Common Questions
Plain answers about water, roads, supplies, village visits, languages and town services.
Plain answers to the things people ask about Opuwo — residents arriving from villages for the hospital or shops, and travelers staging for Kaokoland. Every answer says where it comes from when that matters; anything we could not verify is not here.
What is the situation with Opuwo's water?
Difficult, and long-running — residents told the NAMPA news agency in 2025 the crisis is 34 years old. The town's water comes from NamWater boreholes, the hard water has scaled up roughly 60% of the pipes, and floods in April 2025 damaged the treatment plant and pipelines. Repairs and upgrades have been underway since, including new boreholes and pump upgrades announced in April 2026. Cuts and low pressure still happen; the 'What Opuwo is waiting on' page on this site tracks the fixes with dates.
Is the road to Opuwo tarred?
Yes — the C41 from Kamanjab to Opuwo is tar, and it is the standard way in (about 720 km from Windhoek in total). The tar effectively ends at Opuwo: north and west of town, including the C43 toward Epupa Falls, is gravel.
Is Opuwo really the last supply stop before deep Kaokoland?
For practical purposes, yes. Opuwo has proper supermarkets, banks with ATMs, pharmacies and fuel stations — the last full set of all four heading north or west. Overlanders' accounts consistently advise filling up here and carrying extra fuel for routes beyond Epupa or into the far northwest, since supply further on is informal at best. Stock up on cash too; card machines get rarer the further you go.
When does it rain, and when do the roads get bad?
The rains run roughly November to April, with the real season in January–March; May to October is reliably bone dry. In the rainy months the gravel roads north and west of town degrade fast and dry riverbeds can flow without warning — ask locally about conditions before heading deep into Kaokoland, and check the rain page on this site for where the season stands.
How do I visit a Himba village respectfully?
Go with a Himba guide or through a community-run channel like the Kaoko Information Centre — they ask the village's permission and translate. Buy the customary household gift (maize meal and staples) in an Opuwo shop on the way, ask before photographing anyone, and pay the guide directly at a price agreed before you set off. The 'Visiting Himba communities' page on this site lists verified community-run options and the full set of norms.
Where can I stay in or near Opuwo?
There is a full-service lodge with a campsite on the hill above town (Opuwo Country Lodge), guesthouses in town such as Ohakane, and camping options — plus the Omungunda campsite 42 km north at the Ovahimba Living Museum if you are headed toward Epupa. Booking ahead matters in the July–October tourist season. We have not inspected these ourselves; recent traveler reviews are the best current source.
What number do I call in an emergency?
10111 — the Namibian Police national emergency line. For medical emergencies, Opuwo District Hospital on Mbumbijazo Muharukua Avenue is the referral hospital for the whole region.
Why are so many Himba families living in and around town?
Mostly drought. Repeated failed rainy seasons — the years around 2019 were described as the worst in living memory — killed much of the region's livestock, and herding families moved to Opuwo's informal settlements to survive. Others come to town temporarily for the hospital, pensions or shops, and because there is little affordable lodging, some camp in public spaces while they are here.
What languages are spoken here?
Otjiherero and its Himba dialect Otjihimba are the everyday languages, with Otjizemba also spoken; English is the official language, used in schools and offices, and works fine in shops, lodges and with guides. On the radio, Kunene Community Radio and NBC's Omurari service broadcast in Otjiherero.
Does the town council have a website or notice channel?
Effectively no — the council's website has been unreachable for some time, and there is no official online notice channel for things like water cuts. In practice, announcements travel by radio (Kunene Community Radio) and Facebook pages. For council business — rates, plots, refuse — going to the council offices in person is the reliable route.