Self-Drive Namibia with Etosha: What to Know Before You Go
A self-drive Namibia trip centred on Etosha is one of Africa’s most rewarding independent travel experiences. The roads are manageable, the wildlife is exceptional, and the logistics — while demanding — are achievable with the right preparation. Here’s what you actually need to know.
Is Self-Drive Namibia Right for You?
Question
If Yes → Self-drive works
Are you comfortable driving on the left?
Yes — Namibia drives on the left (British system)
Can you navigate with GPS and a paper map?
Yes — mobile data is unreliable; offline maps essential
Are you comfortable with gravel roads?
Yes — most main routes are gravel; sealed in key corridors
Can you handle basic vehicle problems (flat tyre)?
Highly recommended — remote breakdowns happen
Are you willing to plan ahead (bookings, fuel, food)?
Essential — Namibia rewards planning
Vehicle Choice
For Etosha Main Camps (Dry Season)
Standard 2WD sedan: works on all main park roads in dry season
SUV/crossover: more comfortable and versatile without added 4×4 cost
Not required: 4×4 for the standard Okaukuejo–Halali–Namutoni route in dry season
For Western Concession (Dolomite) or Wet Season
4×4 recommended for Dolomite access roads year-round
4×4 required for some routes in wet season when roads become slippery
Campervan
4×4 campervans combine vehicle + accommodation — popular for Namibia circuits
Cost: NAD 2,500–4,000 per day; more expensive but eliminates lodge bookings in many destinations
Etosha camps have camping pitches — campervans are fully viable inside Etosha
Road Conditions
Road Type
Quality
Speed
Found On
Tarmac (B and C roads)
Generally good
100–120 km/h
B1, B2 (main routes)
Gravel (D roads and park roads)
Variable — can be corrugated
80 km/h max; 60 in park
Most rural routes
Sand tracks
Soft; requires technique
40–60 km/h
Desert areas, Kalahari
Etosha park roads
Gravel; well-maintained
60 km/h max
All internal park roads
Key Self-Drive Rules for Namibia
Drive on the left — not negotiable and easy to forget after long drives
Never drive at night in rural areas — livestock and animals on the road are a serious hazard
Give way to livestock on all roads
Fill fuel whenever you see a petrol station — distances between stations can be 200+ km
Carry extra water: minimum 10 litres per person for any drive in remote areas
Speed limits: 120 km/h tarmac, 80 km/h gravel, 60 km/h Etosha park
Essential Practical Preparations
International driving licence (required alongside home country licence)
Offline maps downloaded before arrival (Maps.me or OsmAnd)
All accommodation confirmed and printed
NAD cash: ATMs in Windhoek, Outjo, Tsumeb, Swakopmund — withdraw before remote areas
Roadside kit: spare tyre (confirm on pickup), tow rope, basic tools, torch
Travel insurance with vehicle cover and medical evacuation
The Classic Namibia Self-Drive Route (Etosha-Centred)