Choose us for an exceptional Addis Ababa experience. With over 20 years of experience providing personalized and high-quality tours, we offer a unique blend of historical exploration and cultural immersion.
Our expert guides provide insightful commentary and personalized attention, ensuring an unforgettable journey through the city's cultural heart. Enjoy an immersive exploration of iconic landmarks, including St. George Cathedral and Merkato market, culminating in a traditional Ethiopian coffee ceremony.
Our city tour includes visits to key landmarks and concludes with an authentic coffee ceremony, with the option to participate in a fun and interactive cooking class. Trust our expertise to create an unforgettable journey.
The guide will be at your chosen pickup location with a sign printed with your name
Your day opens with a drive up to Entoto Hills, the eucalyptus-forested ridge that rises above Addis Ababa and offers the most expansive panoramic view over the capital. From this elevated vantage point, the city spreads across the highland basin below - a landscape that has been the geographic and symbolic heart of Ethiopia since Emperor Menelik II founded Addis Ababa in 1886. The air here is cooler and sharper than the city below, the eucalyptus canopy dense enough to filter the morning light into long horizontal shafts. This is where the city's story begins: before the embassies, the museums, and the markets, Entoto is the ridge from which Menelik surveyed the land and chose this site as his capital. Standing here at the start of your day places everything that follows - the imperial palace, the ancient fossils, the cathedral - in its correct geographic and historical order.
Ethnographic Museum · Former Imperial Palace of Haile Selassie You enter the former imperial palace of Emperor Haile Selassie - now home to the Ethnographic Museum, one of the most layered institutional spaces in East Africa. The building itself is the exhibit before the exhibits begin: these corridors, reception rooms, and private quarters housed the last emperor of the Solomonic dynasty until 1974. The collections inside document the full spectrum of Ethiopian material culture — traditional dress, ceremonial objects, religious artifacts, and the tools of daily life across the country's dozens of distinct ethnic communities. Moving through the rooms is a passage through the living cultures you may have encountered or are about to encounter across Ethiopia: the same woven textiles, the same ritual objects, the same social structures - here catalogued, preserved, and placed in context by the institution that occupies the palace where modern Ethiopian statehood was administered.
National Museum of Ethiopia · Lucy & Prehistory The centerpiece of the National Museum is a fossil that stopped the scientific world: Lucy, the 3.2-million-year-old Australopithecus afarensis specimen discovered in the Afar region of Ethiopia and now regarded as one of the most significant paleoanthropological finds in history. Standing before her, the scale of human time becomes physical rather than abstract — 3.2 million years compressed into a partial skeleton that permanently altered our understanding of human origins and confirmed Ethiopia as the birthplace of the human species. The museum's collections extend beyond Lucy into Ethiopia's deep archaeological record, tracing the full arc from prehistoric hominids through the ancient Aksumite civilization, medieval religious art, and the imperial period. This is not a regional museum — it is one of the most important natural history institutions on the African continent.
Traditional Coffee Ceremony & Ethiopian Lunch · Local Family Home Ethiopia is the birthplace of coffee — and this is where you experience the ritual at its most unmediated. At a local family home, your host begins by roasting green coffee beans directly over coals. The aroma fills the room as the beans darken, then they are ground by hand using the traditional mukecha and zenezena — mortar and pestle. The grounds are brewed in a clay jebena pot and served in small cups alongside popcorn, kolo (roasted barley), kita (pan bread), Fendisha, and Tej, the locally brewed honey wine. The ceremony traces its roots to Kaldi, the Ethiopian shepherd whose goats first discovered the coffee plant — a story your host knows as lived heritage, not legend. Lunch follows: a traditional Ethiopian meal of injera flatbread with accompanying dishes, prepared in the same home. This is a sacred daily ritual, not a tourist show.
St. George Cathedral · Battle of Adwa & Imperial Coronation Site Located in the heart of Addis Ababa, St. George Cathedral is a landmark of Ethiopian Orthodox faith. Built to commemorate Ethiopia's victory at the Battle of Adwa — the 1896 defeat of the Italian colonial army that made Ethiopia the only African nation to successfully repel a European invasion — the cathedral features traditional octagonal architecture and houses beautiful religious artwork and stained-glass windows. In front of the cathedral stands the monument to Emperor Menelik II, the emperor who led Ethiopia to that victory and who founded Addis Ababa itself. It is also here that Emperor Haile Selassie was crowned in 1930, making St. George Cathedral a site where military triumph, imperial legitimacy, and living Orthodox faith converge in a single building. The adjacent Addis Ababa Zero Zero Museum marks the symbolic center point of the capital.
Merkato Market · Guided Exploration of Africa's Largest Open-Air Market Merkato is one of the largest open-air markets in Africa — a dense, sprawling trading district in the west of Addis Ababa where the full commercial life of the city and its hinterland converges in a single walk. The market is organized by trade: metalworkers in one quarter, spice merchants in another, textile vendors, basket weavers, incense traders, and coffee sellers each occupying their own defined zone within the larger whole. Your guide navigates the layout, translating not just the language but the social logic of the space — who sells what, how prices are negotiated, which goods travel here from which region of Ethiopia. This is where the country's artisan production meets its urban distribution network. The smells, sounds, and density of Merkato are unlike anything else in the city: this is Addis Ababa at its most unfiltered, most functional, and most alive.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience for a full refund.
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