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Plug types, electricity and adapters for Rwanda — the 2026 guide

Type C and Type J sockets, 230V, 50Hz. What adapter you need based on where you're flying from, the reliability of the power supply, and the practical things to know about chargers, batteries and the few electrical surprises in Rwanda.

Ineza · Reporter on visiting Rwanda — first trips, longer stays, where to eat.Published 5 min read
Nappyhood Salon and Boutique in Nyabugogo — a typical Kigali establishment where multiple international chargers plug into the same outlet types daily
Photo via Nappyhood Salon

Rwanda uses two plug types — Type C (the round two-pin European socket) and Type J (the three-pin Swiss-style socket). Voltage is 230V at 50Hz, the standard across most of Europe and much of Africa. The practical question for visitors is whether your chargers fit; the working answer depends on where you're flying from.

What you'll find in Rwandan sockets

  • Type C (two round pins, 4mm spacing): The most common across Kigali. European travellers from Belgium, France, Germany, Netherlands, Italy, Spain plug in directly.
  • Type J (three pins in a triangular pattern, Swiss style): Less common but present at newer buildings, hotels and some apartments. Type C plugs fit into Type J sockets.
  • Voltage: 230 V
  • Frequency: 50 Hz

Do you need an adapter? — by country

  • UK (Type G): Yes. Your three-rectangular-pin plugs don't fit. Bring a UK-to-EU adapter.
  • US / Canada (Type A/B): Yes. Flat-blade plugs don't fit. Universal travel adapter or US-to-EU.
  • Australia / New Zealand (Type I): Yes. Angled-blade plugs don't fit.
  • India (Type C/D/M): Type C plugs work directly. Type D and M need adapters.
  • China (Type A/C/I): Type C plugs work; A and I need adapters.
  • Brazil (Type N): Type N plugs are similar to Type C but slightly thicker pins. Sometimes work, sometimes don't. Bring an adapter.
  • South Africa (Type M): Yes. South African three-large-round-pin plugs don't fit. Bring SA-to-EU.
  • EU countries / France / Germany / Belgium / Netherlands / Spain / Italy (Type C/E/F): No adapter needed.
  • Switzerland / Liechtenstein (Type J): No adapter needed — Type J is native here.

Will your devices work at 230V?

Most modern electronics (phone chargers, laptop chargers, camera chargers) are dual-voltage — they accept anywhere from 100V to 240V. Check the small print on the charger: if it says Input: 100-240V, you're fine. If it says Input: 110V (older or some North American appliances), you'll need a voltage converter — but for laptops, phones and cameras this is almost never the case in 2026.

Hair dryers and curling irons from North America often have a 120V only rating. Bring a dual-voltage travel hair dryer or buy a 230V one — don't try to use a 120V-only appliance through a simple adapter; it will fail or burn out.

Power supply reliability

  • Kigali: Power supply is among the most-reliable in the region. Outages happen — typically once every few weeks, briefly. International-tier hotels run automatic backup generators; you won't notice an outage at the Radisson Blu, Marriott or Serena.
  • Volcanoes lodges: Most run on a combination of grid and generator. Wi-Fi may dip during a brief outage but room power generally holds.
  • Akagera / safari camps: Some lodges run on solar-and-generator hybrid systems. Charging time may be limited — check at the lodge.
  • Lake Kivu hotels: Mostly grid-connected with backup generators. Reliable for charging.

Where to buy adapters in Kigali

If you arrive without an adapter, you can buy one at Kigali International Airport (Type-to-EU adapters, USD 5-15), at Simba Supermarket and most hardware shops in Kisimenti (Silverback Mall has a few electronics shops), or at the international-tier hotel reception (some keep spares). Don't rely on the hotel having one for you — bring your own.

Other electrical practicalities

  • USB charging is universal. Most newer hotel rooms have USB ports on bedside tables and desks. Your devices probably charge via USB-C; bring a high-watt USB-C charger and you can skip much of the adapter problem.
  • Power banks (10,000-20,000 mAh) are worth bringing for long safari or trek days when charging at the lodge isn't always available mid-day.
  • Solar chargers work well in Rwanda's strong equatorial light — useful for safari trips, optional for city trips.
  • Surge protection: Most hotel outlets are fine but consider a simple surge protector for laptops if you're sensitive about it.

Related: Rwanda visa types in 2026, What to pack for a Rwanda trip, SIM cards and mobile data. Browse every hotel on the directory.

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Plug types, electricity and adapters for Rwanda — the 2026 guide · Kisimenti Times