# Africa Safari Entry Requirements: Yellow-Fever Certificates & Visa-on-Arrival

> Kenya's eTA, Tanzania's $100 e-visa, South Africa's visa-free stamp, and the yellow-fever rule that catches multi-country travelers — everything a couple needs before an East or Southern Africa safari honeymoon.

*Published 2026-07-03 · By Daniel Okafor, ACC/CTC*

An East or Southern Africa safari honeymoon — the Maasai Mara, the Serengeti, Cape Town's Winelands, a Zanzibar beach coda — is among the most rewarding trips a couple can take, and also among the most logistically involved. Three separate countries can mean three separate entry systems, a fee structure that penalizes US passport holders in one country while waiving it in another, and a yellow-fever rule that hinges not on where you started but on where you have *been*. Get these details right in advance and the trip unfolds beautifully; get them wrong and you can be turned back at a border you did not expect to be a problem. Here is the full picture for 2026.

## Kenya: the eTA that replaced the visa

Kenya eliminated the traditional visa for all nationalities on January 1, 2024, replacing it with a mandatory **Electronic Travel Authorization (eTA)** applied for online before arrival. US citizens pay $30 per adult; children under 16 are free when added to a parent's application. Apply *only* through the official government portal at [etakenya.go.ke](https://etakenya.go.ke/) — the sole authorized platform, since numerous third-party sites charge a large markup for the identical free-to-file service. Standard processing runs 3–5 business days, though most approvals arrive within 24–72 hours; apply at least a week ahead, and two weeks during the peak December–February and July–August windows. Your passport must be valid six months from arrival with at least two blank pages. Couples planning repeat visits can buy a 5-year multi-entry eTA for $185.

## Tanzania: a separate, pricier e-visa

Here is a detail that surprises many couples: **Tanzania is not part of the East Africa Tourist Visa**, which covers only Kenya, Uganda, and Rwanda. So a honeymoon pairing a Kenya safari with the Serengeti or Zanzibar requires two entirely separate authorizations. US citizens pay $100 for a Tanzania single-entry e-visa — double the $50 most other nationalities pay — through the official immigration portal, and processing can take up to 10 business days, so apply at least three weeks out. Visa on arrival at Kilimanjaro and Julius Nyerere international airports is a fallback at the same $100 rate but can mean long queues. Passport validity: six months from departure, two blank pages. Note too that **every visitor to Zanzibar pays a mandatory $44-per-adult tourist-insurance fee**, separate from mainland entry and checked at immigration; arrive without it and you can be refused.

## South Africa: visa-free, but come prepared

South Africa is the simplest of the three: US citizens enter visa-free, receiving a complimentary Visitor's Visa stamp valid up to 90 days for tourism. What you should have ready at the port of entry is a return or onward ticket, proof of accommodation, and evidence of sufficient funds — roughly $1,500 equivalent, with bank statements or credit cards accepted. Your passport must be valid at least 30 days beyond departure with two blank visa pages, though immigration officers in practice look for six months. Entry points include OR Tambo International (Johannesburg), Cape Town International, and King Shaka International (Durban).

## The yellow-fever rule that catches multi-country couples

This is where the most consequential mistakes happen, because the rule depends on your *routing*, not your nationality. Kenya requires a yellow-fever certificate only for travelers arriving from or transiting through a yellow-fever-endemic country. Tanzania is stricter: anyone who has been in Kenya — or any other endemic zone — before entering Tanzania must present a valid **International Certificate of Vaccination**, the yellow card. That means a couple who flies directly from the US to Kenya may not need the certificate for Kenya, but the moment they continue to Tanzania, Kenya counts as a prior endemic-zone stay and the certificate becomes mandatory. South Africa similarly requires it for travelers coming from endemic zones.

On the medicine itself: both the [CDC's Travelers' Health program](https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/diseases/yellow-fever) and the [World Health Organization](https://www.who.int/health-topics/yellow-fever) confirm that a single dose of the yellow-fever vaccine provides lifetime protection — a certificate issued more than 10 days before travel is valid for life, so a shot from a previous trip still counts. The vaccine must be given at a certified yellow-fever vaccination center (a travel-health clinic), and the card must show the vaccine lot number and the administering center's stamp. From a functional, root-cause health perspective, the smartest move is to book a dedicated travel-medicine consultation six to eight weeks before departure: it lets a clinician review the live yellow-fever vaccine's timing and any individual contraindications, discuss malaria prophylaxis appropriate to your specific parks and season, and build immunity on a schedule rather than rushing a stack of shots days before you fly. Real medical advice from a qualified provider always governs — this article is orientation, not a prescription.
CountryEntry documentFee (US citizen)Apply how earlyYellow-fever certificate?KenyaeTA (online)$30 single / $185 5-yr1–2 weeksOnly if arriving from an endemic zoneTanzaniae-visa (or VOA)$100 + $44 Zanzibar insurance3 weeksRequired if you were in Kenya/endemic zone firstSouth AfricaVisa-free stamp on arrival$0N/AOnly if arriving from an endemic zone
**The trap to remember:** the yellow-fever certificate requirement follows your itinerary, not your passport. A direct US-to-Kenya flight may not trigger it — but the instant you continue on to Tanzania, your time in Kenya makes the yellow card mandatory. Sequence your vaccine (at least 10 days before travel) and your visa applications around your actual route, not around a single destination.

## Camera gear, drones, and final checks

Personal cameras for tourist use enter all three countries without declaration. Professional or high-value equipment is another matter: Kenya can require a security bond of 1% of value or KSh 30,000, and Tanzania mandates advance Film Board permits plus a temporary import bond, as the ATA Carnet is not accepted there. Drones are the strictest category of all — Tanzania requires clearance from the Film Board, Civil Aviation Authority, and Ministry of Defense secured before arrival, and unauthorized drones are routinely confiscated. Unless you hold permits in hand, leave the drone home. Finalize each country's authorization on its official government portal within a few weeks of departure, carry printed copies of your eTA, e-visa, and yellow card, and confirm your travel-health plan with a licensed provider. Handle those, and the only thing left to plan is which crossing of the Mara River you want to witness.

## Sources

1. [Kenya Electronic Travel Authorization Portal](https://etakenya.go.ke/)
2. [Yellow Fever — Travelers' Health](https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/diseases/yellow-fever)
3. [Yellow Fever](https://www.who.int/health-topics/yellow-fever)

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Source: https://eraaway.com/planning/africa-safari-entry-requirements-yellow-fever-visa
Index: https://eraaway.com/llms.txt · Full text: https://eraaway.com/llms-full.txt
