Guyana

🇬🇾

Phone Code

+592

Capital

Georgetown

Population

800,000

Native Name

Guyana

Region

Americas

South America

Timezone

Guyana Time

UTC-04:00

Guyana is a South American country on the Caribbean coast, the only English-speaking nation on the continent. Known for vast rainforests (87% forest-covered), Kaieteur Falls (world's largest single-drop waterfall), diverse wildlife, and rich cultural diversity (Indo-Guyanese, Afro-Guyanese, Indigenous peoples). Georgetown, the capital, features colonial wooden architecture along tree-lined avenues. Visitors are drawn to Kaieteur Falls (five times higher than Niagara), Iwokrama Rainforest and Canopy Walkway, Rupununi savannas and ranches, Georgetown's colonial heritage, Orinduik Falls, giant otters and jaguars, birdwatching (over 800 species), and ecotourism lodges. Guyana offers pristine wilderness, adventure tourism, and authentic Caribbean-South American cultural blend.

Visa Requirements for Guyana

Guyana allows visa-free entry for many nationalities. Citizens of the United States, United Kingdom, most EU countries, Canada, and CARICOM (Caribbean Community) member states can enter visa-free for tourism or business for periods ranging from 30 to 90 days depending on nationality. Visitors must have a valid passport (minimum 6 months validity), proof of sufficient funds, and return or onward ticket. Citizens of countries requiring visas must apply in advance through Guyanese embassies or consulates. Guyana's visa policies are relatively liberal, particularly for Western travelers and Caribbean neighbors. English as the official language makes Guyana accessible for anglophone visitors.

Common Visa Types

Visa-Free Entry (30-90 Days)

30, 60, or 90 days depending on nationality; passport stamped at entry; passport valid 6 months required; proof of funds and return ticket needed.

For tourism or business for US, UK, EU, Canada, and many other nationalities.

CARICOM Visa-Free Entry

Up to 6 months typically; no visa required; freedom of movement within CARICOM; passport must be valid.

For citizens of Caribbean Community member states (Antigua & Barbuda, Bahamas, Barbados, Belize, Dominica, Grenada, Haiti, Jamaica, St. Kitts & Nevis, St. Lucia, St. Vincent, Suriname, Trinidad & Tobago) for any purpose.

Visitor Visa (Advance Application)

30-90 days; requires application form, passport, photos, proof of funds, return ticket, hotel bookings; processing times vary by embassy.

For nationalities requiring visas who must apply before travel through Guyanese embassy or consulate.

Visa Extension

Extensions possible through immigration office in Georgetown; apply before current visa expires; fees apply; proof of funds and accommodation required.

For visitors wishing to extend stay beyond initial visa-free period.

Important Travel Information

Passport must be valid at least 6 months. Proof of sufficient funds and return/onward ticket required at entry. Visa-free for US, UK, EU, Canadian and CARICOM nationals (30-90 days).

English is the official language — Guyana is the only English-speaking country in South America. Guyanese Creole is widely spoken alongside English.

Currency: Guyanese Dollar (GYD). USD widely accepted in Georgetown. No ATMs or card facilities in the interior — carry all cash needed for jungle and savannah trips before leaving Georgetown.

Travel Guide

Guyana is South America's best-kept wilderness secret — and the only English-speaking country on the continent. Eighty-seven percent of the land is under primary rainforest, the population is concentrated on a narrow coastal strip, and the interior is one of the least-visited expanses of tropical wilderness left on earth. Kaieteur Falls is the centrepiece: a single unbroken drop of 226 metres (five times the height of Niagara) into a rock amphitheatre ringed by untouched jungle, accessible only by charter flight from Georgetown or a five-day trek through the forest. You walk to the unguarded edge and look straight down into the gorge while golden rocket frogs — endemic to this one site — sit in bromeliads at your feet. The Iwokrama Rainforest Reserve covers 3,700 square kilometres of protected forest with a canopy walkway thirty metres above the floor, one of the highest wild jaguar densities anywhere, giant otters in the rivers, and over 800 bird species. The Rupununi savannahs in the south are a different landscape entirely — golden grasslands, cattle ranches, winding rivers with black caiman, and indigenous Wapishana and Macushi communities running community-owned eco-lodges where guests fish for peacock bass, join night-time caiman surveys, and sleep in hammocks under thatch. Georgetown, the capital, has the tallest wooden church in the world (St George's Cathedral), the chaotic Stabroek Market, El Dorado rum from the Demerara distillery, and an Indo-Guyanese street-food culture of roti, curry and pholourie that reflects the country's South Asian heritage. This is not polished tourism — it is expedition-grade travel where small planes, river boats, and dirt roads are the infrastructure, and that is exactly the point.

Ways to Experience This Destination

Kaieteur Falls and Orinduik Falls

Kaieteur Falls is the world's highest single-drop waterfall — 226 metres of unbroken free fall into a gorge surrounded by pristine rainforest, with no hotels, no barriers and no crowds. Access is by charter flight from Georgetown (one hour over unbroken jungle canopy) or a demanding five-day overland trek from Mahdia. On arrival, visitors walk to the unguarded cliff edge for a visceral encounter with the sheer scale. Golden rocket frogs (Colostethus beebei), endemic to this single location, live in the bromeliads at the rim. Orinduik Falls on the Brazilian border offers natural rock-terrace pools for swimming with views across the savannah.

Iwokrama Rainforest and Jaguar Country

The Iwokrama International Centre manages 3,700 square kilometres of primary rainforest as a model for sustainable tropical forest use. The Canopy Walkway, suspended thirty metres above the forest floor, offers eye-level views into the mid-canopy where toucans, macaws and howler monkeys move through the branches. Night walks reveal caimans, tapirs and tree frogs. Guyana harbours one of the highest densities of wild jaguars on earth, and Iwokrama is one of the few places where sightings are a realistic possibility. Atta Rainforest Lodge is the main accommodation, comfortable enough for the setting, deep in the forest. Access is by road from Georgetown (roughly ten hours) or domestic flight to Annai.

