Do you need an International Driving Permit to drive in Equatorial Guinea?
Sourced from the 1949 Geneva & 1968 Vienna Conventions and rental-network policies
What the rules require
When do you need an IDP in Equatorial Guinea?
Equatorial Guinea drives on the right; an IDP is recommended with your home licence, and checkpoints are common. The permit is a recognised translation of your licence and is presented together with the original.
Does renting a car in Equatorial Guinea require an IDP?
Malabo desks request an IDP; carry passport and home licence too. Having your permit ready avoids losing your reservation at the counter.
Driving rules in Equatorial Guinea you should know
- Drive on the right.
- Numerous police checkpoints.
- 0.05% alcohol limit.
- Carry passport, IDP and home licence.
How long is an IDP valid in Equatorial Guinea?
Equatorial Guinea honours both the 1949 Geneva and 1968 Vienna Convention formats. A 1949-format IDP is valid for up to 1 year; a 1968-format IDP can be valid for up to 3 years, or until your national licence expires. If you travel regularly, the validity clock starts on the issue date, not on first use — so order close to your departure to maximise usable time.
Documents checklist for driving in Equatorial Guinea
- Your original national driving licence — the IDP is a translation and is never valid on its own.
- Your International Driving Permit, in the Local rules format Equatorial Guinea recognises.
- Your passport or accepted national ID for police checks and rental pick-up.
- For rentals: the credit card used for the booking and your rental agreement (it covers the registration and insurance papers).
- Local currency or a card for road costs — Equatorial Guinea uses the XAF.