Thomas Sankara International Airport (OUA) — Ouagadougou — The Complete Master Guide 2026
This is a guide for travellers with a defined reason to be in Ouagadougou — diplomatic, aid, NGO, business, family — not for leisure tourists. The US State Department maintains a Level 4 “Do Not Travel” advisory (issued 4 May 2026) over crime, kidnapping, terrorism and health, and the UK, Canadian and Australian governments hold similar advisories. US government employees are not allowed to travel outside Ouagadougou. The airport sits within Ouagadougou — a rare proximity, 4-5 km from the central administrative district — and is the country’s only major international gateway. Brussels Airlines is the sole nonstop carrier from Europe; Turkish Airlines is the sole nonstop from the Middle East; Air France, Royal Air Maroc, Ethiopian, Emirates, ASKY and several West African carriers provide the wider network. The new Ouagadougou-Donsin airport project remains long-delayed as of 2026 — runway and access roads built, opening date unfirmed. The airport is named after Thomas Sankara, the revolutionary 1983-87 president assassinated in 1987 and rehabilitated as a national hero. Currency: West African CFA franc (XOF), pegged to the euro at 655.957 XOF per €1. E-visa is required for almost all non-ECOWAS visitors.
📍 4-5 km from city centre
🚕 Taxi only · CFA negotiation
🛂 E-visa · Yellow fever vaccine required
⚠️ Critical Travel Advisory — 2026
US State Department Level 4 “Do Not Travel” advisory (issued 4 May 2026) over crime, kidnapping, terrorism and health. UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office and Canadian / Australian / French Foreign Ministry advisories similarly highest-tier. US government employees in Burkina Faso are restricted to within Ouagadougou.
The threat of kidnapping of Westerners by criminal or terrorist groups is high throughout Burkina Faso including in Ouagadougou — and especially severe in the Sahel and East Regions. Violent crime including armed robbery, home invasion and carjacking is common throughout the country.
This guide is for travellers with a clear reason to be in Ouagadougou — diplomatic mission, humanitarian assignment, NGO field work, journalism, business, family visit — who have organised appropriate security arrangements through their employer, sponsor or local fixer. The operational facts below assume that context. Verify the current advisory at travel.state.gov / gov.uk/foreign-travel-advice before relying on any of the practical details here.
⚡ 2026 Quick Reference — Key Facts at a Glance
1,500-5,000 CFA (~€2-8) to city centre · 10-15 min · always agree fare in advance · meters not used · negotiation expected · pre-arranged car via your hotel or fixer strongly recommended
OUA does not have a dedicated public-transit shuttle · local bus options exist but are not realistic for visitors with luggage and security considerations
Carrier-operated business-class lounges for Brussels Airlines / Turkish / Royal Air Maroc premium passengers · no Priority Pass lounge confirmed at OUA · verify before travel
Apply at visaburkina.bf (e-visa portal launched 17 Aug 2023) · US citizens max 1-month stay · multi-week processing
· yellow fever vaccination certificate REQUIRED
West African CFA franc (XOF / FCFA) · pegged to euro at 655.957 XOF per €1 · bring euros not dollars · cards rarely accepted · ATMs exist but unreliable · bring sufficient cash
Brussels Airlines = sole EU nonstop (BRU year-round) · Turkish = sole ME nonstop (IST year-round) · Air France · Royal Air Maroc · Ethiopian · Emirates · Air Algérie · Tunisair · regional African carriers
Long-delayed project · runway + access roads built · opening date unfirmed · current Thomas Sankara airport remains the operational gateway
Burkina Faso is in West Africa · those are EU systems · Burkina has its own visa regime requiring advance e-visa for almost all non-ECOWAS visitors
🏢 1. The Single Terminal & Carrier Reality
OUA operates a single passenger terminal dating to the 1960s — a colonial-era facility that has had successive modernisation passes but remains modest by international hub standards. Renamed Thomas Sankara International Airport in honour of Burkina Faso’s revolutionary 1983-87 president (assassinated 1987, rehabilitated under the current military government). The airport sits in central Ouagadougou — about 4-5 km from the main administrative district, an unusually short distance reflecting the 1960s pre-urban-expansion siting. The new Ouagadougou-Donsin airport, intended to replace OUA with a modern facility 35 km north-east of the city designed for ~1 million annual passengers, has faced years of delays — runway and access roads completed, some administrative buildings built, but no confirmed opening date as of 2026. OUA remains the operational gateway.
