r/Namibia 21h ago

Hello everyone! I'm looking for any job opportunity in Windhoek, including weekend, part-time, casual, or remote work. I have my own PC, smartphone, and internet. Call 0818869805

18 Upvotes

I'm looking for any job opportunity in Windhoek, including weekend, part-time, casual, or remote work. I have my own PC, smartphone, and internet.

I can assist with:

• House cleaning (including post construction cleaning)

• Washing & ironing

• Packing & unpacking when moving

• Computer related tasks and data entry

• CV & cover letter writing (N$50)

• Office assistance and general admin support

I'm reliable, trustworthy, hardworking and available to start immediately.

📞 081 886 9805

Thank you! Please feel free to contact me or share this post with anyone who may need my services.🙏


r/Namibia 12h ago

Help me choose between to itinerary

2 Upvotes

Hello guys, planning my namibian trip and i'm so exited !

Really short on time but for the 5 first days of the trip, would you rather choose :

Day 1 : arrive in Windhoek at 7 am, heading to Kalahari desert. Game drive in the sunset

Day 2 : Game drive and self guided walk in Kalahari desert

Day 3 : Kalahari to Sesriem (sleeping outside the park, in Hammerstein lodge)

Day 4 : i have hard times choosing between

- Sunrise Balloon fligt and then doing Sossuvlei during day time

- Sunrise at Sossuvlei and not doing Balloon flight

Day 5 : Sesriem to Swakopmund (6h)
Or, would you change the day 2, and head to Sesriem one day earlier (maybe leaving at 2 pm) to do sunrise Balloon on day 3 ?

Thanks a lot !!


r/Namibia 1d ago

NATIS Learner's Test - Okahandja

5 Upvotes

Guys, the test isn't difficult. These are the resources I used to pass mine on the first attempt:

  1. Road signs in the learner's textbook - know as many as you possibly can by reading through and writing them down

  2. K53 blue app and the one with South African flag - also a means for practicing and memorizing questions. The blue one also had a summary of the various rules which you can read through to reinforce your memorandum and ability to answer the questions.

  3. MOTUSK53 - question bank that gives you multiple opportunities for free.

  4. AI to help explain each of the answers for further reinforcement.

I did all the above in 24 hours, passed and got my permit that same day. Why bother with the lines and disorganization in Windhoek when you can easily get it all done in a day?


r/Namibia 2d ago

General We're hiring!!

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7 Upvotes

r/Namibia 1d ago

General Out of fuel?

1 Upvotes

For those having a car, what do you do when you run empty and need to fill up but don't have funds mid month?.. Cause I don't like to borrow money from people, what do you do?


r/Namibia 1d ago

Tourism Looking for travel mate(s) for 15-Day Tour in Namibia/Botswana/Zimbabwe

2 Upvotes

[Please do NOT contact for promotional offers;]

Hi! I had been dreaming of visiting Southern Africa, and after intensive research, I found an exceptional 15-day tour to cover all the attractive destinations in Namibia/Botswana/Zimbabwe (+Zambia as optional) at a reasonable price.

It is operated by a trustworthy agency with 4.9 stars by 361 reviews on TripAdvisor, ranked #7 of Windhoek activities. I talked with the staff who sounded well experienced and decent.

I am going for the "camping" option as solo, which means I have to pay x1.8 of the single price for a group (min 2 ppl), therefore looking for any person (of any age/gender) who could share the same itinerary, possibly starting from late August or early September. (<-- still flexible)

It covers;

Windhoek
- Spreetshoogte Pass
Solitaire
Sossusvlei
Swakopmund
Cape Cross
Twyfelfontein
Opuwo & Himba Tribe
Etosha National Park, Okaukuejo
- Etosha National Park, Namutoni
Divundu & Mahango Game Reserve
KongolaMudumu National Park
- Botswana, KasaneChobe National Park
Victoria Falls & Zimbabwe (*Devil's pool tour can be separately booked after late August)

The cost seems the cheapest to comprehensively visit such destinations! You will arrive at Windhoek on Day 0, then will leave from Victoria Falls airport on Day 15.

