The best hotels in Juba
Juba has more than 8,000 accommodation options and almost no reliable way to sort the decent ones from the disasters. We reviewed the standouts. these 16 made the cut.
Our Top Picks in Juba
Click any hotel to check availability and book at the best price.
Sleep Inn Hotel Juba
Konyokonyo, Juba
Free cancellation & Pay later
Oasis Hotel Juba
Hai Referendum, Juba
Free cancellation & Pay later
Gondokoro Guest House
Gondokoro Island, Juba
Free cancellation & Pay later
Radisson Blu Hotel Juba
Kololo, Juba
Free cancellation & Pay later
Acacia Village Hotel
Tong Ping, Juba
Free cancellation & Pay later
All Hotels Compared
Side-by-side comparison to help you pick the right hotel. Prices reflect shoulder season averages.
| # | Hotel | City & Area | Price/Night | Score | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sahara Hotel Juba | Munuki, Juba | $55–80/night | 6.2/10 | Budget Pick |
| 2 | Bedouin Camp Juba | Jebel, Juba | $45–75/night | 6.8/10 | Budget Pick |
| 3 | Logali House | Hai Malakal, Juba | $75–110/night | 7.1/10 | Best Value |
| 4 | Hotel Terrain Juba | Tong Ping, Juba | $110–160/night | 7.8/10 | Most Popular |
| 5 | Anaa Hotel | Gudele, Juba | $100–145/night | 7.2/10 | Hidden Gem |
| 6 | Juba Bridge Hotel | Malakia, Juba | $120–170/night | 7.4/10 | Best Location |
| 7 | Sahara Hotel | Munuki, Juba | $110–160/night | 7.4/10 | Most Popular |
| 8 | Eden Hotel Juba | Gudele, Juba | $130–180/night | 7.6/10 | Hidden Gem |
| 9 | Sleep Inn Hotel Juba | Konyokonyo, Juba | $120–175/night | 7.6/10 | Business Pick |
| 10 | Bedouin Hotel Juba | Jebel, Juba | $150–200/night | 7.5/10 | Business Pick |
| 11 | Oasis Hotel Juba | Hai Referendum, Juba | $160–215/night | 8/10 | Top Rated |
| 12 | Crown Hotel Juba | Hai Malakal, Juba | $160–210/night | 7.9/10 | Most Popular |
| 13 | Gondokoro Guest House | Gondokoro Island, Juba | $180–230/night | 8.1/10 | Romantic Stay |
| 14 | White Nile Hotel | Nyakuron, Juba | $180–230/night | 7.9/10 | Romantic Stay |
| 15 | Radisson Blu Hotel Juba | Kololo, Juba | $260–340/night | 8.6/10 | Luxury Pick |
| 16 | Acacia Village Hotel | Tong Ping, Juba | $280–380/night | 8.8/10 | Top Rated |
Why These Hotels Made Our List
Every hotel earned its spot. Here's exactly why we picked each one.
Sahara Hotel Juba
This is one of the more affordable options in Juba and it shows in the basics. The hotel sits in the Munuki residential area, away from the central business district noise. Rooms are simple with air conditioning and functional bathrooms, which is what matters most in this heat. Staff are friendly and the on-site canteen serves local food at reasonable prices. Do not expect much beyond a clean bed and a working fan.
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Bedouin Camp Juba
A basic but functional option for budget travelers in Juba's Jebel area, not far from the main road toward the airport. Rooms are simple tented structures with shared bathroom facilities and ceiling fans. The staff is friendly and the compound feels reasonably secure with a guarded gate. Meals are available on request and the food is filling if not particularly varied. Not for those expecting comfort, but it does the job for short stays.
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Logali House
Logali House is a genuinely decent budget pick in a city where decent is hard to find at this price. Located in Hai Malakal, it is close to several NGO offices and embassies making it popular with aid workers on tighter per diems. The rooms are basic but clean, and the compound feels secure. The communal area has reliable Wi-Fi which is a real selling point in Juba. Breakfast is included and filling enough to start the day properly.
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Hotel Terrain Juba
Hotel Terrain is one of the most established names in Juba and sits in the Tong Ping area near the UN compound. It caters heavily to humanitarian workers, journalists and contractors who make up most of Juba's long-term visitor base. The rooms are solid and the outdoor restaurant and bar are genuinely lively in the evenings. Security is taken seriously here and the compound has reliable power backup. Expect to pay for extras but the base rate gets you a lot in Juba context.
