Karas, Namibia

State guide with cities, regions, and key information.

Introduction
Karas (also spelled //Karas) is Namibia's southernmost region — a vast, dry, scenic stretch reaching from the Atlantic coast at Lüderitz and Oranjemund to the South African border on the Orange River, and from the Hardap regional boundary in the north to the Atlantic and the Kalahari fringe in the south. The regional capital is Keetmanshoop, the inland junction town on the B1 and B4. The region is sparsely populated (≈ 80 000 people across 161 000 km², making it the country's most thinly settled region by far) but holds two of Namibia's defining tourist destinations: the Fish River Canyon (Namibia's most famous southern landmark) in the south-east, and Lüderitz with the Kolmanskop ghost town on the Atlantic coast in the west. Between them lies the Aus / Klein-Aus Vista corridor with the Wild Horses of the Namib, the Quiver Tree Forest near Keetmanshoop, the Brukkaros volcano, and the Tsau //Khaeb (Sperrgebiet) National Park covering the entire restricted coastal strip. Most Namibian self-drive itineraries crossing the south of the country traverse Karas — entering from Hardap region in the north, stopping at the Quiver Tree Forest and Keetmanshoop, descending to the Fish River Canyon and Ai-Ais Hot Springs in the south, then either crossing to South Africa at Noordoewer or heading west to Lüderitz via Aus. The B1 runs the length of the region north-south, the B4 turns west from Keetmanshoop to Lüderitz, and the M27 / D707 give southern access to Fish River Canyon. Border crossings to South Africa are at Noordoewer (the busiest), Ariamsvlei (eastern, lower-volume) and Oranjemund (south-west, primarily for diamond-area access).

Discover Karas

The Fish River Canyon is the largest tourist draw in southern Namibia and one of the country's signature landscapes. Roughly 160 kilometres long, up to 27 km wide and 550 m deep, it is widely cited as the second-largest canyon in the world after the Grand Canyon — though comparisons vary by measurement method. The main viewpoint at Hobas (the northern entrance, ≈ 80 km west of the Hobas–Ai-Ais junction on the C12) opens to a sweeping panorama of the canyon's classic horseshoe bend; secondary viewpoints (the Main Viewpoint, the Sulphur Springs Viewpoint and the Palm Springs Viewpoint) line the rim at 1- to 5-kilometre intervals on the gravel rim road. Hobas Camp (NWR-operated) offers campsites and chalets at the northern entrance, with cooking facilities, a small shop and the canyon-rim trailhead. Ai-Ais Hot Springs Resort (NWR-operated) at the canyon's southern end has hot sulphur baths (the name 'Ai-Ais' means 'burning water' in the local Khoekhoegowab), chalets, campsites and the southern terminus of the long-distance hike. The 86-km Fish River Canyon Hiking Trail — one of the more demanding multi-day hikes in southern Africa — runs from Hobas to Ai-Ais over 5 days, open only from mid-April to mid-September (closed in summer due to flash-flood and heat risks); permits required from NWR, group size capped at 30, advance booking essential.

Travel Types

Fish River Canyon & Ai-Ais

Namibia's most-photographed southern landscape — the 160-km Fish River Canyon, the Hobas viewpoints, the Ai-Ais Hot Springs at the canyon's southern end and the 5-day Hiking Trail (mid-April to mid-September only).

Lüderitz, Kolmanskop & the Atlantic Coast

The Wilhelmine port town, the Kolmanskop ghost town swallowed by Namib sand, the Tsau //Khaeb (Sperrgebiet) National Park, the Bogenfels natural arch by permit, and the Halifax Island penguin colony — the region's western anchor.

Wild Horses of the Namib & Aus

The Garub-Pan feral-horse herd grazing the open plains west of Aus, the Klein-Aus Vista 50 000-hectare reserve with its dark-sky stargazing position, and the small village of Aus as the fuel-and-coffee stop between Keetmanshoop and Lüderitz.

Quiver Tree Forest & Giant's Playground

Hundreds of 200-year-old Aloidendron dichotomum quiver trees against dolerite rock outcrops, photographed at golden hour and for night astrophotography — plus the basalt-boulder chaos of Giant's Playground and the Mesosaurus Fossil Site nearby.

