Stratégie
US to Africa: Which Layover Cities Actually Earn the Stop
There is no direct flight from most US cities to most African cities. You're stopping somewhere. Ethiopian Airlines routes you through Addis Ababa. Qatar routes you through Doha. Emirates through Dubai. Turkish Airlines through Istanbul. The question isn't whether you connect. It's whether the city you land in is worth a day of your trip. We scored eight of the most common hubs on US to Africa routes. Here's what came out.
Addis Ababa ADD: LayoverScore™ 76
Ethiopian Airlines runs the most comprehensive Africa network on the planet. If you're flying from DC or Chicago to Nairobi, Johannesburg, Accra, or Lagos, you're probably going through Addis. The airport is 20 minutes from the city center by cab. Americans need a visa: $50 on arrival, $52 by e-visa (faster, apply at evisa.gov.et). Addis is where coffee was discovered. The traditional coffee ceremony takes 45 minutes and costs less than $5. Injera houses near Bole serve doro wat for $3-5. The city sits at 2,355 meters. Drink water. A 12-hour layover gives you 7 hours of city time after transit and buffer. That's enough.
Johannesburg JNB: LayoverScore™ 74
OR Tambo is the busiest airport in Africa and the primary hub for Southern Africa. Americans enter South Africa visa-free. The Apartheid Museum is 15 minutes from the terminal and is one of the most important exhibitions in the world. Plan 2 to 3 hours minimum. The Gautrain gets you to Sandton in 15 minutes for R200 ($11). From Sandton, Uber connects to the city. Soweto is 40 minutes away. Vilakazi Street (where both Nelson Mandela and Desmond Tutu once lived) is the center of the historic district. If you have 8 hours, the Apartheid Museum is the move. If you have 12, Soweto earns it.
Dubai DXB: LayoverScore™ 88
Emirates connects Dubai to every major city in Africa. DXB consistently scores among the highest on any long-haul route. The Metro Red Line runs from the airport to Union Station in 37 minutes. US, EU, and UK passports get free 48-hour transit visas. You can see the Burj Khalifa observation deck at sunset and walk through the Deira Spice Souk in the same afternoon. Dubai is not an African city. That might feel like a mismatch on a US to Africa trip. It doesn't matter. The score is the score, and the logistics are among the easiest of any hub on this list.
Istanbul IST: LayoverScore™ 82
Turkish Airlines has one of the largest Africa networks of any non-African carrier. IST connects to 60-plus African cities. The airport is 45 minutes from the city on the Havaist shuttle. Americans need an e-visa (about $50, evisa.gov.tr, takes minutes). Sultanahmet (the Blue Mosque, Hagia Sophia, the Basilica Cistern) is all within walking distance of each other. A 10-hour layover gets you all three and a proper meal. Istanbul is one of the few hub cities that rewards the stop regardless of where you're going. The e-visa cost is the only friction. It's not meaningful friction.
Doha DOH: LayoverScore™ 69
Qatar Airways connects Doha to more African cities than almost any carrier outside the continent. The terminal is extraordinary: there is a basketball court, a 60-meter swimming pool, and a spa airside. For a 6-hour layover, Hamad International Airport is one of the best places in the world to not leave. The city itself is accessible: 30 minutes from the terminal, no visa required for Americans. But Doha in a short window is malls and high-rises. The Pearl neighborhood is walkable. It doesn't match the Istanbul or Addis cultural proposition. The score reflects a strong airport attached to a city that requires more than a layover to understand.
Casablanca CMN: LayoverScore™ 71
Royal Air Maroc positions CMN as the gateway to North and West Africa. Americans enter Morocco visa-free. The Train Al Haouz runs from the airport to the city center in 45 minutes for $4.50. The Hassan II Mosque is one of the largest in the world and stands on a promontory over the Atlantic. Non-Muslims can tour it for $15. Casablanca is not Marrakech (that's the point). It's a working port city with Art Deco French colonial architecture and seafood that earns a detour. If your final destination is West or North Africa, stopping here isn't a diversion. It's the beginning of the cultural context.
Nairobi NBO: LayoverScore™ 72
Kenya Airways connects Nairobi to East and Central Africa. Americans need a visa: the East Africa Tourist Visa ($100) covers Kenya, Uganda, and Rwanda. Apply online at evisa.go.ke before you leave. The visa line on arrival can take 90 minutes. Skip it. With the e-visa, you clear in 15 minutes and take a Bolt (the African Uber equivalent) to Giraffe Centre. The African Fund for Endangered Wildlife runs a Rothschild's giraffe breeding program 20 minutes from the airport. For $10, you feed them from a raised platform at eye level. Nairobi National Park sits inside city limits. You can watch lions with the Nairobi skyline behind them. The minimum layover to do any of this is 12 hours with a pre-arranged e-visa.
Amsterdam AMS: LayoverScore™ 65
KLM connects Amsterdam to a significant number of African cities, particularly in West and Central Africa. AMS is 17 minutes from Amsterdam Centraal by train. The Rijksmuseum has Vermeer and Rembrandt in one building. Americans enter Schengen visa-free. The layover experience is excellent. The issue with AMS as a US to Africa connection is structural: you're traveling east to go south. Amsterdam is a good layover city on almost any route. On a US to Africa itinerary, it adds distance and time in the wrong direction. If your destination is West Africa (Lagos, Accra, Dakar) and KLM has the best connection, it's worth it. If you have options, the African hub connections score better.
How the scores work
LayoverScore™ runs from 0 to 100 and weighs four things: how easy it is to exit the airport (transit time, cost), visa access for US passport holders, what there is to do in your layover window, and how stressful the return to the terminal will be. Cities above 75 reward the connection. Cities below 65 require a specific reason to leave. The Africa routing decision has one extra variable that South America doesn't: your final destination matters more. If you're going to Nairobi, connecting through Addis is culturally coherent. If you're going to Johannesburg, Dubai or Doha might save you money and time on the map. Check the score. Check the routing. The best layover is the one that lines up with where you're actually going.