🛫 Western Carriers — Brussels & Turkish
Brussels Airlines operates the sole year-round nonstop link from Europe — Brussels (BRU) via SN A220 / A330 service, several weekly. Turkish Airlines is the sole nonstop from the Middle East — Istanbul (IST), with onward connections to Turkish’s global network. Air France serves Paris CDG with a near-daily schedule and is the alternative European connection (with the option of stopover at CDG for onward US travel).
These three carriers — SN, TK, AF — are the practical western-traveller options for OUA.
📍 African + Regional Carriers
Royal Air Maroc — Casablanca (CMN), the main connection through the Maghreb. Ethiopian Airlines — Addis Ababa (ADD), the Star Alliance pan-African hub. Emirates — Dubai (DXB). Air Algérie — Algiers (ALG). Tunisair — Tunis (TUN). ASKY Airlines — Lomé (LFW), the regional ECOWAS-hub feeder. Air Côte d’Ivoire — Abidjan (ABJ). Air Senegal — Dakar (DKR).
Air Burkina, the national carrier, operates limited domestic and regional routes — verify current schedule before relying on it; the carrier has had operational challenges in recent years.
Operating airlines at OUA (April 2026)
- Brussels Airlines (SN) — Brussels (BRU); sole EU nonstop, year-round.
- Turkish Airlines (TK) — Istanbul (IST); sole Middle East nonstop, year-round.
- Air France (AF) — Paris CDG; near-daily.
- Royal Air Maroc (AT) — Casablanca (CMN); the Maghreb gateway.
- Ethiopian Airlines (ET) — Addis Ababa (ADD); pan-African Star Alliance hub.
- Emirates (EK) — Dubai (DXB).
- Air Algérie (AH) — Algiers.
- Tunisair (TU) — Tunis.
- ASKY Airlines (KP) — Lomé (LFW), regional ECOWAS feeder.
- Air Côte d’Ivoire (HF) — Abidjan (ABJ).
- Air Senegal (HC) — Dakar (DKR).
- Air Burkina (2J) — national carrier, limited regional operations; verify current schedule.
🛂 2. E-Visa, Yellow Fever & the Security Reality
Burkina Faso is a West African country, not Schengen, not EU. EES and ETIAS do not apply. Visa-on-arrival is generally not available for most western nationalities — the Burkinabé government rolled out an e-visa system at visaburkina.bf on 17 August 2023, and an advance e-visa is the standard entry document for US, UK, EU, Canadian, Australian and most non-ECOWAS nationals. Yellow fever vaccination certificate is required for all visitors over 9 months old. Currency: West African CFA franc (XOF, often written FCFA), pegged to the euro at 655.957 XOF per €1.
E-Visa (visaburkina.bf)
Apply for the Burkinabé e-visa at the official portal visaburkina.bf (launched 17 August 2023). Required documents: passport scan (valid 6+ months), passport photo, hotel reservation confirmation, International Certificate of Vaccination (yellow fever). Processing typically 2-4 weeks — apply well in advance. US citizens: max 1-month stay. Fees vary by nationality and entry count.
Yellow Fever Certificate Mandatory
Yellow fever vaccination is required for all visitors over 9 months of age — must be carried in your International Certificate of Vaccination (the WHO yellow card) and shown on arrival. Without a valid yellow fever certificate you will be denied entry. Verify at your home travel-medicine clinic before booking; the vaccine takes 10 days to confer immunity.
ECOWAS Visa-Free
Citizens of Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) member states — Nigeria, Ghana, Senegal, Côte d’Ivoire, Mali, Niger, Togo, Benin, Liberia, Sierra Leone, Cabo Verde, Gambia, Guinea, Guinea-Bissau — can enter Burkina Faso visa-free under the ECOWAS Free Movement Protocol. Mali and Niger relationships are politically complicated under the current military-government alliances; verify current entry status before relying on it.
