Afghanistan
Phone Code
+93
Capital
Kabul
Population
41 Million
Native Name
افغانستان
Region
Asia
Southern Asia
Timezone
Afghanistan Time
UTC+04:30
On This Page
Afghanistan sits at the heart of Central and South Asia, a landlocked country whose mountains, valleys and ancient cities have absorbed Buddhist, Greek, Persian, Mughal and Islamic civilisations across two and a half millennia. The capital Kabul, the Timurid showpiece of Herat, the Silk Road oasis of Mazar-i-Sharif and the Bamiyan valley sit at the centre of this layered history. Travel access has been highly restricted since 2021; most foreign governments currently advise against visiting, and consular services across the region remain limited.
Visa Requirements for Afghanistan
All foreign nationals require a visa to enter Afghanistan. Procedures and consular availability have been significantly disrupted since 2021. Where Afghan diplomatic missions abroad still process applications, the standard documents are a passport with at least six months' validity, passport-style photographs, completed application forms and a sponsoring letter — from a host organisation, business partner, NGO or government body. Tourist visas are very rarely issued; the great majority of permits go to humanitarian workers, journalists, diplomats and essential business travellers. Always confirm current procedures directly with the nearest Afghan diplomatic mission and consult your own government's travel advisory before making any plans.
Common Visa Types
Business Visa
For trade, infrastructure and reconstruction projects with sponsorship from an Afghan ministry, state-owned enterprise or registered company.
Humanitarian Visa
For aid workers affiliated with the United Nations, ICRC, registered international NGOs and accredited medical or relief organisations operating in Afghanistan.
Diplomatic / Official Visa
For accredited government officials, diplomatic staff and representatives of intergovernmental bodies on official duty.
Practical Travel Information
Travel Guide
Independent tourism to Afghanistan is essentially closed at present, and most Western governments advise against all travel. Yet Afghanistan's heritage continues to matter to a global readership: archaeologists, historians, returning members of the Afghan diaspora, humanitarian and diplomatic personnel, journalists, and the wider community of Silk Road and Central Asia enthusiasts. The country holds two UNESCO World Heritage sites — the cultural landscape and archaeological remains of the Bamiyan Valley, and the Minaret and archaeological remains of Jam — alongside the turquoise lakes of Band-e-Amir National Park, the Timurid monuments of Herat, the Wakhan Corridor that Marco Polo crossed in 1273, and Kabul's Babur Gardens and National Museum. For those whose work or family ties make travel necessary, the practical realities are that visa categories are limited largely to business, humanitarian and diplomatic permits, and that arrangements for accommodation, transport and insurance must be made through specialist providers familiar with the current situation.
Ways to Experience This Destination
Band-e-Amir, in the Hazarajat highlands at 2,900 metres, became Afghanistan's first national park in 2009. Six natural lakes — separated by travertine dams that the high carbonate content of the water has slowly built up over millennia — sit one above the other, their colour ranging from milky aquamarine to deep turquoise against red sandstone cliffs. Long considered one of the most singular natural panoramas in Central Asia, Band-e-Amir is one of the great destinations whose accessibility the political situation has put on hold.
The Bamiyan Valley (UNESCO World Heritage) was a major centre of Buddhist culture along the Silk Road for centuries. The two giant Buddhas — 55 and 38 metres tall, carved into sandstone cliffs in the sixth century — were destroyed in 2001; their empty niches, the surrounding monks' caves still bearing fragments of mural painting, and the ruined citadel of Shahr-e-Gholghola (the City of Screams, sacked by Genghis Khan in 1221) tell more than 1,500 years of layered history through Buddhism, Islam and the Mongol invasions.
The Minaret of Jam (UNESCO World Heritage) rises 65 metres from the floor of a remote gorge at the confluence of the Hari Rud and Jam rivers, built around 1190 by Sultan Ghiyath al-Din of the Ghurids. The intricate terracotta and turquoise glazed-tile inscriptions covering its surface — Quranic verses and geometric patterns — are considered a masterpiece of medieval Islamic architecture. Its inaccessibility, reachable only by mule track until very recently, has paradoxically helped preserve it.
