The United States has placed Niger on its highest Level 4 “Do Not Travel” advisory, citing spiralling insecurity driven by terrorism, kidnappings, violent crime and civil unrest.
In an advisory issued on January 30, 2026, the U.S. Department of State warned Americans to avoid all travel to Niger, stressing that U.S. authorities can no longer provide routine or emergency consular services outside the capital, Niamey. Large swathes of the country remain under a state of emergency with strict movement restrictions.
U.S. officials pointed to recent terror incidents, including a gun battle involving Islamic State–linked militants at Diori Hamani International Airport in Niamey, as evidence of the sharply deteriorating security situation and rising risks to foreigners.
Under existing security rules, foreigners traveling beyond the capital must move with Nigerien military escorts. U.S. government personnel face even tighter controls, including mandatory armored vehicles, curfews, and bans on visiting restaurants and open-air markets. American citizens still in the country have been urged to adopt similar precautions.
Niger’s inclusion brings the number of African countries under the U.S. government’s toughest travel alert to eight. Others on the Level 4 list include Libya, Mali, Burkina Faso, the Central African Republic, South Sudan, Sudan, Somalia, and parts of the Sahel, where insurgency, political instability and weak state control persist.
Level 4 is the highest tier in the U.S. travel advisory system, reserved for countries facing extreme threats such as armed conflict, terrorism or widespread violence that pose grave danger to foreign nationals.
Beyond travel risks, the designation often carries wider consequences, including a collapse in tourism, stalled foreign investment and reduced diplomatic engagement as embassies scale back operations.