Keetmanshoop & the B1 Service Corridor

The regional capital as the practical service centre of southern Namibia — fuel, supplies, the Canyon Hotel and Quiver Inn, and the launch point for the southern circuit. The B1 corridor runs north–south through Keetmanshoop to the South African border at Noordoewer.

Brukkaros, Mesosaurus & the Smaller Stops

The extinct Brukkaros Miocene volcano with the 3-hour hike to the rim, the 280-million-year-old Mesosaurus fossil site, and the small villages of Bethanie, Tses and Grünau along the B1 and B4 corridors.

Karas — Practical Travel Notes
  • The Fish River Canyon Hiking Trail (86 km, 5 days, Hobas to Ai-Ais) is open only from mid-April to mid-September — the rest of the year the canyon is closed to overnight hiking because of summer flash-flood risk and extreme heat. Day visits to the rim viewpoints are open year-round. Permits are issued by Namibia Wildlife Resorts (NWR); group size is capped at 30 and advance booking is essential — slots open 11 months ahead.
  • Ai-Ais and Hobas (the two NWR camps in the Fish River Canyon Park) book up quickly in June–August (southern-hemisphere winter peak). Reserve 6–9 months ahead for self-drive trips that include canyon-rim overnight stays.
  • The Tsau //Khaeb (Sperrgebiet) National Park covering the coastal strip south of Lüderitz is restricted-access — Kolmanskop is open to visitors with a permit (sold at the gate or at the Lüderitz tourism office), but the rest of the park requires a guided 4x4 expedition (Coastways Tours, Lüderitz Safaris). Walking out into the Sperrgebiet without a permit is a serious legal matter — the boundary is fenced and patrolled by Namdeb security.
  • Border crossings to South Africa: Noordoewer (most-used, 24 hours, on the N7/B1) and Ariamsvlei (24 hours, B3 to Upington) — both expect a queue in early morning and late afternoon especially in school-holiday periods. Oranjemund has restricted hours and is primarily for diamond-area access. Carry the rental-vehicle cross-border letter, vehicle papers, passports and visa approvals.
  • Karas is sparsely populated and mobile coverage drops out reliably on the gravel roads — MTC and Telecom Namibia coverage holds in Keetmanshoop, Lüderitz, Aus, Karasburg and Noordoewer, but the rim road at the Fish River Canyon, the road north to Brukkaros and the longer C-route detours run out of signal. Carry printed maps and emergency contacts.
  • Best travel season is April to October — winter (May–August) has cool clear days, cold nights (sometimes below freezing in the interior) and the best conditions for the canyon hike and the long gravel-road drives. Summer (December–March) is hot (often above 35 °C), with the occasional thunderstorm but predominantly dry; flash floods in the canyon system are a real summer hazard.
  • The B1 between Keetmanshoop and Noordoewer is the standard cross-border route to Cape Town and is generally well-maintained tarred road. The B4 from Keetmanshoop to Lüderitz is also tarred. The C-roads to the canyon and to Brukkaros are gravel and dusty; allow extra time and slow speeds, and avoid driving them at night.
  • Currency is the Namibia Dollar (N$/NAD), pegged 1:1 to the South African Rand (ZAR). ATMs are universal in Keetmanshoop and Lüderitz; less reliable in Aus, Karasburg and the smaller villages — carry cash for fuel-stop emergencies on the long stretches.
  • Languages: English is the official language and widely spoken. Afrikaans is heard everywhere — Karas has one of Namibia's strongest Afrikaans-speaking populations alongside Nama. German is heard in Lüderitz and the older Aus / Bethanie families. Nama is the indigenous language of the region — the Khoekhoegowab spoken in Keetmanshoop and the southern villages is the regional language.
  • Diamond-mining is still an active industry in the south-west: Namdeb (the De Beers-Namibian Government joint venture) operates dredge-mining at Oranjemund and the Atlantic coastline. Photographing mining infrastructure is restricted; check before lining up the shot.
Cities in Karas

1 city with detailed travel information