It will be a "once-in-my-life" experience, so I hope to share this fantastic trip with someone. I am open, active, friendly but also independent and responsible, having travelled in various countries by joining local group tours.

Africa is difficult to organize with combinations of multiple tours, so I decided to join the complete packaged tour. We won't share the accommodation, as sleeping in a tent for each. (After discussing with the agency, I recognized that camping in a tent should be "OK", and won't be very problematic, since many travellers do.)

Please contact me!


r/Namibia 2d ago

Planning an 11-Day Namibia Road Trip – Looking for Your Advice!

4 Upvotes

Planning an 11-Day Namibia Road Trip – Looking for Your Advice! 🇳🇦📸🚙

Hi everyone!

I'm planning an 11-day self-drive road trip through Namibia next July, and I'm getting really excited (and trying not to spend every evening watching Namibia travel videos ).

My planned route is:

Windhoek → Sossusvlei → Swakopmund → Sandwich Harbour → Spitzkoppe → Damaraland → Etosha National Park → Windhoek

The main focus of this trip is landscape photography, wildlife, and scenic road trips, so I've tried to keep the itinerary relaxed with as little backtracking as possible.

I'd love to hear any suggestions from people who've done a similar trip. If there's anything you'd change or any hidden gems I shouldn't miss, I'm all ears!

I also have a few questions:

1. Accommodation
Which website do you usually use for booking accommodation in Namibia? Here in Germany, I almost always use Booking.com, but I was wondering if there's another platform that's more popular or offers better options for Namibia.

2. 4×4 Rental
Which rental company would you recommend for a reliable 4×4? I don't mind paying extra for comprehensive insurance if it means having a stress-free trip and good customer support in case something goes wrong.

3. Etosha Accommodation
I'd really like to stay inside Etosha National Park. Seeing wildlife is a much higher priority for me than luxury, and I'd also like to keep the budget reasonable.

I noticed that the NWR website seems to allow instant bookings (is that correct?). Is there another platform where I can reserve first and pay later, or is booking directly with NWR the best option?

4. Best Camp Inside Etosha
If you had to choose, which camp or lodge inside Etosha would you recommend? At the moment, I'm looking at Okaukuejo and Halali, but I'd love to hear your experiences and whether you'd choose something different.

Thanks so much in advance! I really appreciate any advice, tips, or "I wish I'd known this before I went" moments. Hopefully, I'll come back with some great photos to share afterward! 😊


r/Namibia 2d ago

General Individual borrowing groups or platforms

1 Upvotes

I've been looking into borrowing money from individuals rather than banks or microlenders, and I noticed there don't really seem to be any options for that in Namibia.

On Reddit there are communities where individuals can lend to other individuals, and in some countries there are also private Facebook and WhatsApp groups that do the same.

Why doesn't something similar exist in Namibia?

Is it mainly because of legal or regulatory requirements? For example, would someone regularly lending money to others need to be registered with NAMFISA, or are there other reasons why this never took off?

I'm curious whether it's the law, the risk of scams, difficulty enforcing repayments, or simply that there isn't enough demand.

[EDIT]

Another point is collateral. Places like Cash Converters and Cash Crusaders pay you maybe 20% to 40% of the actual value of your item. There is definitely room for a better collateral option that is fairer. I've been there and seen how badly these places treat people and how they give people peanuts for valuable items when they are desperate for cash.


r/Namibia 2d ago

Foreign business partners welcome

6 Upvotes

I am a young female Namibian- trained lawyer and aspiring agricultural entrepreneur buying a successful existing business in agro-processing. Any foreign investor who has a passion for agricultural production and organic farming are welcome to contact me.


r/Namibia 2d ago

Help with best driving route

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2 Upvotes

Coming from Etosha way, which option is the main way or least effort way to go? We'll be in a rental. Thank you!


r/Namibia 3d ago

eMpTyCy Virus

13 Upvotes

Careful guys, seems like the eMpTyCy Virus is doing the rounds again. It makes your airtime credit and data just go "poof". #CRANONLYREGULATESSTARLINK


r/Namibia 4d ago

Namibias Independence

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50 Upvotes

I found this old book of my moms.
Guys, I think we forgave the Afrikaaners too quickly.
Nah man, I will heal when I die.


r/Namibia 4d ago

UnboxSA and Aramex

4 Upvotes

Hi all,

Anyone got more recent experience of using these for shipping from SA (or anywhere)? I see previous posts about Aramex being ok until the mighty Nampost got involved. That still the case?

