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Guides/Madagascar/Avenue of the Baobabs

Avenue of the Baobabs Safari Guide

Madagascar's most iconic landscape — a row of 800-year-old Grandidier's baobabs lining a red dirt road, creating one of Africa's most photographed scenes at sunset.

In This Guide

Top HighlightsBest Time to VisitBudget GuideGetting There

Top Highlights

Iconic baobab-lined dirt road
800-year-old Grandidier's baobabs
Spectacular sunrise and sunset photography
Baobab Amoureux (entwined lovers)
Gateway to western Madagascar

Best Time to Visit Avenue of the Baobabs

Year-round, though the dry season (April-October) offers the best road conditions and clearest skies. Sunset is the most popular time for photography when the trees are silhouetted against dramatic western skies.

Avenue of the Baobabs Safari Budget Guide

No entry fee (community donations appreciated). Lodges in nearby Morondava from $20-100/night. Best combined with a visit to Tsingy de Bemaraha (2 days from Morondava). Photography guides $10-20.

Getting to Avenue of the Baobabs

Located 20km north of Morondava on the west coast. Morondava is reached by daily flights from Antananarivo (1 hour) or by road (10-12 hours). The avenue is on the road to Tsingy de Bemaraha.

The Avenue of the Baobabs is Madagascar's most recognizable image — a stretch of red dirt road flanked by two dozen towering Grandidier's baobabs, their massive trunks and umbrella canopies creating a cathedral-like corridor through the flat western landscape. These are among the world's largest and oldest baobab trees, some reaching 30 metres tall and estimated at over 800 years old.

At sunset, when the baobabs are silhouetted against the blazing Malagasy sky, the avenue becomes one of the most photographed natural scenes in Africa. The trees are remnants of a dense tropical forest that once covered the area — cleared for agriculture, only the baobabs were spared, standing as monuments to a vanished ecosystem.

Nearby, the Baobab Amoureux (Lovers' Baobab) features two massive trunks spiralling around each other in an embrace that has become a symbol of enduring love. The avenue serves as the gateway to western Madagascar and the starting point for expeditions to the Tsingy de Bemaraha.

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