South Africa
Traveling to · South Africa
Weather right now
9°C
Sun
20° / 9°
Mon
21° / 10°
Tue
21° / 10°
Wed
22° / 10°
Country facts
Capital
Pretoria
Language
en · en
Currency
ZAR R
Emergency
10111 police 10177 medical 112 all
Tipping
10-15% at restaurants is standard; 5-10 R for parking attendants; petrol-pump attendants 5 R.
Plug & power
Type M/D/N · 230V · 50Hz
When to visit
Year-round travel possible. Local dry seasons vary — check specific destination 2-4 weeks before booking.
JanFebMarAprMayJunJulAugSepOctNovDec
high season
low season
Typical costs (USD)
Hotel · budget
$30-60
per night
Hotel · midrange
$80-160
per night
Meal
$5-18
restaurant, typical
Transit
$1-5
single trip
Wide spread by country. Resort destinations premium; off-track exceptional value.
Essential phrases
Hello
Thank you
Please
Excuse me
Sorry
Where is the toilet?
How much?
Help!
The bill please
I don't understand
Water
Coffee
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
0
0
Zero
1
1
One
2
2
Two
3
3
Three
4
4
Four
5
5
Five
6
6
Six
7
7
Seven
8
8
Eight
9
9
Nine
10
10
Ten
20
20
Twenty
50
50
Fifty
100
100
Hundred
1000
1000
Thousand
What to pack
- Lightweight breathable clothing
- Strong SPF + sun hat
- Mosquito repellent
- Walking shoes for variable terrain
- Layered clothing for AC indoors
Cultural notes
- 11 official languages — English is the working lingua franca; locals often speak 2-4
- Don't take pictures of children without permission, especially in townships
- Don't walk alone at night in cities — use Uber/Bolt instead
- Greet with handshakes; warm 'Howzit' is universal slang
- Tap water is safe in major cities — check in rural areas
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.