Maya-Maya International Airport (BZV) — Airport Guide 2026
The Republic of the Congo’s main international gateway sits 3–6 km from central Brazzaville — one of the shortest airport-to-city distances in Central Africa — which makes the visa and yellow-fever requirements all the more worth sorting before you board.
Quick Reference
BZV / FCBB
Maya-Maya International Airport
Republic of the Congo
~3–6 km
One modern terminal (2010–2013), domestic + international combined
Taxi only; no meters; negotiate before boarding
15–20 min
Central African CFA franc (XAF/FCFA); pegged at €1 = 655.957 FCFA; ≈600–610 FCFA/US$1 (May 2026)
Required in advance for most nationalities; no e-visa
Mandatory certificate; checked on arrival
Salon Ebene — airside, 24/7, Priority Pass
Air France, Ethiopian Airlines, Royal Air Maroc, ASKY, Air Côte d’Ivoire, TAAG Angola, Afrijet
Level 2 — Exercise Increased Caution
🏗️ Terminal & Airlines
Maya-Maya’s single terminal was rebuilt in two phases by a Chinese contractor: a new 3,300-metre runway and first terminal phase opened in 2010, with the larger second phase completed in 2013. It is sized to handle over two million passengers a year and can take wide-body aircraft. Domestic and international operations share the same building. On foot, gate to immigration is short — this is not an airport where you spend twenty minutes on a moving walkway.
The international schedule is built around a handful of carriers. Air France is the busiest, running roughly ten departures a week to Paris-CDG — the dominant link to Europe. Ethiopian Airlines connects via Addis Ababa toward East Africa and onward to Asia. Royal Air Maroc operates the Casablanca routing, which feeds Europe and North America. ASKY Airlines and Air Côte d’Ivoire cover the West and Central African regional network; TAAG Angola links Luanda; Afrijet handles Gabon and nearby Central African points.
⚠️ Thin schedule — check your frequency
Several of these routes do not operate daily. If your itinerary involves a same-day connection through BZV, verify the actual days of operation before booking — a carrier appearing on the route map does not mean a flight every day.
One practical consequence of the regional-carrier mix: many tickets here are sold point-to-point with no through-checked baggage agreement. On a self-transfer, you will typically clear immigration, collect your bag and re-check it, which makes the visa section below relevant even on itineraries you assumed were airside-only.
🛂 Border & Visa
The headline is short: most foreign travellers need a visa arranged before they fly, plus a yellow-fever certificate. There is no workaround for either.
📋 Standard visa application
For the great majority of nationalities — including most European, North American and other non-African passport holders — a visa must be obtained from a Republic of the Congo embassy or consulate before departure. Applications typically require a letter of invitation or proof of a confirmed hotel booking, in some cases stamped by the country’s territorial-surveillance directorate (the DDST/DGST). This is not a same-week process from every consulate; build in time.
⚠️ No e-visa — and this one matters
There is no e-visa for the Republic of the Congo. The online “Congo e-visa” portals that appear at the top of search results are for the Democratic Republic of the Congo — a different country, across the river, capital Kinshasa. If a site is selling you an online Congo visa through a .cd domain, that is the DRC, not Brazzaville. Get the wrong one and you will be denied boarding or entry.
🛂 Visa on arrival — short list only
Maya-Maya does issue visas on arrival, but only to citizens of Benin, Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, Mauritania, Morocco, Niger, Senegal and Togo. If your passport is not on that list, do not arrive without a visa.
🤝 CEMAC free movement
Holders of biometric passports from Cameroon, the Central African Republic, Chad, Equatorial Guinea and Gabon may enter visa-free for stays under 90 days under the CEMAC regional agreement. The biometric condition is not optional — an older machine-readable CEMAC passport does not automatically qualify.
💉 Yellow fever — hard requirement
A yellow-fever vaccination certificate is mandatory for adults and children over nine months. The vaccine must be administered at least ten days before arrival. You present the yellow card at the health check on arrival; health authorities can refuse entry to travellers without a valid certificate. This is enforced.
🚕 Getting Into Brazzaville
Three to six kilometres from the centre, 15–20 minutes by car. The distance is genuinely convenient. The system for covering it is not.
There are no taxi queues at the terminal, and taxis cannot pick up in the departures or arrivals parking areas. A public taxi park a few metres from the building is where the green-and-white cars wait. Brazzaville’s taxis have no meters, so you agree the fare before you get in and settle it in cash before the doors close. Local aggregators quote rough figures in the region of 1,000–3,000 FCFA for the run into town, but because no official airport tariff is published, treat any number as a negotiating anchor, not a posted price. The first quote will assume you don’t know the range.
💡 Hotel pickup on first arrival
If you are staying at one of the larger hotels, arranging a pickup in advance removes the kerbside negotiation entirely. For a first arrival after dark, this is the cleaner option — not because the taxi park is dangerous, but because fare negotiation in an unfamiliar currency in the dark is an avoidable friction.
There is no airport rail link and no published scheduled shuttle bus into the centre.
🛋️ Lounge
One lounge at BZV: Salon Ebene, located airside. After clearing outbound immigration and security, turn left — it sits on the left side of the exhibition area. Open 24 hours. Priority Pass accepted, along with business- and first-class passengers on select airlines and other eligible pass holders.
🛋️ Salon Ebene — the practical case
Complimentary food, standard alcoholic drinks, Wi-Fi, TV, air conditioning. Champagne carries a surcharge; children are not admitted. The air conditioning alone makes it worth the visit in Brazzaville’s heat. It is smoke-free.