Thanks


r/Namibia 4d ago

A guide through the Kalahari for self-drive travelers

6 Upvotes

We've noticed that alot of first-time Namibia itineraries hit Sossusvlei, Swakopmund, Damaraland Etosha and the Fish River. Which is totally understandable cause these are amongst the true gems of Namibia. However, the Kalahari, off to the south-east, usually gets left off entirely, which is a shame because it's genuinely different from the rest of the country, especially for a couple of quiet nights.
Not going to pretend it's a headline destination like Sossusvlei. It isn't. But it's the missing piece for a lot of Namibia trips and it's easy to add.

The Namibian Kalahari is the western edge of the Kalahari Basin that stretches into Botswana and South Africa. It looks nothing like the Namib. Where the Namib is bare and dramatic, the Kalahari is dressed. Red vegetated linear dunes running northwest to southeast, camel thorn trees, tall grass, sociable weaver nests the size of small cars in the trees. It's a proper landscape rather than pure geology. Also cooler in the mornings than you might expect, and legitimate frost in winter overnight.

Wildlife-wise it punches above what most travellers realise. Gemsbok everywhere, springbok herds, meerkat colonies, cheetah, brown hyena, occasionally leopard. If you push into the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park you get some of the best cat viewing in southern Africa, including the famous black-maned Kalahari lions.

How to add it

Two versions, depending on how much time you have.

The light version: two nights at one of the Kalahari lodges an hour or so east of Mariental. Kalahari Anib is the mid-range default, sedan-accessible, and has campsites as well as lodge rooms. Bagatelle and Intu Afrika are the other well-known options. This gives you one full day for a couple of game drives, walking in the dunes, and sitting under the trees. Fits neatly into a standard route as either your first or last stop out of Windhoek, or as a break between the south (Fish River) and Sossusvlei.

The full version: cross into the Kgalagadi Transfrontier Park via the Mata Mata gate. Roughly 250km of gravel from Stampriet on the C15, following the old Auob riverbed. The road is generally in good shape and passenger vehicles handle it fine. Once inside the park you can do a lot with a 2WD on the main tracks between Mata Mata, Twee Rivieren and Nossob, though a 4x4 with proper clearance opens up more of the remote camps. Minimum four nights in the park to make the drive worth it. This is an add-on for people who already know they like sit-and-watch game viewing, not a general first-timer recommendation.

Practicalities

The Mata Mata border post is open 08:00 to 16:30 and to cross into the Kgalagadi from Namibia you need proof of at least two nights booked inside the park. SANParks handles the bookings and their website is where you do it, well in advance for peak season. Fuel is available at Twee Rivieren, Mata Mata and Nossob camps inside the park. This is SANParks, not NWR, so the current in-park fuel issues on the Etosha side don't apply here, but usual half-tank discipline still holds.

Cross-border rental paperwork matters. Confirm with your rental company that you're allowed to cross into South Africa via Kgalagadi, get the cross-border letter, and check whether they want you to exit and re-enter Namibia the same way or continue out to South Africa.

Works well if you're doing three weeks or more, if you want a slower-paced destination in the mix, or if you've done Namibia before and want something outside the standard circuit. Also works as a buffer day out of or into Windhoek without needing to be dramatic.

Doesn't work if you've got fourteen days and are set on hitting all the postcard destinations. In that case, save the Kalahari for next time and don't feel bad about it.

