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Cameroon

Central Africa (Gulf of Guinea coast and interior highlands; member of the **African Union**, **CEMAC**, **OHADA**, and **Francophonie**—uses the **Central African CFA franc (XAF)** pegged to the euro). **Douala** is the economic and port hub; **Yaoundé** is the political capital; **Bafoussam**, **Garoua**, and **Maroua** anchor west and **Grand Nord** corridors. **Northwest/Southwest** **Anglophone** crisis areas and **Far North** **Boko Haram**–adjacent zones carry **US travel advisories**—read **district-level** guidance before any move. · Primary language: **French** and **English** are official; **Francophone** institutions dominate much federal administration while **Anglophone** education and media traditions persist in **Northwest/Southwest**. **Fulfulde**, **Ewondo**, **Bamileke** languages, **Duala**, and hundreds of local languages shape markets and family life. **English** is stronger in **Douala** and **Yaoundé** corporate, **NGO**, and oil-and-gas pockets than in many provincial **préfecture** windows—plan **French** or **translation** for tax, land registry, and hospital paperwork.

Overview for US expats

**Bilingual** CEMEC economy bridging **Atlantic** ports and **Sahel**–adjacent interior, with **Douala** container traffic, **Camrail** links, and **domestic flights** structuring a huge north–south axis. **Numbeo**-style snapshots often show **national cost-of-living indices below the US composite** in **XAF** terms, but **secure** housing, international schools, and **medevac**-ready **insurance** can dominate budgets. **Private clinics** in Douala and Yaoundé cover much expat routine care; **complex** cases may route to **Europe** or **South Africa**. **Malaria** chemoprophylaxis remains standard in many districts. Honest planning must budget **security fragmentation** in **Anglophone** regions and the **Far North**, **gendarmerie** checkpoints, **power** and **water** variation, and **French-first** bureaucracy outside bilingual employer bubbles.

Douala is the main commercial hub

Visas and residence are national Cameroonian matters. We keep one country profile for Cameroon and a Douala page for Littoral context.

Douala overview →

Everyday life

Healthcare quality (1–5)
1
Cost of living (1–5, higher = more affordable)
5
Safety (1–5)
3
Ease of living in English (1–5)
3

Data points (where available)

Numbeo cost of living index
37.4
Safety index
41.2
Healthcare index
49.8

Schooling for families (1–5)

Early childhood
3
Primary (elementary)
3
Secondary (middle/high)
3

Why Cameroon works well for expats

  • Regional hub character between **Nigeria**, **Gabon**, **CAR**, and **Chad** for trade, **NGO**, and **hydrocarbons**-linked careers
  • Extraordinary **biodiversity**—**Korup**, **Dja**, **Waza**, **Mount Cameroon**—when security and logistics allow
  • Growing **mobile money** and **4G** footprint in major cities alongside **XAF** peg stability versus purely floating currencies

Tradeoffs and challenges

  • **US State Department** highlights **violent crime**, **kidnapping**, and **armed conflict** risks in parts of **Northwest/Southwest** and **Far North**—many assignees face movement restrictions
  • Dual **French/English** administrative cultures can confuse filings; certified translations add time and cost
  • International-school fees and **secure** compound housing cluster in **Douala** and **Yaoundé** at **premium** prices
  • Road travel combines **potholes**, **checkpoint** delays, and **night**-driving risk on some intercity routes

Visa routes for US citizens

  • other

    Difficulty: medium

    US passport holders should confirm current **visa** categories, **eVisa** availability, and permitted stay lengths on **DGDI** / diplomatic channels before travel—rules **change** with security events. Tourism visits are **not** permission to work locally or reside indefinitely. Review **US Embassy Yaoundé** and **travel.state.gov** for **Northwest/Southwest**, **Far North**, and **border** advisories.

  • work permit

    Difficulty: medium

    Employment residence ties to sponsoring entities, labour-market steps, medical checks, and **carte** / permit filings through **Interior** and **labour** offices—**oil**, **agribusiness**, **NGO**, and **infrastructure** employers typically coordinate counsel. Paid work on a visitor stamp carries **enforcement** risk.

  • entrepreneur

    Difficulty: hard

    Company formation with **CEPAC** / one-stop-shop processes, **tax** registration, sector licences, and investment rules where applicable—verify current **API** / investment-code thresholds. Registration alone does not replace immigration status.

  • family reunification

    Difficulty: medium

    Dependant permits when a principal holds qualifying residence—US civil documents generally need **apostille** and **certified French or English translation** as requested.

  • retirement

    Difficulty: hard

    No mainstream passive-income retirement visa comparable to Panama; long-stay retirees usually need another qualifying **carte** or lawful repeat visits—confirm with counsel.

  • digital nomad

    Difficulty: hard

    Cameroon does **not** publish a single EU-style **digital nomad** visa with a public income threshold. Remote work while holding only a **visitor** label needs **counsel**-vetted alignment with immigration and tax practice.

Example cities to explore

Douala (Bonanjo, Akwa, Bassa industrial belt), Yaoundé (Bastos, Mfandena, Nsimeyong), Bafoussam (West Region hub), Garoua & Maroua (Grand Nord), Limbe & Buea (Southwest littoral), Kribi (deep-water port corridor), Douala International (DLA)

References and further reading

Next steps