No DragonPass or LoungeKey arrangement is confirmed at BZV. If your lounge card runs on a network other than Priority Pass, check directly with the lounge rather than assuming access.
The lounge is airside, which means it is only useful once you have cleared outbound immigration and security. It cannot serve as a waiting room for a long pre-check-in gap.
🛡️ Security & Advisory
The US State Department rates the Republic of the Congo Level 2 — Exercise Increased Caution, citing crime, with violent crime — armed robbery and assault — flagged as a concern across the country.
The UK FCDO advises against all travel only to a specific zone: within 50 km of the Republic of Congo–Central African Republic border in the Likouala region. It does not restrict Brazzaville.
France’s MEAE flags petty and violent crime concentrated in Brazzaville and Pointe-Noire, advises against walking through outlying districts after dark, and notes heightened vigilance in the Pool department. It records that the Pool situation has progressively stabilised since the December 2017 ceasefire and that road traffic on the main routes has returned to normal.
⚠️ Mosquito-borne illness — not just malaria
The MEAE specifically notes chikungunya cases reported in Brazzaville, alongside the standard malaria precautions. Pack accordingly.
The practical read: Brazzaville is a city to move through prepared, not a destination to avoid. Daytime movement in the central districts with a pre-arranged vehicle is the normal mode for visitors. The avoidable mistakes are walking peripheral areas at night, using unknown cars, and travelling anywhere near the CAR border zone.
🍽️ Food Before You Fly
Airside catering at BZV is limited. The Salon Ebene lounge is the most reliable place to eat and drink once you are through security. Landside, before check-in, the offering is similarly modest.
The food that is worth eating is in the city, not the airport. Brazzaville’s standard is poulet moambe — chicken in a sauce of palm-nut pulp, served with rice or plantain — and grilled river fish, particularly capitaine (Nile perch), which is the other staple along the central food strips near Poto-Poto and Marché Total. These are city meals. Do not expect to find them at a BZV gate.
✈️ Layover Decision
Geographically, the city is unusually accessible — under 20 minutes from the terminal by car to the central landmarks. The honest verdict follows the visa rules and the advisory, not the distance.
Without a visa: you stay airside. There is no transit-visa scheme that allows a visa-less traveller to leave the terminal. Salon Ebene is your layover.
With a visa: a daytime half-day in the centre is feasible on a layover of roughly five to six hours or more, provided you use a pre-arranged car, go in daylight and build in a sensible return buffer for check-in and security.
The standout worth the taxi ride is the Basilique Sainte-Anne in the Poto-Poto district — a basilica whose construction Roger Erell began in 1943 and completed in 1949, recognisable by its green-tiled roof designed to echo traditional Congolese village rooftops. It is the most architecturally distinctive building in the city. The Case de Gaulle (built for Charles de Gaulle during Brazzaville’s Free-France period in the 1940s) and views over the Congo River — with Kinshasa visible on the far bank — round out a short circuit.
💡 Layover math
Pre-arranged car: add 10 min for pickup. Drive to Poto-Poto: ~20 min. Basilique Sainte-Anne: 20–30 min on foot around the district. Return to airport: ~20 min. Check-in and security buffer: 60–90 min for international. Total: ~2.5–3 hours consumed before any actual sightseeing. Five hours is the minimum for this to feel like a visit rather than a sprint.
On a layover under four hours, or after dark, or without a visa, stay in the terminal.
💰 Money & Connectivity
The Central African CFA franc (XAF/FCFA) is pegged to the euro at the fixed rate of €1 = 655.957 FCFA — the peg does not float, so euro-holders can compute prices exactly. The dollar sits at roughly 600–610 FCFA in May 2026.
Cash dominates. Card acceptance is reliable only at larger hotels; ATMs are not guaranteed to work with every foreign card. Carry francs for taxis and small purchases. Change only what you need at the airport — bureau-de-change margins there are poor relative to the peg. Keep small notes for the kerbside taxi negotiation.
For data, buy a local SIM in the city if you need reliable coverage; do not count on smooth airport Wi-Fi beyond the lounge. Coverage in central Brazzaville is workable but not fast.
❓ FAQ
📊 At a glance — BZV 2026
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| IATA / ICAO | BZV / FCBB |
| Distance to centre | ~3–6 km |
| Terminal | One modern terminal (built 2010–2013), domestic + international |
| Ground transport | Taxi only; green-and-white cars; public taxi park at terminal |
| Journey time | 15–20 min |
| Airport rail / shuttle | None published |
| Currency | XAF (FCFA); pegged €1 = 655.957 FCFA; ≈600–610 FCFA/US$1 (May 2026) |
| Payment | Cash dominant; cards reliable only at larger hotels |
| Visa | Required in advance for most; no e-visa; VoA for 8 West African nationalities |
| CEMAC | Biometric passports (CM/CF/TD/GQ/GA) visa-free under 90 days |
| Yellow fever | Mandatory certificate; ≥10 days before arrival; checked on entry |
| Lounge | Salon Ebene — airside, 24/7, Priority Pass |
| Carriers | Air France (~10/wk), Ethiopian, Royal Air Maroc, ASKY, TAAG, Air Côte d’Ivoire, Afrijet |
| US advisory | Level 2 — Exercise Increased Caution (crime) |
| Layover verdict | Airside without visa; half-day in centre feasible at ~5–6 hrs+ with visa, pre-arranged car, daylight |