Who needs what to enter Burkina Faso via OUA
| Passport | Visa needed? | How to apply | Yellow fever certificate? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Burkinabé / ECOWAS member states (Nigeria, Ghana, Senegal, Côte d’Ivoire, Togo, Benin, etc.) | No (ECOWAS Free Movement) | Direct entry | Yes — required for all visitors over 9 months |
| US | Yes — e-visa | visaburkina.bf · max 1-month stay | Yes — required |
| UK / EU member states / Canada / Australia / NZ / Japan / South Korea | Yes — e-visa | visaburkina.bf · processing 2-4 weeks · stay length per visa granted | Yes — required |
| Most non-ECOWAS African nationals | Yes — e-visa or embassy visa | visaburkina.bf or Burkinabé consulate | Yes — required |
| Chinese / Russian / restricted nationalities | Yes — embassy visa | Apply at Burkinabé embassy in advance · longer processing | Yes — required |
The 2014 Burkinabé revolution, two coups in 2022, and the ongoing jihadist insurgency in the Sahel have transformed the country’s security environment. The current military government has restricted French and Western military presence and rebuilt security partnerships with Russia, Wagner-successor structures, and the Mali-Niger AES (Alliance of Sahel States) bloc. The threat of kidnapping of Westerners by criminal or terrorist groups is high throughout the country, including in Ouagadougou; especially severe in the Sahel and East Regions. Most diplomatic missions restrict their staff to within Ouagadougou itself. Verify the current US State Department, UK FCDO, Canadian, French and Australian advisories before travelling.
🚕 3. Taxi, Hotel Pickup & the No-Rideshare Reality
OUA sits 4-5 km from central Ouagadougou — the airport is unusually close to the city because of its 1960s siting before urban expansion caught up. There is no rail link, no public-transit airport bus, and no rideshare app operates reliably — Uber and Bolt have minimal or no presence. The only practical options are airport taxi (with negotiated fare) or pre-arranged hotel pickup. The latter is strongly recommended for first-time visitors, both for safety and to avoid the negotiation.
⭐ Pre-Arranged Hotel Pickup — the Default for Visitors
- Most international-standard hotels in Ouagadougou (Laico Ouaga 2000, Hotel Bravia, Hotel Splendid) arrange airport pickups for arriving guests for around 10,000-20,000 CFA (€15-30) one-way.
- Pre-arrange via your hotel reservation confirmation — the driver will meet you in the arrivals hall holding a placard with your name.
- The standard recommendation for first-time visitors and for travellers under any kind of security protocol. Removes the negotiation, the route uncertainty, and the unknown-driver question.
🚕 Airport Taxi (Negotiate)
- Fare: 1,500-5,000 CFA (~€2-8) for the 4-5 km run to central Ouagadougou — wide range reflects negotiation, time of day, and traveller experience.
- 10-15 min journey to the central district.
- Meters are not used — always agree the fare with the driver before getting in, in CFA francs.
- Refuse the touts inside the terminal hall — use the formal taxi queue outside the arrivals hall.
- Cash only — driver expects CFA francs; euros sometimes accepted at a poor rate.
🚫 No Uber / No Bolt / No DiDi
Rideshare apps have no meaningful presence at OUA or in Ouagadougou. Uber, Bolt and DiDi do not operate reliably here. Do not plan around any rideshare option for OUA.
🚗 Rental Cars & Driving Reality
Major Burkinabé and selected international rental brands operate at OUA (Hertz, Avis). Self-drive is not recommended for most visitors — the security advisory, road conditions, and inter-city travel restrictions make a driver-and-vehicle hire (most reliable through hotels or formal car-hire firms) the standard option for non-Ouagadougou trips. Inter-city travel by road is dangerous — kidnapping risk on most highways, US government employees restricted to Ouagadougou.
🛋️ 4. Carrier Business-Class Lounges — the Limited Setup
OUA’s lounge map is limited — appropriate to the airport’s size and operational profile. Brussels Airlines, Turkish Airlines, Air France, Royal Air Maroc, Ethiopian and Emirates each operate (or have operated) carrier-specific lounges for their premium-cabin passengers; provision is intermittent and depends on the carrier’s flight bank that day. No Priority Pass lounge has been reliably confirmed at OUA as of 2026; verify with Priority Pass before counting on access here. No Centurion Lounge, no Capital One Lounge, no Chase Sapphire Lounge — these have no presence in Burkina Faso.
🛋️ Carrier-Specific Business Lounges
Brussels Airlines, Turkish, Air France, Royal Air Maroc, Ethiopian, Emirates may operate small dedicated lounges for their premium-cabin passengers — typically open during the relevant flight-bank window. Provision varies.
If your ticket is in business or first class on one of these airlines, ask at check-in for lounge access and directions.
⚠️ No Confirmed Priority Pass at OUA
No Priority Pass lounge is reliably listed at OUA as of 2026. Priority Pass / LoungeKey / DragonPass holders should not expect access here. Verify with Priority Pass directly before relying on lounge access at OUA.