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Anaa Hotel
The Anaa Hotel is located in the Gudele residential area, a bit removed from the central business district but easy to reach by taxi. Rooms are clean with consistent air conditioning and hot water, which cannot be taken for granted in Juba. The restaurant serves a mix of local and international dishes and is popular with neighborhood regulars. The compound has secure parking and a generator that kicks in reliably during power cuts. A solid and underrated choice for mid-range travelers.
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Juba Bridge Hotel
The Juba Bridge Hotel sits in Malakia close to the Juba Bridge crossing over the White Nile, giving it one of the more memorable settings in town. The river views from certain rooms are genuinely impressive and worth requesting at check-in. Rooms are mid-range standard with consistent air conditioning and hot water. The restaurant on site focuses on grilled meats and does it reasonably well. It gets busy with local business travelers midweek so book ahead.
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Sahara Hotel
The Sahara Hotel in Munuki is one of the more established mid-range options in Juba and stays consistently busy with long-term contractors and aid workers. Rooms are well maintained with satellite television and reliable Wi-Fi. The hotel restaurant is open for three meals daily and the menu covers both grilled meats and lighter fare. Security is taken seriously with perimeter fencing and 24-hour guards. The location in Munuki puts you near several embassies and international organization offices.
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Eden Hotel Juba
Eden Hotel is tucked into the Gudele neighborhood and sees far less foot traffic than the more central options. The compound is spacious and relatively green by Juba standards, with a small outdoor seating area that works well in the evenings. Rooms are clean, well-maintained and offer better value than similarly priced competitors closer to the city center. The kitchen turns out a decent mix of Ethiopian and South Sudanese dishes. A solid choice if you have your own transport or a regular driver.
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Sleep Inn Hotel Juba
Sleep Inn Hotel is positioned near the busy Konyokonyo market area, giving it good access to central Juba without being right in the thick of the market crowds. The rooms are tidier than the price would suggest, with proper beds, air conditioning, and en-suite bathrooms. Conference facilities are available and regularly used by NGOs for training sessions. Breakfast is included in most rates and is a decent spread of eggs, bread, and fruit. Staff responsiveness is one of the stronger points of this property.
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Bedouin Hotel Juba
Bedouin Hotel is located in the Jebel area on the eastern side of Juba and is popular with business travelers working in that corridor. The rooms are consistently good with proper blackout curtains and stable air conditioning, both critical in Juba's climate. There is a small conference facility that works well for small meetings and presentations. The staff are professional and the front desk team speaks English well. Internet can be patchy during peak hours but generator backup is reliable.
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Oasis Hotel Juba
Oasis Hotel consistently earns better reviews than most of its competitors in Juba and the Hai Referendum location keeps it close to government offices and several international organizations. The rooms are among the better-maintained in this price range with proper mattresses and functioning hot water throughout the day. The outdoor restaurant area is pleasant in the early evenings before it gets too humid. Security lighting and perimeter control are good. It is one of the few mid-range hotels in Juba that feels like it is actually trying to improve.
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Crown Hotel Juba
Crown Hotel is a well-regarded property in the Hai Malakal neighborhood and draws a regular clientele of business travelers and senior NGO staff. The rooms are spacious compared to competitors in this price range, with proper work desks and strong Wi-Fi connectivity. The hotel pool is a significant draw during Juba's intense dry season heat. The restaurant operates to a good standard and the bar is one of the more relaxed social spots in the area. Booking in advance is advised as it fills up quickly.
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Gondokoro Guest House
Gondokoro Guest House occupies a quieter setting near the river and benefits from the relative calm of the Gondokoro Island area on the outskirts of Juba. The property is small and well-maintained, with individually decorated rooms that show more care than the typical Juba guesthouse. The outdoor terrace overlooking the Nile is the standout feature and is excellent at sunrise and sunset. Food quality here is noticeably better than most competitors, with fresh ingredients sourced locally. It is a good choice for those who prioritize atmosphere over proximity to the city center.
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White Nile Hotel
White Nile Hotel sits near the Nyakuron Cultural Centre and offers some of the better Nile-facing views available at this price tier. The rooms facing the river are worth the slight premium and the outdoor terrace is the main reason people return. It draws a mix of government guests, visiting diplomats and the occasional tourist, which gives it a slightly more cosmopolitan feel than most Juba hotels. Food quality is above average and the bar stocks a decent range. Request an upper floor room for both the view and reduced street noise.
