Lebanon
Traveling to · Lebanon
Weather right now
18°C
Sun
22° / 18°
Mon
22° / 17°
Tue
22° / 18°
Wed
22° / 19°
Country facts
Capital
Beirut
Language
ar · ar
Currency
LBP ل.ل
Emergency
112 police 175 fire 140 medical
Tipping
10-15% at restaurants if not included; small tips for porters.
Plug & power
Type A/B/C/D/G · 230V · 50Hz
When to visit
November–March: pleasant 20-28°C. Avoid June–September — 45°C+ daytime makes outdoor travel dangerous.
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
high season
low season
Typical costs (USD)
Hotel · budget
$40-100
per night
Hotel · midrange
$120-280
per night
Meal
$8-25
restaurant, typical
Transit
$2-6
single trip
Gulf states pricey (Dubai-tier). North Africa significantly cheaper.
Essential phrases
Hello
مرحبًا
Thank you
شكرًا لك
Please
لو سمحت
Excuse me
اعذرني
Sorry
آسف
Where is the bathroom?
أين الحمام؟
How much?
كم ثمن؟
Help!
يساعد!
I don't understand
لا أفهم
Coffee
قهوة
Water
ماء
Tea
شاي
Translate any phrase →
Open the full translation grid — your phrase will appear in 65 languages with audio and a cross-check verdict on each card.
Numbers
٠
0
صفر
Zero
١
1
واحد
One
٢
2
اثنين
Two
٣
3
ثلاثة
Three
٤
4
أربعة
Four
٥
5
خمسة
Five
٦
6
ستة
Six
٧
7
سبعة
Seven
٨
8
ثمانية
Eight
٩
9
تسعة
Nine
١٠
10
عشرة
Ten
٢٠
20
عشرين
Twenty
٥٠
50
خمسون
Fifty
١٠٠
100
مائة
Hundred
١٠٠٠
1000
ألف
Thousand
What to pack
- Long lightweight breathable clothing (sun protection)
- Wide-brim hat + sunglasses + SPF 50+
- Modest dress code — covered shoulders + knees minimum
- Reusable water bottle (large)
- Comfortable closed shoes (sand + heat)
- Light layers for air-conditioned interiors
- Lip balm + moisturizer (very dry air)
Cultural notes
- French + English widely spoken alongside Arabic
- Severe economic crisis — bring USD cash, dollar-priced often
- Hezbollah-controlled areas exist — check travel advisories
- Dress code varies — Beirut beachfront is liberal, south + east more conservative
- Tipping helps people directly given the currency collapse
Universal courtesies
Apply everywhere, every country — respect travels with you.
- Try a greeting in the local language even if it's the only word you know — it's appreciated everywhere.
- Match local dress norms when entering religious sites, government buildings, or rural areas.
- Ask before photographing people, especially children or in religious settings.
- Tipping customs vary — never assume your home country's expectation applies.
- Remove shoes when entering homes if your host does; watch their cue.
- Keep voices lower than at home in temples, mosques, museums, public transport.
- Hands and gestures mean different things across cultures — observe before reaching out.
- Cash + cards: rural areas often need cash; major cities take cards. Carry small notes.
- Don't compare countries to each other in front of locals — every culture stands on its own.
- If you don't know the etiquette, watching for 30 seconds usually teaches it.