“Travel is not about the miles you cover — it’s about the kitchens you sit in, the stories you are told, and the morning sounds that make a place real.”
The Most Honest Way to Travel
A homestay is exactly what it sounds like: you stay in someone’s home. Not an Airbnb. Not a boutique guesthouse with exposed brick and a carefully curated breakfast menu. A real family home — with the sounds of children, the smell of amiwo on the stove, the call to prayer at dawn, the neighbour’s goat, and the absolute, unhurried generosity of Beninese hospitality.
Visit Benin Republic’s Homestay Programme connects travellers with 48 verified host families across 8 regions — from Cotonou’s vibrant urban neighbourhoods to the fishing villages of Grand Popo, the heritage streets of Ouidah, and the farming communities of the Abomey Plateau. Every family is vetted, briefed, and supported. Every guest is welcomed as family.
Real Life, Shared With You
A Benin Republic homestay is not a performance of local culture for tourist consumption. It is an invitation into daily life. Here is what that genuinely looks like.
Every Meal is a Story
You will eat what the family eats. Amiwo, akpan, grilled tilapia with gari, peanut soup over yam, fried plantain at midnight. You may be invited to help cook. You will always be given the best portion.
Dawn Begins Early
Fishing families leave before 4am. Market families are up at 5. In Benin, the most important hours happen before the heat arrives. You are welcome to come, or to sleep — both are respected.
Children Will Adopt You
In Beninese family culture, a guest is everyone’s guest. The children will be fascinated by you, want to show you everything, teach you Fon words, and will be deeply offended if you do not admire their football skills.
Ceremonies Find You
Benin is a country of living ceremony. A funeral procession may pass. A Voodoo offering may be left at the crossroads. A naming ceremony may be happening three doors away. Your host family will explain everything — or simply include you.
Comfortable, Clean, Simple
Guest rooms in our vetted programme are clean, private, and ventilated. All have mosquito nets and access to a bathroom. Some have air conditioning. None have room service — but all have hosts who will bring you water before you think to ask.
Language is No Barrier
Most hosts speak French and basic English. All speak warmth. Visit Benin Republic provides every guest with a phrasebook of essential Fon expressions — and the guarantee that any awkward silence will be filled with laughter within seconds.
Wi-Fi is Inconsistent (On Purpose)
Most homestay properties have limited internet. We consider this a feature. The conversations you have instead with your host family, at the market, over shared cooking are the reason you came to Benin in the first place.

Choose Your Stay
All packages include vetted host family placement, pre-arrival briefing, SK-Pay wallet, VBR support line, and a welcome orientation in your host community. Prices available on request — all revenue goes directly to host families.
City Immersion
The perfect introduction — a long weekend in Cotonou or Ouidah with a local family, before the tourist trail finds its way here.
- 3 nights with a vetted urban host family (Cotonou or Ouidah)
- All meals with the family — breakfast, lunch, dinner
- Guided morning market walk with your host
- One cultural excursion (Ganvié, Ouidah Heritage Trail, or Abomey)
- 24-hour VBR guest support line
Village Life
A week in a rural or coastal community, farming, fishing, weaving, and living at the pace of a Beninese family that has been here for centuries.
- 7 nights with a rural host family (Grand Popo, Abomey Plateau, or Kétou region)
- Full board — all meals prepared by and with your host family
- Participation in daily family activities: fishing, farming, or craft production
- Two guided cultural excursions chosen by your host
- Community welcome ceremony on arrival
- Optional: one half-day cooking masterclass
Multi-Region Immersion
Three families. Three regions. Three completely different faces of Benin — from the urban energy of Cotonou to the royal heritage of Abomey to the Atlantic edge of Grand Popo.
- 10 nights across 3 host families in 3 regions
- Full board at each home — different cuisine, different culture each stop
- Private transport between host families arranged by VBR
- Introduction to Vodun cultural practice (with elder permission)
- Private artisan workshop at Abomey (bronze casting or appliqué)
- Dawn fishing trip at Grand Popo with host family
- KipFashion curated handcraft gift sourced during your stay
- Full VBR concierge support throughout
Your Own Benin
Tell us who you are, what you want to understand, and how long you have. We will match you with the exact right family or families and design the stay around you.
Everything else built around your specific intentions
Custom duration from 2 nights to 3 months
Personality-matched host family placement
Language learning add-on (Fon or Yoruba basics with a tutor)
Volunteer integration option schools, health clinics,
Research and academic stays (anthropology, religious studies, public health)
Solo traveller, couple, family, or group configurations

You Will Eat Extraordinarily Well
Beninese home cooking is one of West Africa’s best-kept secrets. Your host family will feed you from a repertoire that no restaurant in Cotonou can replicate — because these are recipes that live in hands, not menus. Here is what may appear on your table:
Amiwo
Slow-cooked cornmeal with tomato, palm oil, and smoked fish — the foundational dish of Fon home cooking. Rich, complex, and deeply comforting.
Grilled Atlantic Tilapia
At Grand Popo, your host family may grill the fish they pulled from the ocean that morning. With gari and sliced tomatoes. There is nothing simpler or more perfect.
Akpan & Ogi
Fermented corn porridge, served warm or cold, sweet or savoury. The breakfast of Benin. You will miss it when you go home and you will not be able to explain why to anyone.
Peanut & Palm Soup
The Sunday dish. Made for hours. Served with pounded yam. This is the meal your host will make when they want you to understand that you are truly welcome.
Everything You Need to Know
What to Bring
- Light, modest clothingLong trousers and covered shoulders are respected in most communities, particularly in rural areas and heritage districts.
- A small gift for the familyNothing large or expensive — tea, good coffee, a small book, or sweets for the children. The gesture matters far more than the gift.
- Mosquito repellent & netAll vetted rooms include mosquito nets. Bring your own repellent. Malaria prophylaxis is strongly recommended — discuss with your GP.
- Your SK-Pay wallet, loadedPre-load your CFA wallet before departure. Having local currency readily available — without cash handling — makes daily life seamless.
- Yellow fever certificateMandatory for entry into Benin Republic. Ensure your vaccination is up to date at least 10 days before travel.
Guest Etiquette
- Greet with both handsIn Fon culture, greeting is an act of respect. Take time with it. Ask how the family is, how the children are. Rushing past a greeting is considered rude.
- Accept food when offeredRefusing food is a significant act in Beninese hospitality. If you have dietary restrictions, communicate them through VBR before arrival — not at the table.
- Ask before photographingParticularly important at ceremonies, in markets, and with elders. Your host family will guide you. When in doubt, put the camera away and simply be present.
- Participate, don’t observeThe highest compliment you can pay a Beninese host is to try. Try the cooking, the weaving, the farming, the drumming. You will be bad at it. You will be warmly encouraged regardless.
- Learn three words of FonMǐ dó wǔ jí (we are one), Àbǒ (welcome), Àwǎn (thank you). Three words, and you will have your host family’s hearts for the entire stay.
Your Group’s African Journey Starts Here
Send us your group size, travel dates, and interests. Our team will design a bespoke Benin Republic experience that your group will talk about for decades.

