How to Travel Between Kenya, Uganda & Tanzania for AFCON 2027 (Flights, Road & Borders)
A practical guide on how to travel between Kenya, Uganda and Tanzania for AFCON 2027. Learn when to fly vs go by road, border timing rules, document checklists, costs, and how to avoid fatigue and missed matches.
AFCON 2027 is hosted across Kenya, Uganda, and Tanzania — which means many fans will cross borders at least once. If you plan cross-border movement properly, it’s smooth. If you rush it, you’ll lose money, time, and sometimes matches.
This is a how-to guide, not a brochure. It’s built around one goal: help you travel between the three host countries safely, efficiently, and matchday-proof.
The golden rule: never cross borders on matchday
If you take only one thing from this guide, take this:
Do not plan border crossings on a matchday.
Crossing borders adds uncertainty:
- queues,
- document checks,
- transport delays,
- route changes.
Instead, cross:
- the day after a match, or
- at least 24 hours before your next match.
Step 1: Choose your travel style (this decides everything)
Cross-border AFCON travel usually falls into three styles:
1) Football-first (lowest risk)
- One base country
- One planned move (only if fixtures force it)
- Fan zones for “extra” matches
2) Balanced (best for most fans)
- One primary base country
- Optional second country if you have a real gap
- 1–2 recovery days built in
3) Holiday-first (highest logistics)
- Beach/safari blocks built around AFCON
- More movement
- Fewer stadium matches, more fan zones
Pick your style early. It prevents emotional, expensive moves later.
Step 2: Decide when to fly vs travel by road
Option A: Regional flights (best for time & energy)
Best when
- your schedule is tight,
- you’re moving between major cities,
- you have back-to-back matchdays.
Reality
- prices rise closer to matchdays,
- availability tightens for popular windows,
- baggage rules matter.
Match-safe tip Book flights for movement days, not matchdays, and keep a buffer if you’re attending a key game.
Option B: Road travel (best for short hops + budget)
Best when
- you have buffer days,
- you’re travelling as a group,
- you want to control costs.
Reality
- journeys take longer than expected,
- fatigue builds quickly,
- delays are more common during tournament periods.
Match-safe tip Road travel is strongest for non-urgent moves and shorter routes. Don’t try to “road it” the day before a must-win game.
Option C: Mixed strategy (most realistic)
- Fly for long moves
- Road travel for short hops
- Build recovery days after long journeys
This approach gives the best balance between cost and reliability.
Step 3: Border crossing timing rules (what actually works)
Border crossings are smoother when you:
- travel in daylight,
- avoid weekends and peak matchdays,
- keep documents ready and accessible,
- avoid unnecessary luggage.
Best windows
- Mid-morning to early afternoon
- Day after a match
- Two days before a match (ideal)
Worst windows
- Late night
- Matchday mornings
- Immediately after a big evening match
Crowds move in waves. Be outside the wave.
Step 4: Document checklist (don’t improvise this)
Keep these in both digital and physical form:
- Passport
- Visa / entry permissions (where required)
- AFCON tickets or booking confirmations
- Accommodation confirmations
- Return or onward travel proof (if needed)
- Travel insurance details
- Emergency contacts
Pro tip: store copies offline on your phone. Data can fail at the worst times.
Step 5: Money, SIMs & staying connected across countries
Money
- Use ATMs in cities, not at borders
- Carry small cash for incidental costs
- Keep a second payment method (card + cash)
SIM/data
- Buy a local SIM on arrival in each country (simple and reliable)
- Keep offline maps saved
- Share live location with your group on movement days
Connectivity is usually fine — but you need a plan if it’s not.
Step 6: How to build a match-safe cross-border itinerary
Here are three templates that work well.
Template 1: One-country base + one move (best value)
- Country A (Group stage)
- Move once to Country B (Knockouts)
- Stay put for the remainder
Template 2: Two-country balance (best for 10–14 days)
- Country A (early phase)
- Country B (mid to late phase)
- Optional leisure add-on if you have a true gap
Template 3: Three-country run (only for long stays)
- Kenya + Uganda + Tanzania in a structured order
- Buffers built in
- Minimal back-and-forth travel
Rule: avoid “zig-zag” routing. Zig-zag travel is how fans burn out.
Step 7: Common mistakes that cost fans matches
- Crossing borders on matchday
- Booking inter-country moves with no buffer
- Overpacking (slows everything down)
- Chasing “one extra match” across borders
- Planning late-night arrivals into unfamiliar areas
AFCON is not the time for tight turnarounds.
Quick decision guide
If you have:
- 7–10 days: one country, one base city
- 10–14 days: one country + one move max
- 14+ days: two countries comfortably, three only with discipline
Most fans enjoy AFCON more by moving less.
Final advice: move intentionally, not emotionally
AFCON creates FOMO. The best trips ignore it.
Plan your base. Pick your key matches. Move only when you must — and always with time in your favour.
Want a cross-border AFCON plan built for you?
If you share:
- your arrival airport,
- how many days you have,
- which teams/stages matter most,
I can map a Kenya–Uganda–Tanzania travel route with buffer days, realistic costs, and match-safe movement windows.