If you arrive without a carrier-lounge access: the airside seating + small bar is the alternative; budget for a couple of hours airside rather than expecting a relaxation space.
⚠️ No Centurion / Capital One / Chase Sapphire
None of the US premium-card-flagship lounges operate at OUA — these have no Burkina Faso or West African mainland (excluding Dakar/Lagos hub) presence.
🍲 5. Burkinabé Food: Tô, Riz Gras, Brochettes, Bissap
Burkinabé cuisine sits at the Sahelian agricultural crossroads — sorghum and millet staples from the millennia-old Mossi kingdom kitchen, peanut sauces, grilled meats from the cattle-herding Fulani and Mossi traditions, French colonial pâtisserie influence in Ouagadougou’s middle-class bakeries. The defining dishes are tô (a thick millet or sorghum porridge eaten with sauces), riz gras (the “fat rice” jollof-style one-pot dish), poulet bicyclette (free-range chicken slow-grilled), and brochettes (grilled-meat skewers). OUA’s airside food is functional and limited; the proper version is in central Ouagadougou’s maquis (open-air restaurants) and the upmarket hotel restaurants. The food at hotels under western security recommendation is well-prepared and safer than open-street options.
Tô is the foundational Burkinabé dish — a thick porridge made from millet or sorghum flour, cooked with water until it has a dough-like consistency. Eaten with a sauce — usually sauce gombo (okra), sauce arachide (peanut), or sauce gloutte (a slimy leaf sauce). The standard rural Burkinabé meal; available at any maquis in Ouagadougou for 500-1,500 CFA. The cultural equivalent of bread/rice for the millions of Burkinabé living in the agricultural belt.
Riz gras (“fat rice”) is the Burkinabé take on the West African jollof tradition — rice cooked in a tomato + onion + meat broth, served with grilled chicken or fish. Poulet bicyclette (“bicycle chicken”) refers to the wiry free-range chicken that local farmers walk to market — tougher than industrial chicken but more flavourful, slow-grilled with chili-onion sauce. 2,500-5,000 CFA at a maquis; more at hotel restaurants.
Brochettes — skewered grilled meat (beef, mutton, sometimes chicken), seasoned with West African chili-onion-peanut-powder (“kankan”) spice, sold from street grills across Ouagadougou. 200-500 CFA per skewer at street level, 1,000-2,000 CFA at restaurants. Street food at the lower end of the price scale is best avoided unless you know the vendor per general traveller-safety guidance; the hotel-restaurant version is the safer choice.
Bissap is the Sahelian hibiscus tea — dried Roselle calyces steeped in water, sweetened, served chilled. Bright red, refreshing, the universal West African non-alcoholic drink. Bouille is a millet-based porridge-drink. Bissap 200-500 CFA. Dolo (the local millet beer from the Mossi tradition) is available at the village level but rarely served in Ouagadougou’s international-standard restaurants. Brakina is the standard Burkinabé pale lager beer.
Duty-Free & Souvenir Reality at OUA
🎭 Bronze + Wooden Artisan Crafts
5,000-50,000 CFA per piece. Burkina Faso has a strong artisan tradition — Bobo Dioulasso bronze casting (cire perdue / lost-wax technique), Ouagadougou wooden masks, hand-woven cotton textiles, leather work. The Centre National d’Artisanat d’Art (CNAA) in Ouagadougou is the most credible buying point with certified pieces; airside selection is more limited.
🌍 FESPACO Memorabilia
FESPACO (Festival Panafricain du Cinéma et de la Télévision de Ouagadougou) — the biennial pan-African film festival held in odd-numbered years (next: 2027) — is Burkina’s standout cultural export. Festival posters, T-shirts, books on African cinema. Selection thin at OUA.
☕ Burkinabé Coffee + Karité (Shea Butter)
3,000-15,000 CFA. Locally-grown coffee from the western highlands and karité (shea butter) — Burkina Faso is one of the world’s main shea-butter producers, the unrefined block-form butter is the standard souvenir for cosmetics-aware travellers. Cooperatives like UPROKA produce certified shea butter for export.
📚 Thomas Sankara Books
5,000-20,000 CFA. Thomas Sankara is a national hero and a wider African revolutionary figure; his speeches and biographies are sold at OUA and central Ouagadougou bookshops. The translated French-language editions are widely available.
