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Visit Rwanda

Customs, etiquette and tipping in Rwanda — the 2026 guide

Tipping percentages by setting, the things to avoid (plastic bags, drone use without permits, military photography), Umuganda, public-conduct expectations, and the small social cues that make a visiting traveller's days run smoothly in Rwanda.

Ineza · Reporter on visiting Rwanda — first trips, longer stays, where to eat.Published 6 min read
Le Spa Kigali in Gisimenti — a hospitality setting where understanding tipping norms makes the visit smoother
Photo via Le Spa Kigali

Rwanda's social code is more formal than most travellers expect, gentler than the international-business stereotype suggests, and built on a real culture of mutual respect that's worth respecting in turn. The list below is the practical 2026 guide — tipping, dress, public conduct, and the small social cues that make the trip easier.

Tipping — the working numbers

  • Restaurants: 5-10% is generous. Most mid-tier and higher restaurants already add 10% service charge to the bill — check first. If service charge is included, an extra 1,000-2,000 RWF for exceptional service is enough.
  • Hotels: USD 1-2 per bag for porters. USD 2-5 per day for housekeeping (left on the pillow at the end of the stay). USD 5-10 for concierge who arranged things for you.
  • Tour guides / safari drivers: USD 10-20 per day per traveller for a multi-day trip. For gorilla trekking, USD 10-15 per traveller for the guide team is standard.
  • Moto-taxis: Round up to the nearest 500 RWF if pleased.
  • Move app rides: No tipping expected; app fare is complete.
  • Salon and spa: 1,000-3,000 RWF for the senior stylist or therapist is generous.

Don't over-tip. Excessive tipping (US-style 20%+) can read as condescending in some contexts. Match the local norm.

Dress code

  • Kigali generally: Smart-casual works for most settings. Jeans-and-shirt acceptable at most restaurants and bars. Shorts and flip-flops work at cafés and casual venues.
  • Business meetings: More formal than American startup culture; less formal than London. Open-neck shirts, blazers, smart dresses appropriate. Avoid loud-pattern shirts.
  • Religious sites and memorials: Cover shoulders and knees. Kigali Genocide Memorial — sombre attire, no shorts, no t-shirts with slogans.
  • Volcanoes National Park / gorilla trek: Hiking gear (long trousers, long-sleeved shirt, sturdy boots). Briefing and lodge wear casual.
  • Beach / Lake Kivu: Swimwear at the lakeside; cover up when walking around hotel/town areas.
  • Camouflage: Restricted to military and security personnel. Don't bring camo clothing.

Public conduct

  1. Plastic bags are banned. Customs will confiscate them at the airport. Use cloth bags or paper bags. This is universal and strictly enforced.
  2. Don't photograph military, police, airports or government buildings. Don't photograph people without permission, especially in markets or villages.
  3. Drone use requires permits from the Rwanda Civil Aviation Authority. Apply weeks ahead if you plan aerial photography.
  4. Avoid public arguments and loud voices. Rwandan social norms favour calm and de-escalation. Even animated business discussions stay below American conversation volumes.
  5. Respect Kigali's cleanliness. Don't litter — this is taken seriously. Carry small bags for any waste until you find a bin.
  6. Greet before transacting. Hello before how much?, even at moto-taxi stops.

Umuganda — last Saturday of every month

Umuganda is Rwanda's mandatory community work morning, held on the last Saturday of every month between 8 AM and 11 AM. Most businesses close during this window, traffic is light, and the city pauses. As a visitor you're not expected to participate but you should plan around it — your hotel will likely run a reduced schedule, taxis are scarce, and many shops are closed until 11 AM. Worth knowing if your visit overlaps.

Religion and observance

Rwanda is majority Christian (Catholic and Protestant) with a significant Muslim minority. Friday prayers happen at mosques across Kigali; Sunday church attendance is widespread. Most businesses operate normal Sunday hours but salons and some retail close. The Muslim community is concentrated around Nyamirambo; the area has multiple mosques and an active Friday prayer schedule.

Greetings and handshakes

  • Handshakes are standard for first meetings. Firm but not aggressive.
  • Two-hand handshake (right hand offered with left hand supporting right elbow or wrist) shows additional respect — useful for older Rwandans or formal business contexts.
  • Eye contact during greetings is appreciated but sustained eye contact during conversation isn't expected — looking away periodically is normal.
  • Hugging isn't common in initial meetings; reserved for close relationships.
  • Always greet before requesting. Muraho before how much? — even with strangers.

Things visitors get wrong

  1. Treating Rwanda like a generic African destination. Each country in the region has its own conventions; what works in Kenya or Tanzania doesn't all apply. Kigali is meaningfully more formal and quieter than Nairobi.
  2. Over-tipping. Most service contexts already include 10% service charge. Don't double-tip.
  3. Photographing without permission. Especially at markets or with children. Ask first.
  4. Loud public conversations. Particularly at restaurants and cafés. The ambient volume in Kigali is meaningfully quieter than American or West African cities.
  5. Carrying alcohol into mosques or government buildings. Doesn't come up often but worth knowing.

Related: Rwanda visa types in 2026, Safety in Rwanda, Language in Rwanda. Browse every hotel on the directory.

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Customs, etiquette and tipping in Rwanda — the 2026 guide · Kisimenti Times