Dar es Salaam — Tanzania’s largest city and primary commercial port on the Indian Ocean — is East Africa’s most underrated city for the tourist visitor. Most travellers experience Dar as a transit point between the international airport and either Zanzibar (45-minute flight) or Arusha (7-hour drive north), spending at most one night before moving on. Those who take 2–3 days in Dar discover a genuinely interesting Indian Ocean city: the Kariakoo Market (one of East Africa’s largest and most chaotic), the Kivukoni Fish Market (where Indian Ocean fish arrives fresh from dawn fishing boats each morning), the Msasani Peninsula (Dar’s most attractive waterfront neighbourhood with good restaurants and the dhow harbour), and the city’s extraordinary cultural layering of Swahili, Arab, Indian, German colonial, British colonial, and post-independence African architectural and cultural influences. This guide covers Dar es Salaam for 2025.

Kariakoo Market

Kariakoo Market (in the Kariakoo district, 3 km southwest of the city centre) is the largest market in Tanzania and one of the most intensely alive commercial spaces in East Africa — a 40+ acre complex of permanent stalls, informal traders, and wholesale warehouses selling everything from fresh produce (the produce section has the most diverse fruit and vegetable range in Tanzania, including tropical species not commonly found elsewhere: jackfruit, baobab fruit, tamarind pods) to second-hand clothing, electronics, traditional medicines, and the extraordinary Kariakoo fabric section (colourful kangas and kitenges — the printed cotton fabrics that are Tanzania’s most identifiable textile tradition — sold by the piece and by the bolt at prices far below tourist market pricing). The market atmosphere: dense, loud, fast-moving, with motorcycle taxi (boda-boda) drivers threading through the aisles at constant speed. Going early (07:00–09:00): the most active, the freshest produce, the best light for photography (overcast morning light through the market roof — bring a camera with good low-light performance).

Kivukoni Fish Market

The Kivukoni Fish Market (on the harbour front, 2 km east of the city centre) is Dar es Salaam’s most viscerally atmospheric place — the Indian Ocean’s morning catch arriving by wooden fishing boat from 05:00 onward, the fish laid out on concrete slabs for the wholesale buyers, the gulls and pelicans working the harbour margins, and the smell (an honest declaration of the market’s purpose). The fish on sale: yellowfin tuna (the most common large pelagic species in the Dar offshore catch), kingfish (wahoo — excellent eating), red snapper, grouper, barracuda, and the Indian Ocean’s extraordinary diversity of reef fish. Buying directly from the market (you negotiate price with individual fishermen for their catch, then take it to one of the adjacent restaurants who will cook it for a small fee — approximately TSh 2,000 per kilogram cooking fee) is one of Dar’s most authentic culinary experiences.

Msasani Peninsula

The Msasani Peninsula (4 km north of the city centre, Dar’s upmarket residential and restaurant district) is where expat Dar es Salaam and wealthy Tanzanian residents spend their leisure time — the peninsula’s waterfront, with dhow harbour views and Indian Ocean breezes, has Dar’s highest concentration of good restaurants, cafes, and bars. The Slipway complex (a converted boat slip facility on the peninsula harbour front) has 20+ restaurants and craft shops at a standard comparable to Nairobi’s upmarket districts. Best Dar restaurants: Sapana Village (USD $15–25 per person, consistently excellent Swahili coastal cuisine — biryani, coconut fish, and octopus curry), Atis (USD $20–35 per person, the Msasani Peninsula’s best seafood restaurant), and Addis in Dar (Kijitonyama area, USD $10–20 per person, the finest Ethiopian restaurant in Tanzania — injera, tibs, and doro wat).

Practical Information 2025

  • Airport: Julius Nyerere International Airport, 13 km from city centre — taxi approximately USD $25–30, ride-share app Bolt approximately USD $8–12
  • Safety: Dar es Salaam is generally safer than Kampala or Nairobi for tourist visitors — street crime exists but is less prevalent than in other East Africa capitals. Standard urban caution applies: don’t display expensive equipment, use metered taxis or Bolt rather than street taxis at night
  • Accommodation: Southern Sun Dar es Salaam (USD $150–200/night, the business-class standard); Hyatt Regency Dar es Salaam (USD $250–350/night, the top business hotel with Indian Ocean views); Sea Cliff Hotel (USD $100–150/night, Msasani Peninsula, the best positioned mid-range hotel)

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