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Libya

State of Libya

Northern Africa · LBY

US Advisory: Level 4(Do Not Travel)

Editorial Snapshot

Why Go To Libya

Libya is compelling for travelers who care about major archaeological sites and desert landscapes more than easy logistics. A viable trip would need to stay tightly focused on Tripoli and the headline classical sites, with current conditions making casual country-wide touring unrealistic.

Popular For

Ancient sitesDesert sceneryArchaeologyHistoric citiesOverland travel

Things To See

  • Tripoli
  • Leptis Magna
  • Sabratha
  • Cyrene
  • Ghadames
  • Acacus Mountains

Best Months

MarAprOctNov

Know Before You Go

  • Spring and fall are the most practical seasons for ruins and desert travel.
  • Keep the route narrow and purpose-built.
  • Check current security and access conditions before planning any trip.

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Flights

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Hotels & Accommodations

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Guidebooks

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Tours & Activities

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Country Data

Stats At A Glance

Practical travel, safety, climate, and quality-of-life stats for Libya.

Quick Facts

Capital
Tripoli
Population
7,459,000
Area
1,759,540 km²
Region
Northern Africa

Languages

  • Arabic

Currency

Libyan dinar (ل.د)

LYD

Exchange rate unavailable for USD.

Cost of Living (World Bank)

45.9

Price level index (US = 100)

Groceries
22.8
Restaurants
12.4
Rent
4.9

Safety & Peace

Global Peace Index2.478

lower score = more peaceful · 1.0–3.5 scale

GPI Rank#131 of 163

Monthly Climate Averages

These weather averages are based on data for Tripoli (32.88°N, 13.17°E).

TempRainSun
Jan13.3°C36mm8.9h
Feb14.0°C34mm9.5h
Mar15.7°C23mm10.5h
Apr18.8°C10mm11.3h
May22.0°C3mm12.0h
Jun25.5°C2mm13.1h
Jul27.3°C0mm13.3h
Aug28.0°C2mm12.4h
Sep27.0°C13mm11.6h
Oct23.4°C21mm9.8h
Nov19.0°C29mm9.3h
Dec15.0°C44mm8.8h

LGBTQ+ Friendly

15/100

Traveler LGBTQ score

Legal protections
2/100
Lived safety
42/100

This score blends legal protections with lived-safety context so strong laws alone do not automatically push a country to the top of the ranking.

  • Homosexuality legal
  • Relationship recognitionNone
  • Adoption recognition
  • Anti-discrimination laws
  • Employment protections
  • Legal gender recognition
  • Conversion therapy ban

Human Development Index (UNDP)

0.721

High human development

5-year change
-0.022
10-year change
-0.027
Trend
declining
Data year
2023
Gender Dev. Index (GDI)
0.955
Gender Inequality Index (GII)
0.253
Planetary-adjusted HDI (PHDI)
0.629

UNESCO World Heritage Sites (5)

  • 🏛️

    Old Town of Ghadamès

    Inscribed 1986

  • 🏛️

    Rock-Art Sites of Tadrart Acacus

    Inscribed 1985

  • 🏛️

    Archaeological Site of Sabratha

    Inscribed 1982

  • 🏛️

    Archaeological Site of Leptis Magna

    Inscribed 1982

  • 🏛️

    Archaeological Site of Cyrene

    Inscribed 1982

Natural Beauty (World Bank)

Protected land area
0.1%
Forest cover
0.1%

Source: World Bank.

Wildlife & Birdwatching

Threatened mammal species (IUCN)
11
Threatened bird species (IUCN)
11

Source: World Bank / IUCN Red List. Higher counts indicate richer biodiversity, typically in tropical rainforest, island, and savannah ecosystems.

Food & Cuisine

33/100

Food and dining score

Built from two layers: dining-scene breadth and open prestige signals. We combine restaurant density, cuisine diversity, distinguished restaurants, and gastronomy-city recognitions from open data sources.

Luxury Infrastructure

8/100

Luxury & premium accommodation score

Based on OpenStreetMap luxury hotel density and World Bank international tourism receipts.