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Radisson Blu Hotel Juba
The Radisson Blu is the clearest international standard hotel in Juba and sits in the Kololo area with good access to the central business district. Rooms are modern, well-equipped and feel genuinely comparable to Radisson properties elsewhere on the continent. The pool is a serious draw and the restaurant delivers consistent quality across its menu. Security infrastructure is comprehensive with full backup power and controlled access. For anyone on a corporate or diplomatic expense account this is the obvious first choice in Juba.
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Acacia Village Hotel
Acacia Village is widely considered the best overall hotel experience currently operating in Juba. Located in Tong Ping near the UN House compound, it is the go-to address for senior UN officials, embassy staff and executives visiting on international assignments. The cottages and suites are spacious and tastefully finished, and the grounds are well-kept with mature trees providing genuine shade. The restaurant is the best in Juba by most accounts, with a kitchen that maintains quality consistently. Full generator and water backup means none of the infrastructure headaches common elsewhere in the city.
Check AvailabilityWhere to Stay in Juba
The neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel.
First time in Juba? Here's what you need to know before you book
Juba is not a typical tourist city. Most visitors are here for work: NGO missions, diplomatic postings, journalism, or business. That shapes the hotel market completely. The best hotels, like Acacia Village and Hotel Terrain in Tong Ping, are optimised for international professionals, not leisure travellers. That's not a problem. it means reliable infrastructure, good security, and actual service standards.
Location matters more here than in most cities because traffic and road conditions can double your travel time. A hotel that's '15 minutes from your office' on a dry January morning might be 45 minutes away in October rain. Tong Ping and Kololo are the two areas where infrastructure is consistently good. If someone offers you a deal somewhere else, check the road access first. We've seen this mistake hundreds of times.
Tong Ping vs Kololo: which side of Juba should you base yourself?
Tong Ping Road is where the operational heart of international Juba sits. Hotel Terrain, Acacia Village, and most of the major UN and NGO offices are within a 10-minute radius of each other. If your work pulls you to those offices daily, staying anywhere else adds unnecessary friction. Kololo is quieter, more residential, and home to the Radisson Blu. It suits diplomats and senior staff who want calm over convenience.
Budget-wise, Tong Ping runs $110-380/night depending on the hotel. Kololo starts at $260/night with the Radisson. The 15-minute drive between them sounds minor until you're making it twice a day in peak traffic. Pick your base around your primary daily destination and don't overthink it.
How to get around Juba without a car
You really need a car in Juba. That said, boda-bodas (motorcycle taxis) are everywhere and cover short distances for $1-3. They're faster than cars in traffic but come with obvious risk. wear the helmet if the driver offers one. Tuk-tuks operate in areas like Konyo Konyo and Malakia. For anything beyond 20 minutes, negotiate a car with a trusted driver: $20-40 for a half-day is the going rate for a reliable English-speaking driver.
Uber and Bolt don't operate in Juba. Ask your hotel to connect you with a vetted driver. Hotel Terrain and Acacia Village both keep a short list of reliable contacts. The Juba Bridge connecting Malakia to the east bank is the main crossing point; factor in 20-30 minutes of traffic during morning rush between 7-9am.
Budget travel in Juba: what $45-100/night actually gets you
Bedouin Camp Juba in Jebel is the budget floor on this list at $45-75/night, and it's legitimate. You get a clean room, generator backup, and a location near Jebel Kujur that's calmer than anything near central Juba. Sahara Hotel Juba in Munuki is the alternative at $55-80/night, more convenient for reaching the city centre in around 25 minutes by boda-boda. Neither has a pool. Both have the basics covered.
The honest trade-off at this price point is transport costs. You'll spend $5-15/day getting to meetings, which narrows the gap with mid-range hotels in better locations. Run the numbers before assuming the cheapest room is actually the cheapest stay.
Staying on the Nile: Juba's river hotels explained
Three hotels on this list offer genuine White Nile proximity. Juba Bridge Hotel in Malakia is the most accessible: 5 minutes walk from the bridge, upper floor rooms with river views, and rates at $120-170/night that are competitive for what you get. White Nile Hotel in Nyakuron sits on the bank itself, with a terrace that's the best place in the city to watch the sun set over the water. Gondokoro Guest House on Gondokoro Island goes furthest: you arrive by boat from the Malakia riverbank, 8 minutes across.
