Liberia Launches Tourism Authority to Tap Regional Boom

Liberia launches independent Tourism Authority to attract adventure travelers to 560 km of coastline, surf breaks and rainforest parks.

By Wilson Montgomery · Updated 5 min read
Image Credit: Adobe Stock

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PAYNESVILLE, Liberia — Travelers who have already ticked Ghana and Senegal off their West Africa bucket lists may soon find another stamp in their passports. In Paynesville, the Liberian government has quietly set the clock on a 90-day countdown to bring the brand-new Liberia Tourism Authority to life and reposition the country as the region’s next adventure capital.

Liberia Tourism Authority: what it is and why it matters

President Joseph Boakai pushed legislation through the National Legislature in June to create the first independent body charged solely with tourism promotion and regulation. The Liberia Tourism Authority is expected to open offices, hire staff and deliver the country’s first stand-alone national tourism strategy before the 90-day window closes in September. Why the urgency? Officials see tourism as a missing engine in an economy still chasing the elusive $1 billion revenue mark. Neighboring Ghana, often cited as the regional benchmark, reported $4.8 billion in tourism receipts from 1.3 million arrivals in 2024 alone. Liberia’s newly appointed presidential envoy for tourism, Chris Onanuga, believes his country can ride the same wave—literally and figuratively. “Tourism is more than business; it proves Liberia can offer beauty, not just resilience,” Onanuga said during a recreation day in Voka Mission.

Key targets at a glance

  • Develop 15 eco-tourism sites, including Sapo National Park, Nimba Reserve and the surf town of Robertsport.
  • Increase tourist traffic by 10 percent once the Authority is fully operational.
  • Streamline arrivals through an electronic visa system and ongoing airport upgrades.
  • Deliver Liberia’s first formal tourism strategy by September.

Why travelers should pay attention

Liberia lays claim to 560 kilometers of near-unbroken sand along the Atlantic, some of the continent’s loftiest surfable waves and the largest remaining stretch of Upper Guinean rainforest. Sixteen distinct ethnic groups add layers of dance, language and cuisine that are unlike anything found elsewhere in West Africa. Yet many international travelers still associate the country with images of civil conflict that ended in 2003. Officials hope a dedicated Authority—separate from the Ministry of Information—will help replace war-era headlines with photographs of sea turtles nesting on isolated beaches or pygmy hippos wandering through misty jungle.

Infrastructure reality check

Liberia scores high on promise but low on paved roads, trained guides and reliable Wi-Fi. Former foreign minister Togar Gayewea McIntosh cautioned lawmakers that building an agency without fixing basic access could blunt its impact. “Tourists don’t walk on policy—they walk on roads,” McIntosh said in an interview. The warning is particularly relevant for Robertsport, a three-hour drive northwest of the capital that includes long, cratered sections of laterite. Still, the sleepy fishing village is already a stop on the African Surf Tour and is known for point breaks that peel for hundreds of meters. Local guesthouse owner Philip Banini hosted roughly 40 surfers during the last dry season but only one visitor by June 2025. “When tourists come, the whole town eats,” Banini said in Robertsport.

What exists today

• Roberts International Airport is undergoing modernization to expand capacity.
• A new electronic visa platform lets travelers submit documents online before arrival.
• Libassa Ecolodge—20 thatched bungalows set amid coastal forest—offers rates from $125 per night and is a popular weekend escape from Monrovia.
• Philip’s Guesthouse in Robertsport rents four rooms for $30–$40 per night, board hire included.
• A USAID Trade Hub grant of $262,000 in 2022 helped Libassa’s owners launch a sister property, Wackolla Eco-Lodge, creating more than 50 local jobs.

Conservation partnerships in the pipeline

Wildlife encounters are central to the government’s tourism pitch. The Second Chance Chimpanzee Rescue Liberia is finalizing an agreement with the Tourism Authority and the National Public Health Institute to roll out a formal visitor program that balances education with primate welfare. Plans call for a raised viewing platform and hands-on awareness sessions designed to curb the illegal bushmeat trade. Further east, Sapo National Park—Liberia’s largest protected area—offers dense, emerald rainforest teeming with endangered species. Earlier community-based tourism attempts collapsed during COVID-19, but officials say the new Authority will funnel technical support to rebuild guiding cooperatives and craft markets around park gates.

Lingering challenges—and how they affect travelers

  • Roads: Many signature sites require hours of driving on unpaved routes. Expect seasonal delays during the May–October rainy season.
  • Connectivity: Mobile data coverage thins out beyond Monrovia; download offline maps before departure.
  • Skilled labor: Only a handful of accredited guides currently operate countrywide. Verify certifications when booking treks.
  • Economic shifts: The closure of U.S. Agency for International Development programs pulled roughly $300 million from the local economy, eliminating 30 American and 70 Liberian direct jobs plus another 490 positions at partner organizations.

Tips for Travelers

  1. Visa: Use the new e-visa portal to avoid lines at Roberts International Airport.
  2. Surf season: Peaks November through March, when winds are offshore and rainfall is minimal.
  3. Rainforest trekking: Dry season (November–April) offers easier river crossings in Sapo National Park.
  4. Local transport: Arrange 4×4 vehicles with drivers familiar with rural routes; few rental agencies operate outside the capital.
  5. Health: Yellow-fever vaccination is mandatory. Carry proof on arrival.
  6. Currency: U.S. dollars circulate alongside Liberian dollars; bring small bills for remote areas.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Liberia safe for tourists?

Liberia has remained peaceful for more than two decades. Petty theft in urban areas is the main concern; standard city precautions apply.

When will the Liberia Tourism Authority be fully operational?

Officials have a 90-day target that ends in September 2024 to set up offices, hire staff and publish the country’s first tourism strategy.

What types of tourism does Liberia plan to highlight?

Ecotourism, surf tourism, cultural heritage and culinary experiences sit at the top of the Authority’s agenda.

Can travelers reach the rainforest easily?

Access to Sapo National Park requires a combination of paved and dirt roads. Improvements are a government priority but no construction timetable has been released.

The bottom line for Jetsetters

Liberia’s creation of an independent Tourism Authority signals serious intent to convert its natural riches into visitor experiences. Early adopters willing to trade creature comforts for frontier appeal will find empty breaks, off-grid jungle lodges and a cultural mosaic spread across 16 tribes. Just pack patience—and a spare tire—until the roads catch up with the vision.

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