beyond thiéboudiène, there's yassa poulet (chicken marinated in lemon and caramelised onions), mafé (peanut and meat stew), caldou (tangy fish dish). Dakar's markets overflow with fresh Atlantic fish, tropical fruit and spices. Casamance, the southern region separated by Gambia, is a destination in itself for weekends: mangrove forests, near-deserted beaches, Portuguese colonial architecture in Ziguinchor.
Saint-Louis, the former capital of French West Africa, 3 hours from Dakar, is a UNESCO island-city with unique Franco-African architecture — colonial buildings in bright colours, wrought-iron balconies, fishermen casting their pirogues from the Langue de Barbarie beach. Several expats have made Saint-Louis their permanent base, drawn by its calm and history.
Visa & residency
EU nationals enter Senegal visa-free for 90 days. Long-term residency requires a residence card from the Ministry of the Interior, accessible on proof of address, income and activity. The process is documented but slow (2–4 months). Senegal has no official nomad visa at this date, but tolerance toward long stays is genuine. Conditions subject to change — verify with the Senegalese embassy before settling.
One of Africa's most versatile destinations: good for nomads (GMT time zone, adequate infrastructure), excellent for the francophone retiree (social security agreement, French culture everywhere, beaches), solid for the employed expat (francophone West Africa business hub). Senegalese teranga is real and makes a daily difference. Overall expat score: 7.5 / 10.
Living in Ghana: West Africa's anglophone hub
Ghana launched the "Year of Return" movement in 2019 — an official government invitation to the African-American diaspora to return to the continent 400 years after the start of the transatlantic slave trade. American celebrities responded publicly. Thousands of African-Americans made the journey, and a portion settled. The result: Accra today is one of Africa's most diverse international destinations — diaspora Ghanaians "returning", Americans, Europeans, and increasingly nomads who are discovering that Accra is nothing like the underdeveloped country they imagined.
Accra in 2026 is a city in permanent construction — in the good sense. Entire neighbourhoods are transforming: Cantonments and East Legon are residential areas with hotels, fusion cuisine restaurants, cocktail bars and ultra-modern gyms. The Osu neighbourhood is Ghana's equivalent of London's Shoreditch — street art, independent cafés, local designer boutiques. Oxford Street in Accra (which looks nothing like the London original — it's a lively boulevard full of restaurants, bars and street vendors) is one of West Africa's most animated streets in the evenings.
Friday evening: dinner at La Chaumière or Buka, modern West African cuisine restaurants in Accra — $18–$30 per person. Saturday: drive to Cape Coast, 2.5 hours. Cape Coast Castle, the departure point for millions of enslaved people to the Americas, is UNESCO listed. The visit is moving, silent, necessary — $15 entry. Elmina beach in the afternoon, turquoise water, pirogue fishermen, children playing in the waves — free. Night at a Cape Coast guesthouse: $35–$60. Sunday: Kumasi craft market (3 hours' drive), kente cloth — the traditional Ashanti hand-woven fabric, worn by kings and today by everyone — bought directly from the weavers for $15–$60 depending on quality.
Quality of life — what surprises you
Ghana surprises on several fronts. First, the food: Ghanaian jollof rice (rice cooked in a spiced tomato sauce) is a national pride — and the subject of a legendary social media rivalry with Nigeria, each country claiming the superior version. Kelewele (spiced fried plantain), fufu (cassava and plantain paste eaten with soup), waakye (rice and beans cooked together) — a robust, generous cuisine that genuinely fills you up. Then the music: the Afrobeats the whole world has embraced in recent years has its roots in Ghana and Nigeria, and Accra is one of the cities where this scene is alive daily — concerts, clubs, producers.
Ghana's stability is also a strong argument. The country has had regular peaceful transfers of power since the end of the Rawlings era in 2001, and is considered one of West Africa's most solid democracies — an institutional context that its neighbours (Nigeria, Ivory Coast, Guinea) can't all claim in the same way.
A solid destination for an anglophone profile seeking a West African base with institutional stability, rich cultural life and a diverse international community. The connection with the African-American diaspora creates an atmosphere of a city in motion that attracts increasing numbers of creative and entrepreneurial profiles. Overall expat score: 7.2 / 10.
Living in Abidjan: the economic capital of francophone West Africa
Abidjan isn't Ivory Coast's official capital — that's Yamoussoukro, the birthplace of Félix Houphouët-Boigny, home to the Basilica of Our Lady of Peace, the largest Christian church in the world. But nobody really cares: Abidjan is the real capital, economic, cultural, diplomatic — a megacity of 6 million inhabitants built on a lagoon, with bridges connecting its neighbourhoods like a city on water. It's home to most major French companies in West Africa, the African Development Bank, and a creative scene (coupé-décalé music, African fashion, contemporary art) that radiates across the whole continent.
The Cocody neighbourhood — and more specifically the Riviera — is the expat community's heart. Embassies, secured residences, shopping centres, French restaurants, AEFE French schools. That's where most expat executives from major French companies (TotalEnergies, Bolloré, Orange, Société Générale), NGOs and international institutions live. The standard of living in these areas is high — and so is the budget.
Tuesday morning: business meeting in Plateau (Abidjan's CBD), a glass tower neighbourhood perched on the Ébrié lagoon. Lagoon views from the 15th-floor meeting room. 1pm: attiéké poisson (fermented cassava semolina, the staple of Ivorian food) at a neighbourhood maquis — $3.50. Ivory Coast produces 40% of the world's cocoa, and the chocolate is exceptional — artisan bar at $2 from the market. 7pm: afterwork on the Radisson Blu Plateau terrace, cocktail with a view of the Abidjan skyline and illuminated lagoon — $9. Weekend: Grand-Bassam, the former colonial capital, UNESCO listed, 40 minutes by road — golden sand beaches on the Atlantic, 19th-century Franco-African architecture, grilled fish restaurants.
What you need to know before going
Ivory Coast went through two major political crises (1999–2003 and 2010–2011) that left deep marks on the country. The situation has stabilised since, and Abidjan has seen real economic growth since 2012 — growth was among Africa's highest for several consecutive years. But the political context remains worth watching: elections are often tense moments, and national reconciliation remains incomplete according to independent observers.
For a professional expat in the private sector or an NGO, Abidjan is an excellent destination — well-equipped, well-connected (a major West African air hub), with all the services needed for an intense professional life. For an independent nomad seeking quiet and budget optimisation, other destinations in this series are better suited.
Abidjan is the unmissable economic capital of francophone West Africa — for employed expats and business profiles, it's a top-tier destination. For independent nomads or budget retirees, other countries in this series offer better value. The political context deserves monitoring. Overall expat score: 6.5 / 10 (general) — 8.0 / 10 (business employee profile).
Which Africa for which profile?
The series' definitive rankings, country by country, profile by profile.
The final word — after 18 countries
This series has covered 18 countries, 4 profiles, hundreds of figures, dozens of angles. The opening question was simple: is it possible to live in Africa? The answer, after all this, is more nuanced than "yes" or "no" — it's "it depends on what you're looking for, and here is precisely what you'll find in each place."
What is certain: Africa in 2026 is not the Africa travel guides painted ten years ago. Kigali works. Nairobi innovates. Dakar welcomes. Mauritius exempts. Zanzibar enchants. Namibia liberates. This continent is vast, heterogeneous, often misunderstood — and that's precisely why it remains one of the last great expatriation opportunities for those who take the time to really understand it.
The rankings and budgets in this series are compasses, not contracts. Conditions change, exchange rates move, visas evolve. What doesn't change: Africa rewards those who arrive with curiosity and preparation rather than preconceptions and improvisation.