The Nile-front options are worth it for longer stays or if atmosphere matters to you. For short work trips, the extra logistics of the Gondokoro Island crossing may not justify it. But if you have a free evening, the White Nile Hotel terrace on a Sunday is something you won't forget about Juba.
Wet season vs dry season: when to book and what to pay
December through February is peak season in Juba. Roads are dry, the airport runs smoothly, and hotel rates are at their highest. Acacia Village hits $380/night, even Bedouin Camp pushes its upper rate. Book 3-4 weeks ahead minimum for anything in Tong Ping or Kololo during this window. March to May sees temperatures climb to 38-40°C before the rains, and rates soften slightly.
June through October is wet season. Konyo Konyo floods, the road to Gudele turns rough, and travel times across the city increase sharply. But rates drop 15-25% across the board, availability opens up, and the city is quieter. If your work is based indoors and you have a reliable car, wet season is genuinely good value. Just don't book anything near a low-lying area without asking the hotel directly about flooding.
Juba's best neighborhoods
Tong Ping and Kololo are where you want to be: good roads, reliable power, and the city's best hotels within a short drive of each other. If you're here for work, Hai Malakal is a solid second choice. Avoid Konyo Konyo after dark regardless of where you're staying.
Tong Ping 2 vetted hotels Juba's operational core: where the best hotels and the biggest organisations all end up.
Juba's operational core: where the best hotels and the biggest organisations all end up.
Tong Ping Road is the spine of international Juba. UN agencies, major NGOs, and the city's two best hotels. Hotel Terrain and Acacia Village. all cluster within a few minutes of each other here. If you have meetings in this part of the city, staying anywhere else is a daily tax on your time.
Hotel Terrain at $110-160/night is the workhorse: reliable, well-connected, with a bar that functions as Juba's informal coordination hub. Acacia Village at $280-380/night is the premium option, with the best compound, best pool, and highest service standard in the city. Both book out fast when major operations or conferences hit town.
Roads here are better maintained than most of Juba, and power supply to the compound generators is relatively consistent. You're 12-15 minutes from the airport on Airport Road. It's not quiet. generators run through the night at many of the compounds. but it's functional in a way that matters.
Kololo & Hai Referendum 2 vetted hotels Juba's quietest upscale zone: diplomatic residential, calm, and worth the premium.
Juba's quietest upscale zone: diplomatic residential, calm, and worth the premium.
Kololo is where Juba's diplomatic community lives and meets. It's residential, green by local standards, and noticeably calmer than anywhere near the city centre. The Radisson Blu here is the most internationally recognisable hotel in South Sudan, and it operates accordingly: room quality, food, and infrastructure are the most consistent you'll find in Juba.
Hai Referendum sits adjacent and is home to Oasis Hotel, rated the second-highest on this list at 8.0. The neighbourhood is quiet, the hotel compound is well-managed, and you're 12 minutes from the airport. Rates run $160-215/night at Oasis, significantly below Radisson prices but with a similar residential calm.
The trade-off for both is distance from Tong Ping: plan on 15-20 minutes by car to the main NGO cluster. During peak morning traffic that stretches. Both hotels run transfers, and having a reliable driver is the standard assumption at this price level.
Hai Malakal & Nyakuron 3 vetted hotels Nile-adjacent, atmospheric, and the best middle ground between price and character.
Nile-adjacent, atmospheric, and the best middle ground between price and character.
Hai Malakal is where Juba's NGO and creative crowd overlaps. Logali House has built a genuine reputation here at $75-110/night. it's the most characterful hotel at the budget-to-mid range, and the outdoor area draws a crowd that makes evening downtime actually enjoyable. Crown Hotel at $160-210/night is the area's upscale anchor, reliable and well-appointed without reaching for Radisson prices.
Nyakuron borders Hai Malakal and is home to the White Nile Hotel, one of the best riverside stays in the city. The Nyakuron Cultural Centre is 5 minutes walk. worth a visit if you have a free afternoon. This area is calmer than Malakia but still connected to the city's main routes.
Pricing across Hai Malakal runs $75-230/night depending on the hotel, which makes it the most range-flexible area on this list. You're 15 minutes from Juba International Airport, and the roads here hold up reasonably well even in the wet season. Good choice for longer stays.
