Africa > 🇹🇳 Tunisia
The city by city Car or no Car advice for Tunisia can be broken down into three similar questions - do you need a car in Tunisia; is it worth it (based on costs), and ultimately - should you rent one? (a balance of the two).🚆 🚌⛴️ Do we need to rent a car in Tunisia?
These scores are based on the quality of public transport and other travel options. If these are good enough to see the main points of interest, then you don’t need to rent a car.💰💶💳 Is it worth hiring a car in Tunisia?
These scores reflect the practical factors that affect whether renting a car is convenient, good value, and stress-free.🏙️ Main Cities in Tunisia
| CITY | IATA | Score |
|---|---|---|
| Djerba | DJE | |
| Enfidha | NBE | |
| Monastir | MIR | |
| Tunis | TUN |
🚆 First: public transport is genuinely good
Tunisia’s intercity train network is one of the best in North Africa. You can move easily between:
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Tunis ↔ Sousse ↔ Sfax
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Tunis ↔ Gabès
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Tunis ↔ Bizerte
Comfortable louage minibuses fill the gaps between towns. They leave when full and cost very little. For city travel, taxis are cheap and reliable.
If your plan is medinas, beaches and museum visits, you can rely on trains + louages without stress.
🚗 Renting a car — what it opens up
A rental car helps enormously if you want to reach places off the main transport routes, such as:
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Remote Roman sites like Dougga, Bulla Regia, and Makthar
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The salt flats and desert landscapes around Tozeur
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Mountain villages near Le Kef or Ain Draham
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Quiet stretches of coastline north of Tunis or south of Sfax
Driving is generally fine on highways and main roads, but urban traffic can feel chaotic. Roundabouts follow local logic, not formal rules. Outside cities, roads range from excellent to patchy.
Rental prices usually sit in the mid-range (€25–€45/day), which is decent value for the region.
🏛️ Tunis — base without a car
Staying in Tunis? You don’t need a car.
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The Medina → walkable
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Carthage → metro light rail (TGM)
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Sidi Bou Saïd → TGM again
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Bardo Museum → short taxi ride
Parking in the city centre is awkward, and there’s no advantage to driving inside Tunis itself.
🏝️ Resort areas (Hammamet, Sousse, Monastir, Djerba)
If you’re at an all-inclusive or a beach hotel, you can rely on taxis and excursions. organised tours cover the Sahara circuits, and local buses run frequently.
But a rental car gives you much easier access to quiet beaches, hill towns inland, and the freedom to wander — especially in Djerba, whose ring road and beaches reward slow exploration.
🧭 Final verdict — Should you rent a car in Tunisia?
Yes, if:
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You want to see archaeological sites off the main lines
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You’re heading into the desert regions
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You prefer freedom and flexibility
No, if:
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You’re staying mostly in Tunis or a beach resort
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You dislike lively or improvised traffic
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You’re happy using trains + louages
Overall: Tunisia offers enough safe, scenic driving to make a car worthwhile if exploration is your goal. But if you stick to the classic cities and coasts, you’ll do perfectly well without one 🌞🚗🇹🇳