Happy to answer questions on specific routes or lodges if anyone's planning around it.


r/Namibia 4d ago

How do you actually track your spending?

5 Upvotes

I've been trying to get a better handle on tracking my expenses/finances generally, and realized I don't actually know how other people approach it. Curious what everyone's real workflow is.

  • How do you actually track what you spend? An app, a spreadsheet, mental math, nothing at all?
  • Do receipts factor into it, or is it purely bank statement/transaction based for you?
  • What's actually made you regret not tracking something, like a surprise at tax time, not knowing where money went, or a lost receipt?
  • What's annoying about however you currently do it?

I've got a software background and I'm planning on building something for myself to actually use, so genuinely trying to understand what's real vs. what I'd just be assuming.


r/Namibia 5d ago

Politics, i think Western Bypass Status Check: whats the current status of the idiocracy with the speed bumps?

9 Upvotes

Yeah, basically just the title. I'm not home right now so im struggling to keep my finger on the pulse of things. Is anyone in a position of any influence even making an attempt to remove these things? I doesnt sound like it from here lol, and its annoying me


r/Namibia 5d ago

Skeleton coast trip

5 Upvotes

Hello all. In september I go for the 20th time to Namibia. You can say, I have some experience. But I never been to Skeleton coast.

What is the best trip from Damaraland to the coast? Do I need a permit?

Thanks all.


r/Namibia 5d ago

General “Paltjies” Brakwater recreational park.

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2 Upvotes

I remember going here my frequently in my childhood it’s like it was just forgotten memory.I was thinking maybe I go there with a small group of friends now that I’m older but I remember they added tariff of 500. Do you think it’s worth it or are they better alternatives for that price.


r/Namibia 5d ago

Financial tips

3 Upvotes

What great investment products do you know of in our market?


r/Namibia 6d ago

Guesthouse

5 Upvotes

Anyone know of a guesthouse that can host 20+ people for a birthday party here in Windhoek. I've been searching tirelessly and to no avail. Please if you have any information on that it'll be highly appreciated!


r/Namibia 6d ago

Banks for home loans

6 Upvotes

Hello all, a bit of context: I'm a first-time home buyer who is looking for a small apartment/ townhouse to buy within the next 6-8 months. I am in my early 30s and have started putting together savings to be able to pay atleast 10-20% as a down payment on the purchase. I bank with FNB and have browsed a bit on their home loans section on their website as well as spoken to representatives.

I would like to know what bank/ banks would you recommend for home loans for first-time buyers. Who gives the best interest rates and has a supportive staff to assist first-time buyers?

Also, if anyone has any feedback on how to make the most of my savings while I wait to buy, I would appreciate that. I currently have a money market account with Ashburton, but if there's anything else I should look into, I'm all ears.


r/Namibia 6d ago

🇳🇦 x 🇨🇳

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29 Upvotes

Looking forward to meaningful investments.


r/Namibia 6d ago

Apartment in Ongwediva

3 Upvotes

Hi, I will be moving to Ongwediva for a year and would like to get an apartment. A one bedroom flat is preferred but I have no problem with a two bedroom one. If anyone happens to know an agent or are privy to any listings in the area, please share that information below.


r/Namibia 7d ago

Guesthouse

3 Upvotes

Hi, anyone that knows any affordable guesthouse in Windhoek?


r/Namibia 7d ago

Politics Two Theories, One Outcome

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18 Upvotes

Two Theories, One Outcome

Post 1994, South Africa didn't invent the hostility and violence towards the African "other", they inherited the logic and rewired its targets, from the white colonialist to foreign (African) nationals.

Isolation Theory: Traces this to apartheid, due to decades of exclusion. South Africa was a nation cut off from the continent and unprepared for the sudden changes that democracy would bring.

Scapegoat Theory: Unemployment, and deprivation misplaced onto a convenient, visible outsider. A target chosen not by chance but by the very exclusionary architecture that once organised apartheid itself.

This is not a immigration issue; its a structural issue being projected onto African. Which begs the question are we treating the symptoms or still protecting the very structure.??