Rupununi Savannahs and Community Ecotourism

The Rupununi in southern Guyana is a landscape of golden grasslands, meandering rivers, cattle ranches and Amerindian communities that feels closer to the Venezuelan llanos than to the coastal Caribbean. Caiman House in Yupukari — a Macushi community research and tourism project — offers night-time capture-and-release surveys of black caiman. Surama Eco-Lodge (Macushi-owned) provides hiking, fishing and village life. Karanambu Lodge, the former giant otter rescue station of the late Diane McTurk, allows close-range observation of these charismatic animals. Peacock bass fishing in the Rupununi rivers is exceptional. The drive from Georgetown takes ten to fourteen hours on laterite roads, or a domestic flight to Lethem takes ninety minutes.

Georgetown: Rum, Street Food and Wooden Architecture

Georgetown surprises visitors who expect a jungle gateway and find a Caribbean capital with character. St George's Cathedral is the tallest freestanding wooden building in the world at 43 metres. Stabroek Market is a cacophony of produce, fish and household goods under a Victorian iron clock tower. The Seawall, stretching along the Atlantic, is where the city comes out at dusk. Demerara Distillers produces El Dorado rum — regularly rated among the finest in the world — and distillery visits include tastings of aged expressions. The street-food scene reflects Guyana's Indo-Caribbean heritage: roti stuffed with chicken or duck curry, Guyanese chow mein, pholourie (split-pea fritters), and cook-up rice (a one-pot staple of rice, coconut milk, beans and whatever protein is available).

Birdwatching: 800 Species in Pristine Habitat

Guyana is a world-class birdwatching destination with over 800 recorded species across rainforest, savannah, montane and coastal habitats. The Harpy Eagle — the most powerful raptor in the Americas — nests in the Iwokrama and Kanuku Mountains. The Guianan Cock-of-the-Rock performs at dawn leks in forest clearings. Scarlet macaws, channel-billed toucans, and the Capuchinbird are regular sightings. The Rupununi savannahs add jabiru storks, sun bitterns and red-bellied macaws. Specialist birding guides operate out of Georgetown, with itineraries combining Iwokrama, the Rupununi and the coastal mangroves for maximum species diversity.

Money & Currency

Money & Currency
$

Guyanese Dollar (GYD)

Currency code: GYD

Practical Money Tips

Guyanese Dollar (GYD) — USD widely accepted in Georgetown; exchange on arrival

Guyana uses the Guyanese Dollar (GYD), currently at approximately 209–215 GYD per USD. USD is the de facto second currency and is widely accepted in Georgetown hotels, tour operators, and upmarket restaurants — making USD cash the most practical foreign currency to bring. GBP and EUR can be exchanged at cambios (licensed exchange bureaux) on Robb Street and Camp Street in Georgetown, and at the Cheddi Jagan International Airport. Bank of Nova Scotia, Republic Bank, and Citizens Bank also exchange major foreign currencies. Outside Georgetown — in Linden, New Amsterdam, the Rupununi savannah, and remote eco-lodges — GYD cash is the only practical currency, and USD may not always be accepted.

ATMs in Georgetown — Bank of Nova Scotia and Republic Bank; cash-only outside the capital

Georgetown has ATMs at Bank of Nova Scotia (Robb Street), Republic Bank (Water Street), Citizens Bank, and Demerara Bank. International Visa and Mastercard cards generally work at these ATMs. The Guyanese Dollar has a relatively low denomination ceiling — expect to withdraw multiple times for larger amounts, as ATMs may dispense in smaller bills. Outside Georgetown — in the interior (Lethem, Annai, Karanambu, Iwokrama), at Kaieteur Falls access points, and in Amerindian villages — there are no ATMs and no card facilities. For any interior or jungle trip (Rupununi, Iwokrama Rainforest), carry all GYD or USD cash needed for the entire stay.

No Apple Pay or Google Pay — limited card acceptance in Georgetown; cash-only in the interior

Apple Pay and Google Pay do not function in Guyana. Card acceptance is limited even in Georgetown — major hotels and a handful of upmarket restaurants accept Visa and Mastercard, but most businesses, local restaurants, markets (Stabroek Market, Bourda Market), and transportation are cash-only. In the Guyanese interior (Kaieteur Falls, Rupununi, Iwokrama), cash is the only payment method — eco-lodges typically accept USD or GYD cash. Carry a good supply of GYD in small denominations for tipping, food stalls, and local transport (minibuses from the seawall area, taxis). USD is useful as a supplementary currency for negotiating with tour operators and lodges.

Affordable by Caribbean standards — oil boom driving price rises in Georgetown

Guyana has historically been one of South America's most affordable English-speaking destinations. Local meal at a cookshop: GYD 800–1,500 (USD 3.80–7). Mid-range restaurant in Georgetown: USD 15–30 per person. Budget guesthouse: USD 30–60/night. Mid-range hotel in Georgetown: USD 80–150/night. Minibus across Georgetown: GYD 200–400. Domestic flight Georgetown–Lethem (Rupununi gateway): USD 100–180. Kaieteur Falls day trip from Georgetown: USD 150–250. Ecotourism package rates have risen significantly since Guyana's massive offshore oil discovery in 2015 — Georgetown is becoming noticeably more expensive, while the interior remains the best value.

Note: Always check current exchange rates before traveling. Currency exchange is available at airports, banks, and authorized money changers.

Common Money Questions

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