💡 6. Practical Notes for the Working Traveller
Given the security advisory, this section gives operational guidance for travellers with a defined reason to be in Ouagadougou — diplomatic mission, humanitarian assignment, journalism, business, family visit — rather than tourist itinerary suggestions. Standard sightseeing recommendations are inappropriate; the priorities are sleeping safely, eating well, conducting business, and getting out.
Most diplomatic, NGO, journalist and corporate visitors stay at one of the international-standard hotels in central Ouagadougou or in the Ouaga 2000 administrative district: Laico Ouaga 2000 (Libyan-owned business hotel, the most-stayed-at western traveller option, ~$180-340 USD), Hotel Bravia, Hotel Splendid (the historic colonial heritage hotel; note that Hotel Splendid was the site of a January 2016 terrorist attack and has been rebuilt with enhanced security since), Hôtel Pacific. All offer airport pickup, on-site dining, and concierge support that includes vetted drivers.
Within central Ouagadougou and the Ouaga 2000 district, daytime movement is generally manageable for visitors with appropriate local context — the central market (Marché Central), the Place des Nations Unies, the Place de la Révolution, the Monument aux Héros Nationaux, the Musée National. Movement after dark should be by vetted driver only; do not walk between venues. Diplomatic-quarter movements are organised through your sponsor.
OUA is not a layover destination for tourism. The Burkinabé tourist sites (the W National Park along the Niger border, the Lobi tribal area in the south, the cave paintings, the Sindou Peaks) all sit in regions under elevated security risk. The Bobo Dioulasso visit (the cultural-traditional city 360 km west) is no longer recommended for most western tourists under current advisories. If you have a long OUA layover with valid e-visa, stay in central Ouagadougou with a vetted driver — do not undertake inter-city day trips.
FESPACO — the Festival Panafricain du Cinéma et de la Télévision de Ouagadougou — is the world’s largest African film festival, held biennially in late February / early March of odd-numbered years (next: 2027). For the duration of FESPACO the visiting-journalist + film-industry traveller community is large and the security framework is enhanced. The 2027 edition is the most likely future window for non-mission cultural travel; outside FESPACO, normal restrictions apply.
Movement outside Ouagadougou requires careful operational planning and is generally restricted for diplomatic and NGO staff. Most foreign embassies and NGOs operate convoy protocols, briefings, and vehicle-tracking requirements for any inter-city movement. Casual day trips by hired car are not advisable — kidnapping risk on most highways. If your mission requires inter-city movement, your sponsor will brief you on the protocols.
🔧 Practical Notes — Connectivity, Currency, Border
West African CFA franc (XOF, often written FCFA). Pegged to the euro at 655.957 XOF per €1 — this rate is fixed by the BCEAO (Banque Centrale des États de l’Afrique de l’Ouest). Bring euros, not US dollars — euros exchange easily at banks and exchange offices in Ouagadougou; USD is harder to exchange and at a worse rate. Cards are rarely accepted outside the international-standard hotels and a handful of restaurants — bring sufficient cash in CFA or euros. ATMs exist in central Ouagadougou but are unreliable; do not assume a foreign card will work. Cash is king. Tipping convention: 10% at international restaurants; rounding up at maquis.
E-visa from visaburkina.bf is mandatory for almost all non-ECOWAS visitors — US, UK, EU, Canadian, Australian, Japanese, Korean. Processing 2-4 weeks; apply well in advance. Yellow fever vaccination certificate (WHO yellow card) is required on entry for all visitors over 9 months old. EES and ETIAS do NOT apply — Burkina Faso is in West Africa, not the EU/Schengen.
Burkinabé networks — Orange Burkina Faso, Moov Africa Burkina Faso (formerly Telecel), Onatel/Movitel. Local prepaid SIM 2,500-5,000 CFA at airport kiosks or in-city operator shops. 4G covers central Ouagadougou; coverage thins quickly outside the city. International roaming on a non-Burkinabé SIM is expensive but reliable in central Ouagadougou — many western diplomatic and NGO travellers use roaming rather than swap SIMs.
The security situation in Burkina Faso evolves; the operational practices in this guide are accurate as of May 2026 but may shift. Verify the current US State Department advisory at travel.state.gov, the UK FCDO at gov.uk/foreign-travel-advice, the Canadian advisory at travel.gc.ca, and your home country’s equivalent before booking. Verify the current e-visa status at visaburkina.bf. Verify the airport’s current operational status — Brussels Airlines and Turkish Airlines maintain web pages with their latest OUA flight status.