Malakia & Gondokoro Island 2 vetted hotels The most atmospheric corners of Juba: riverside, busy, and genuinely different.
The most atmospheric corners of Juba: riverside, busy, and genuinely different.
Malakia is a working neighbourhood along the Nile, busy and unfiltered in a way that Tong Ping definitely isn't. Juba Bridge Hotel sits here, 5 minutes walk from the bridge itself, and the upper floor river views are the best you'll get from a city-side hotel. Rates at $120-170/night are fair for the location, and the area's energy is part of the appeal if you're not on a tight schedule.
Gondokoro Island is a different thing entirely. You take a boat from the Malakia riverbank. 8 minutes. and the city noise drops away almost immediately. Gondokoro Guest House at $180-230/night is small, personal, and the most peaceful place to stay in Juba. That peace comes with logistics: coordinate boat times, especially if you have an early morning departure.
Both options suit travellers who want something beyond the compound-and-generator Juba experience. Not ideal for back-to-back meeting days, but excellent for a weekend or a longer stay where atmosphere matters.
Gudele & Jebel 4 vetted hotels Where value lives in Juba. further out, but honest about what you're paying for.
Where value lives in Juba. further out, but honest about what you're paying for.
Gudele and Jebel are residential areas that most short-stay visitors skip. That's their advantage: lower prices, less noise, and a more local feel than the NGO-saturated zones around Tong Ping. Budget travellers staying at Bedouin Camp Juba in Jebel at $45-75/night or Anaa Hotel in Gudele at $100-145/night are making a sensible trade: save on rooms, spend on transport.
Eden Hotel in Gudele ($130-180/night) and Bedouin Hotel in Jebel ($150-200/night) step up the quality significantly without stepping into the Tong Ping price bracket. Both have solid compounds, functioning amenities, and staff that take service seriously. Jebel Kujur is 10 minutes from Bedouin Hotel on foot. the morning views over Juba make it worth setting an early alarm.
The honest downside is distance. Gudele is 20-25 minutes by car to Tong Ping in normal traffic. Jebel is 30-35 minutes. That adds up across a week-long stay. Plan your itinerary before committing, and make sure your driver is sorted before you land.
Best Areas by Vibe
Tell us how you travel and we'll point you to the right part of Juba.
Romantic Escape
Gondokoro Island is the only place in Juba where the city actually disappears. The 8-minute boat crossing from Malakia sets the tone. quiet water, no traffic, and a guest house that genuinely earns the peace it promises.
Culture & History
Nyakuron is where Juba's cultural life surfaces. The Nyakuron Cultural Centre is 5 minutes from White Nile Hotel, and the neighbourhood connects you to the river history and local arts scene that the compound hotels in Tong Ping deliberately insulate you from.
Family Stay
Hai Referendum's residential calm makes it the most sensible base for families. Oasis Hotel has one of the city's cleaner pools, secure grounds, and enough space to not feel cooped up. important when you're keeping kids entertained in a city with limited public attractions.
Budget Travel
Jebel delivers the best budget-to-quality ratio in Juba. Bedouin Camp starts at $45/night, Jebel Kujur is walkable, and the neighbourhood is calmer than anything near Konyo Konyo market. which matters a lot at 6am.
Waterfront
Malakia gives you the White Nile at your doorstep without the boat logistics of Gondokoro Island. Juba Bridge Hotel's upper floor rooms sit directly above the river, and the bridge views at dusk are worth booking a corner room specifically for.
Business & Foodie
Tong Ping Road is where Juba's best impromptu meals and working dinners happen. Hotel Terrain's bar draws everyone from UN coordinators to journalists, and Acacia Village's restaurant is the most reliable dinner option in the city. no advance guessing required.
Location Quality
Is the neighborhood walkable? Are restaurants, shops, and attractions within 10 minutes on foot? How does it feel after dark? We evaluate safety, public transport access, and whether the area has genuine local character or just tourist traps. A hotel in the wrong neighborhood ruins a trip. That's why location carries the most weight.
Value for Money
We compare what you pay against what you get. A €150 hotel with a great location, clean rooms, and helpful staff can outscore a €500 hotel with fancy amenities in a bad area. We factor in seasonal pricing, cancellation policies, and hidden costs like tourist tax and breakfast surcharges. The goal is finding the best ratio, not the lowest price.
