Erongo, Namibia

State guide with cities, regions, and key information.

Introduction
Erongo is the central-Namibian region that holds the country's Atlantic coast — Swakopmund and Walvis Bay — together with the granite massifs of Spitzkoppe and Brandberg and the southern apron of the Skeleton Coast. The region is named for the Erongo mountain, a 35-million-year-old volcanic caldera that rises to 2 320 m and dominates the inland plateau between the coast and Damaraland. For the visitor, Erongo is the country's single most-densely-itinerised region: a self-drive route from Windhoek to the Atlantic will spend most of its days here, between the dune coast, the inselberg landscapes, and the gravel passes that connect them. The region covers 64 000 km² along the Atlantic, from the Kuiseb riverbed north of Sossusvlei (its southern boundary, shared with Hardap) up to the Hoanib river and the southern edge of the Skeleton Coast Park (its northern boundary, shared with Kunene). Inland, Erongo runs east as far as Karibib and Usakos on the B2 highway, and includes the granite uplands south of the Brandberg. The regional capital is Swakopmund.

Discover Erongo

Swakopmund is the region's centre and Namibia's principal coastal town. Founded in 1892 as the German South-West African port — a counterweight to British-controlled Walvis Bay 31 km south — the town retains an unusually dense Wilhelmine architectural layer: the Woermann House (1894), the Old District Court (Altes Amtsgericht, 1908), the Hohenzollernhaus (1906), the Marine Memorial (1908), the small Lutheran church (1911), and the 1903 sandstone lighthouse, all set on a thin strip of beach against the immediate edge of the Namib. The Mole — the original 1899 stone breakwater that silted closed within a decade — survives as the town's small lagoon and beach pool; the Jetty (a 2006 rebuild of the original 1905 landing pier) extends 262 metres into the Atlantic and hosts the Jetty 1905 fine-dining restaurant at its end. The Swakopmund Brewery in the Strand Hotel complex brews seven beers on-site; Café Anton on Bismarck Strasse and Käpps & Konditorei opposite are the town's Wilhelmine-era coffeehouse and bakery. Most coastal Namibia itineraries spend two or three nights in Swakopmund as the natural pause-and-recovery between the inland safari leg and the southern desert leg.

Travel Types

Swakopmund — Wilhelmine Coast & Adventure Base

Half-timbered architecture, Café Anton, the Swakopmund Brewery, sandboarding, dune quad-biking, skydiving over the Namib and the Sandwich Harbour 4x4 day trip — the country's coastal-adventure capital.

Walvis Bay — Lagoon Flamingos & Sea Kayaking

Lagoon flamingo flocks from October to April, kayaking with bottlenose dolphins and Cape fur seals at Pelican Point, sunset catamaran cruises, Bird Paradise sewage lagoon, and Walvis Bay Airport as the regional commercial gateway.

Spitzkoppe — Granite Inselberg & Community Camping

1 728-metre granite massif west of Usakos with the community-conservancy campsite among the boulders, the Pondok hike, the Bushman's Paradise rock art and the orange sunset light on the granite.

Brandberg & White Lady

Namibia's highest peak (Königstein 2 573 m), the White Lady rock painting at Tsisab Gorge with a mandatory Damara guide, the Maack Shelter rock-art panels and the Brandberg's microclimate endemics.

Cape Cross & Skeleton Coast

Cape Cross Cape fur seal colony (100 000+ animals), the 1486 Portuguese padrão of Diogo Cão, the Zeila shipwreck south of Henties Bay, the Ugab Gate entry to the Skeleton Coast Park and Terrace Bay as the southernmost stay.

Welwitschia Drive & the Living Desert

The 130-km Namib-Naukluft loop east of Swakopmund through the Moon Landscape and the Welwitschia stands; four-hour Living Desert tours into the dunes for sidewinder snakes, Namaqua chameleons and fog-basking beetles.

Erongo — Practical Travel Notes
  • The region's coastal climate is unique within Namibia — Swakopmund and Walvis Bay stay between 15 and 22 °C all year, with fog rolling in at night. December and January are the only reliably warm coastal months. Pack a fleece even in summer for the coast.
  • The inland Erongo (Usakos, Karibib, Spitzkoppe, Brandberg) is the opposite — hot, dry summer afternoons (often 35–40 °C in January) and cold winter nights below freezing in June and July. The same itinerary day can cover both microclimates.
  • Walvis Bay International Airport (WVB) is the region's commercial airport, closer to most Erongo destinations than Hosea Kutako (Windhoek). FlyNamibia operates domestic services to Windhoek Eros and to the safari destinations. International long-haul still routes through Hosea Kutako; the four-hour B2 drive from Windhoek is the standard arrival route.
  • Spitzkoppe is community-managed by the !Oe-#Gâb Conservancy — entry fees go directly to the local Damara community. Drone use is not permitted without conservancy approval. The conservancy campsite books up months ahead for high season (June–August and December).
  • The White Lady at Brandberg requires a registered Damara guide (mandatory, included in the entry fee). The four-hour return walk from the entrance gate is over uneven rock; carry water and wear closed shoes. The Maack Shelter higher in the gorge needs a longer guided walk.
  • Cape Cross seal colony is best visited mid-morning or late afternoon; the colony's smell at midday in summer is overwhelming, and many travellers spend less than 20 minutes on the boardwalk. The seal-pup peak is in November and December.
  • The Skeleton Coast Park requires a permit (sold at the Ugab Gate). Travel above Möwe Bay is fly-in only with the licensed lodge operators. The southern park section between Swakopmund and Terrace Bay is driveable in two-wheel-drive on the salt road, but a high-clearance vehicle is recommended for the gravel sections.
  • The Welwitschia Drive in the Namib-Naukluft requires a permit (sold at the Namib-Naukluft office in Swakopmund or the Namib-i visitor centre). The drive is on gravel, 130 km loop, half-day or full-day depending on stops. Bring water and lunch — there is no service en route except the Goanikontes Oasis.
  • Mobile coverage on the B2 corridor and in Swakopmund/Walvis Bay is reliable; on the C34 north to Cape Cross and on the gravel inland C-roads to Spitzkoppe and Brandberg, coverage is patchy to absent. Carry printed copies of bookings and emergency contacts for the inland legs.
  • The Erongo region operates in English, with German very widely spoken in Swakopmund and Walvis Bay reflecting the regional Wilhelmine heritage. Afrikaans is widely understood. Damara/Nama and Oshiwambo are heard in the rural communities and the Mondesa township of Swakopmund.
  • Card payment including contactless is universal in Swakopmund and Walvis Bay; small craft stalls, the Spitzkoppe conservancy, Cape Cross gate and some inland fuel stations take cash only. ATMs in Swakopmund (Sam Nujoma Avenue, Bismarck Strasse, Platz am Meer mall), Walvis Bay (12th Road), Usakos and Karibib.
  • The Erongo region overlaps geologically and culturally with the Damaraland portion of the Kunene region to the north — visitors planning a Damaraland leg (Twyfelfontein, desert elephants, Palmwag) typically combine it with the Erongo highlights in a single inland-coastal loop.
Cities in Erongo

1 city with detailed travel information