US Travel Advisory

Reissued after periodic review with minor edits. Do not travel to Libya for any reason due to crime, terrorism, unexploded landmines, civil unrest, kidnapping, and armed conflict. Read entire Travel Advisory. Country Summary: Terrorism: There is risk of terrorist violence, including terrorist attacks and other activity in Libya. Visit the U.S. Department of State's country reports on terrorism to learn more. Terrorist attacks could occur with little or no warning, targeting public spaces like tourist locations, hotels, transportation hubs, markets/shopping malls, and government facilities. Kidnapping is widespread, and victims have included U.S. citizens. Kidnappers may take advantage of unplanned opportunities. Criminal or armed individuals or groups have threatened to and/or have seized or detained and threatened to kill, injure, or continue to detain individuals in order to compel a third party (including a governmental organization) to do or abstain from doing something as a condition of release. Unexploded landmines, cluster munitions, and unexploded ammunition are a hazard throughout Libya. Heed land mine warning signs. Do not venture off the road into areas marked with red and white plastic tape. Avoid roadside ditches, shoulders, and unmarked trails. Never touch anything resembling unexploded munitions. Landmines do exist in populated areas due to numerous ground offensives in the last decade. Outbreaks of violence between competing armed groups can occur with little warning and have the potential to impact U.S. citizens. The capital, Tripoli, and other cities, such as Surman, Al-Jufra, Misrata, Ajdabiya, Benghazi, and Zuwara, have witnessed fighting among armed groups. Hotels and airports frequented by U.S. citizens have been the targets of these attacks. Even demonstrations intended to be peaceful can turn confrontational and escalate into violence. Armed groups sometimes detain travelers for arbitrary reasons, do not grant detainees access to lawyers or legal processes, and do not allow detainees to inform others of their status. U.S. citizens should carry proof of citizenship and valid immigration status at all times, but having these documents does not guarantee fair treatment. While there are operational international airports in Libya with regular domestic and international flights, flights are often delayed, rerouted, and cancelled without warning. The U.S. government prohibits U.S. commercial aviation operations within Libyan airspace. Due to risks to civil aviation operating within or in the vicinity of Libya, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) has issued a Notice to Air Missions (NOTAM) and a Special Federal Aviation Regulation (SFAR). For more information U.S. citizens should consult the Federal Aviation Administration’s Prohibitions, Restrictions and Notices. The Commandant of the U.S. Coast Guard has determined that effective anti-terrorism measures are not in place in Libyan ports and has imposed conditions of entry on vessels that arrive in U.S. ports having visited ports in Libya. Mariners and passengers traveling through the ports of Libya should exercise caution. U.S. citizens in Libya in need of routine consular services should contact the U.S. Embassy in Tunis, Tunisia for assistance. To contact the U.S. Embassy in Tunis, click here. U.S. citizens who are in Libya are urged to depart as soon as possible via commercial means if possible. The Department of State will continue to provide information via the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP), Embassy Libya's web page, Travel.State.Gov, Facebook, and X. Read the country information page for additional information on travel to Libya. If you decide to travel to Libya: Visit our website for Travel to High-Risk Areas. Carry proof of citizenship and valid immigration status at all times. Avoid demonstrations and crowds. Make contingency plans to leave. Draft a will and designate appropriate insurance beneficiaries and a power of attorney. Discuss a plan with loved ones regarding care or custody of children, pets, property, belongings, non-liquid assets (collections, artwork, etc.), funeral wishes, etcetera. Establish your own personal security plan in coordination with your family, and employer or host organization, so that they can monitor your safety and location. This plan should specify whom you would contact first, and how that person should share information. Appoint one family member to serve as the point of contact with kidnappers/hostage-takers, media, U.S. and host country government agencies, and members of Congress if you are kidnapped, taken hostage, or detained. Consider consulting with a professional security organization. Do not touch unknown metal objects and avoid traveling off well-used roads, tracks, and paths due to risk of unexploded ordnance. Enroll in the Smart Traveler Enrollment Program (STEP) to receive Alerts and make it easier to locate you in an emergency. Review the Country Security Report for Libya. Visit the CDC page for the latest Travel Health Information related to your travel. U.S. citizens who travel abroad should always have a contingency plan for emergency situations. Review the Traveler’s Checklist. We highly recommend that you buy insurance before you travel. Check with your travel insurance provider about evacuation assistance, medical insurance, and trip cancellation coverage.

Read full advisory →

Data current as of May 2026 and subject to change. Travel advisory information is sourced from the U.S. State Department and reflects conditions at the time of data collection, not real-time conditions. Do not rely solely on this information for travel decisions. Always check current government advisories for your nationality. Terms of Use · About our data

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