Guest Experience
We analyze thousands of verified guest reviews across multiple platforms, looking for patterns rather than individual complaints. Consistent praise for cleanliness, staff, and room quality counts. We also assess the intangibles: does the hotel have character? Would you recommend it to a friend? A soul-less chain hotel with perfect facilities still loses to a well-run boutique with personality.
When to Visit Juba
When to visit Juba and what to pay.
Dry Season (Dec-Feb)
This is peak Juba. Roads are passable, the airport runs smoothly, and every hotel from Tong Ping to Kololo is in high demand. Acacia Village and Hotel Terrain fill 2-3 weeks ahead. Temperatures stay at 28-35°C. hot, but manageable with air conditioning and a functioning pool.
Hot Season (Mar-May)
March through May is Juba at its most brutal thermally: temperatures peak around 38-40°C in April before the rains arrive. Hotel rates soften slightly from peak levels. budget $100-180/night in Gudele or Hai Malakal instead of the December highs. A pool is less of a luxury and more of a requirement: Oasis Hotel and Radisson Blu are the obvious choices.
Wet Season (Jun-Sep)
Rates drop 15-25% across the board and the city empties of non-essential international staff. Temperatures moderate to 26-32°C, making June-September genuinely pleasant by Juba standards. The catch is infrastructure: roads near Konyo Konyo and parts of Malakia flood badly, and Gudele's access road gets rough. Stick to hotels in Tong Ping, Hai Malakal, or Kololo if you're visiting in this window.
Short Rains (Oct-Nov)
October and November sit in a sweet spot: the heaviest rains are easing, temperatures are comfortable at 27-33°C, and hotel rates haven't yet climbed to December peaks. You'll find Logali House in Hai Malakal at $75-110/night and solid availability at Oasis Hotel in Hai Referendum around $160-200/night. Book 1-2 weeks ahead rather than the month-in-advance required for peak season.
Booking Tips for Juba
Insider tips for booking hotels in Juba.
Confirm your booking 48 hours before arrival
Juba's hotel market operates under heavy demand from international organisations. No-shows get resold fast, and 'we have your reservation' at check-in isn't always accurate. Call or WhatsApp the hotel directly 48 hours before you land. every decent hotel from Logali House upward has a number that works. Don't rely on email confirmations alone.
Carry USD in small bills
Almost every hotel above $75/night operates in US dollars. The problem is change: getting break for a $50 or $100 bill at a smaller property in Gudele or Jebel can take 20 minutes. Bring a mix of $1, $5, and $20 bills. The Radisson Blu and Acacia Village accept cards, but connectivity outages make cash the safer backup everywhere in Juba.
Ask specifically about generator hours
Every hotel in Juba claims reliable power. What they mean varies significantly. At Acacia Village and Radisson Blu, generator backup is essentially seamless. At budget options in Munuki and Jebel, 'generator' sometimes means 6-10pm only. Ask: 'What hours does the generator run and does it cover air conditioning?' before you book, not after you check in sweating at 2am.
Book Tong Ping hotels 3-4 weeks ahead for major UN periods
Juba hosts major IGAD, AU, and UN-related meetings several times a year, and Hotel Terrain and Acacia Village on Tong Ping Road fill completely during these windows. The city's high-end capacity is limited: if Acacia Village is full, your next option is the Radisson Blu in Kololo at similar prices. Check if any major regional summits or peace process events fall during your travel dates. the South Sudan peace monitoring body publishes meeting schedules publicly.
Sort your airport transfer before you land
There's no metered taxi system at Juba International Airport. What there is: negotiation, variable pricing, and occasional hassle. Most hotels at $110/night and above offer airport pickup. confirm it in writing when you book and get a driver's number. A legitimate hotel driver will be at arrivals with your name on a card. If yours isn't there, call the hotel directly before accepting any offers from the kerb.
Wet season means plan your route before you commit to a hotel
June through October, the roads around Konyo Konyo market and parts of Malakia can become impassable after heavy rain. A hotel that's 15 minutes away in December might be an hour in August. or unreachable without a 4WD. Sleep Inn in Konyokonyo is a fine hotel, but in peak wet season the surrounding streets test any vehicle. Ask the hotel what conditions look like and whether they have a high-clearance vehicle for transfers.
Hotels in Juba — FAQ
Everything you need to know before booking hotels in Juba.
What's the best area to stay in Juba?
