Yellow fever and vaccinations
Burundi requires proof of yellow fever vaccination for entry, and immigration officers do check the certificate on arrival — carry the yellow card (the International Certificate of Vaccination) alongside your passport. Yellow fever vaccine must be given at least ten days before travel to be valid, so do not leave it to the last minute. If you have a genuine medical reason you cannot be vaccinated, get a properly documented exemption from a travel clinic in advance, and understand you may still face questions at the border.
Beyond yellow fever, a travel-health professional will typically review your routine vaccinations and recommend several others for this region. Book that appointment six to eight weeks before departure — some courses take time. The table below lists what is commonly discussed for Burundi; your own advice depends on your health, age, itinerary and how long you'll stay.
| Vaccine | Why it's usually considered |
|---|---|
| Yellow fever | Required for entry; certificate checked on arrival |
| Routine (MMR, tetanus/diphtheria, polio) | Ensure these are up to date before any trip |
| Hepatitis A | Spread via contaminated food and water — common recommendation |
| Hepatitis B | Blood/bodily-fluid exposure; often advised for longer stays |
| Typhoid | Food and waterborne; worth considering here |
| Rabies | Consider it — dogs and animals present, and post-exposure care is limited |
| Cholera / meningitis | Discussed depending on season, outbreaks and itinerary |
Treat this list as a conversation starter with a clinician, not a prescription. Outbreak situations change, so a good travel clinic will also check the latest public-health notices for Burundi before advising you.
Malaria — a year-round risk
Bujumbura sits at low altitude beside Lake Tanganyika, which makes malaria a real, year-round concern rather than a seasonal one. This is not a place to be casual about it. Standard advice has two pillars: take antimalarial prophylaxis as prescribed by your doctor, and stop the mosquitoes biting in the first place. No prophylaxis is 100% effective, so bite prevention genuinely matters.
For bite prevention: use a repellent with DEET or an equivalent proven active ingredient, cover up at dusk and after dark when the malaria mosquito is most active, sleep under a good insecticide-treated net or in a properly screened, air-conditioned room, and consider treating clothing. Malaria symptoms — fever, chills, headache, body aches — can appear from a week after exposure up to months after you return home. If you develop a fever during or after your trip, seek medical help urgently and tell the doctor you were in a malaria zone. It is a medical emergency, not something to sleep off.
Lake Tanganyika, bilharzia and water safety
Lake Tanganyika is the jewel of Bujumbura and its beaches are a highlight — but the freshwater carries a real risk of bilharzia (schistosomiasis), a parasitic infection caught from contact with water where the parasite and its host snails are present. You cannot see whether water is infected. Risk varies by spot and is generally lower in deeper, open, moving water away from reedy shallows and slow shorelines, but no natural freshwater in the region can be called guaranteed safe. Many visitors do swim at the popular beaches; if you choose to, understand the risk, dry off promptly and vigorously with a towel, and it is sensible to have a doctor test and, if needed, treat you for bilharzia a few weeks after freshwater contact — the treatment is simple and effective. Read our notes on Lake Tanganyika beaches and on Saga Beach for how people actually use the lakeshore, and make your own informed call.
For drinking water, keep it simple: do not drink the tap water. Stick to sealed bottled water (check the seal is intact) or water you have boiled or properly filtered and treated. Use safe water for brushing your teeth too, avoid ice unless you know it's made from treated water, and be wary of drinks diluted with tap water.
Food hygiene and medical care
Travellers' diarrhoea is the most common thing to spoil a trip. Reduce the odds with well-worn advice: eat food that is freshly cooked and served hot, peel fruit yourself, be cautious with salads and raw vegetables washed in tap water, choose busy places with high turnover, and wash or sanitise your hands before eating. Bring a small kit — oral rehydration salts, an anti-diarrhoeal, and any personal medication in its original packaging with a copy of the prescription, since pharmacy stock here is unreliable.
Be realistic about medical care. Facilities in Bujumbura are limited, specialist care and reliable diagnostics are scarce, and for anything serious — a major injury, complicated illness, or surgery — the standard plan is medical evacuation, usually to Nairobi. That makes comprehensive travel insurance with guaranteed medical evacuation cover essential, not optional. Check the policy explicitly covers evacuation from Burundi and read the small print on what triggers it. Carry the insurer's 24-hour assistance number, keep it somewhere you can reach it fast, and note your blood type and any allergies.
This page is general information, not medical advice. See a travel-health clinic or your doctor six to eight weeks before you travel for vaccinations and antimalarials tailored to you, and check the latest official health notices for Burundi, which change with outbreaks and seasons. Take out travel insurance that explicitly covers emergency medical evacuation. If you feel unwell — especially with a fever — during or after your trip, seek medical care promptly and mention you were in a malaria area.
Health and safety overlap: read our Bujumbura safety guide for the wider picture on staying out of trouble, and sort your entry paperwork — including that all-important yellow fever certificate — via the Burundi visa guide before you go.