Herat was one of the high points of the Islamic world in the fifteenth century, when Timurid rulers like Husain Bayqara and the poet Jami made it a centre of Persian art, calligraphy and miniature painting. The Friday Mosque (Masjid-e Jami) with its blue-tiled iwans, the Citadel of Alexander, and the surviving Mussallah minarets bear witness to that golden era. Until 2021, the old city, with its bazaars, caravanserais and traditional copper workshops, remained one of the most evocative urban landscapes in Central Asia.
The Wakhan Corridor — Afghanistan's narrow finger between Tajikistan and Pakistan — was Marco Polo's overland route into China in the late thirteenth century, and remained until recently one of Asia's most demanding trekking destinations. Visiting the semi-nomadic Kyrgyz communities of the High Pamir at 4,000 metres, glimpsing Marco Polo sheep (Ovis ammon polii) — whose horns are the largest of any wild sheep — and crossing the Hindu Kush passes was an experience of geographical and cultural intensity rarely matched anywhere on earth.
Kabul, at 1,800 metres and ringed by mountains, carries the layered history of its many rulers. The Babur Gardens (Bagh-e Babur) — laid out by the Mughal founder Babur in the early sixteenth century and his burial place — were carefully restored before 2021 and remain a defining urban green space. The National Museum of Afghanistan, despite the heavy losses of decades of conflict, still preserves treasures of the Bagram ivories and Greco-Bactrian coin collections that bear witness to the country's extraordinary historical crossroads.
Money & Currency
Afghan Afghani (AFN)
Currency code: AFN
Practical Money Tips
USD Is the Practical Working Currency — Sarafi Money Changers Set the Rate
The Afghan Afghani (AFN) is the official currency, but US dollars circulate alongside it across Kabul, Herat and Mazar-i-Sharif and are the practical working currency for foreign visitors. Money changers — sarafi — operate in the bazaars, the long-established hub being Sarai Shahzada in central Kabul, where rates are competitive and posted openly. Bring crisp, post-2009-series US dollar bills (the modern security-thread design); torn, marked or older notes are routinely refused or discounted. Always count cash before leaving the counter and keep a record of the day's rate.
ATMs Are Unreliable — Bring All the Cash You Need
International ATM networks barely function in Afghanistan. The few ATMs that exist (chiefly in Kabul, attached to bank branches such as Azizi Bank, Kabul Bank and Afghan United Bank) have been intermittent since 2021 and often fail to read foreign cards or hold no cash. Plan to bring the entire budget of your stay in US-dollar cash; do not rely on withdrawals on the ground. Carry a mix of denominations (USD 1, 5, 20, 50, 100) so you can pay small amounts without forcing change.
Cards Are Not Accepted — Cash Is the Only Reliable Method
Visa, Mastercard, Apple Pay, Google Pay and contactless terminals are essentially absent across Afghanistan. International sanctions and the disruption of correspondent banking have left the few hotels with historical card terminals largely offline. Cash in US dollars and Afghani is the only reliable payment method for hotels, transport, restaurants and supplies. The small handful of upscale Kabul hotels that historically accepted cards should not be relied on.
Local Costs Are Low, but Logistics and Security Are Where the Budget Goes
Day-to-day prices are modest: a meal at a local kebab restaurant costs USD 3–6, a long-distance taxi within Kabul USD 5–10, a guesthouse room USD 15–40. The budget instead goes on what the situation requires — vetted local fixers and drivers, satellite-phone rentals, specialist insurance, accommodation in pre-approved compounds. Carry small denomination Afghani notes (10, 50, 100 AFN) for tea, bread, taxis and bazaar purchases; tipping 10% is normal at restaurants where staff serve you.
Note: Always check current exchange rates before traveling. Currency exchange is available at airports, banks, and authorized money changers.
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