Tong Ping is the safest bet for most visitors. It's where Hotel Terrain and Acacia Village are based, and it puts you within 10 minutes of the main UN and NGO offices on Tong Ping Road. Kololo is the other strong option, especially if you're at the Radisson Blu. Both areas have better roads and more reliable generator backup than the city centre.
How much does a good hotel in Juba cost per night?
Budget options in Munuki and Jebel start around $45-75/night, though you're trading location and amenities. Mid-range hotels in Tong Ping and Hai Malakal run $110-180/night and cover most needs. If you want Radisson or Acacia Village quality in Kololo or Tong Ping, budget $260-380/night, and it's worth it if someone else is paying.
Is it safe to walk around Juba at night?
Honestly, walking after dark anywhere in Juba is not recommended, even in the quieter compounds around Tong Ping or Hai Malakal. Keep a trusted driver's number saved: a short trip across town runs around $5-15 depending on the distance and negotiation. Gondokoro Island and Nyakuron are calm, but you still want a car for anything after 9pm.
Which Juba hotels are best for NGO and UN workers?
Hotel Terrain on Tong Ping Road is the long-standing favourite: the bar is practically an informal coordination hub and you're 8 minutes on foot from several major UN offices. Acacia Village Hotel, also in Tong Ping, is the higher-comfort option when budget isn't the constraint. Both have reliable connectivity and secure compounds, which are the two non-negotiables for most international staff.
Does Juba have any romantic or boutique hotels?
Gondokoro Guest House on Gondokoro Island is the closest thing to a boutique experience in the city. You cross the White Nile to get there, the rooms are quiet, and the river views are genuine. White Nile Hotel in Nyakuron, 5 minutes from the Nyakuron Cultural Centre, is the other option if island access feels like too much logistics.
When is the best time to visit Juba?
December through February is the dry season: temperatures sit around 28-34°C, the roads are passable, and hotel rates are at their highest. March-May brings heat up to 40°C before the rains arrive. June-October is the wet season: roads can flood badly around Konyo Konyo and Malakia, but hotel prices drop by 15-25% and the city is noticeably less crowded.
How far is it from Juba International Airport to the main hotel areas?
The airport on Airport Road is about 12-18 minutes from Tong Ping and 15 minutes from Kololo with light traffic. During peak hours, especially around 7-9am, that can stretch to 30-35 minutes. Most hotels at $150/night and above will arrange airport pickup: confirm it in writing when you book because 'yes we have transfers' sometimes means 'we'll sort something.'
Are there hotels near the White Nile in Juba?
Juba Bridge Hotel in Malakia is 5 minutes on foot from the bridge itself, with proper river views from the upper floors. White Nile Hotel in Nyakuron sits right on the bank. Gondokoro Guest House on Gondokoro Island is literally on the water. These three cover the Nile-adjacent options at $120-230/night depending on your budget.
Do Juba hotels have reliable electricity and wifi?
Most hotels above $100/night run their own generators and manage outages reasonably well. At the budget end in Jebel or Munuki, expect interruptions: ask specifically about generator hours before booking. Wifi is improving but Starlink terminals at several of the better hotels, including Terrain and Acacia Village, have made a real difference in the last 2 years.
What currency do Juba hotels accept?
US dollars are the effective currency for hotels in Juba: essentially every hotel from $75/night upward quotes and accepts USD cash. South Sudanese Pounds (SSP) are accepted at local guesthouses in Gudele and Munuki, but the exchange rate shifts fast. Carry USD in small bills: getting change for a $100 note can take longer than you'd expect.
Which Juba neighbourhoods should I avoid when booking?
Konyo Konyo market area is chaotic, loud, and floods badly in the wet season. Sleep Inn Hotel manages despite the location, but it's not where you want to be wandering. Gudele is fine but far from most meeting points, meaning you'll need a car for everything. Central Juba near Juba Teaching Hospital gets congested quickly and the hotel options there are inconsistent in quality.
Are there any local tips for booking hotels in Juba?
Book directly with the hotel by phone or email and confirm 48 hours before arrival: no-shows get resold fast in a city with high demand from international organisations. Don't rely on walk-in availability at Acacia Village or Radisson Blu. both fill 2-3 weeks ahead during major UN or IGAD meetings in the city. And always confirm if breakfast is included: at $160-340/night it should be, but 'complimentary breakfast' in Juba sometimes means just tea.