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COUNTRY TRADING PROFILES
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Travel information
Entry requirements |
Organizing your trip |
Visiting |
Eating |
Paying |
Speaking |
Entry requirements
- Passport and visa service
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To know if you need a visa, consult the Homevisas.com website
- Diplomatic representations
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Consult the directory of embassies and consulates near you on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs website.
- For more information
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Embassy of Tunisia in Greece
2, rue Anthéon and Marathonodromon 154 52 PPsychico Phone: 2106717590, 2106749791 Fax 2106713432 atathina@otenet.gr
Organizing your trip
Means of transport recommended in town
- Recommendation
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Public transport in town is not always on time. The best way to get around in the big cities is to take a taxi (yellow cars). They are very inexpensive and work with a meter. You are advised to check each time that the driver starts the meter correctly when you set off!
- Maps of urban networks
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Means of transport recommended in the rest of the country
- Recommendation
- The rail network covers almost all the country, linking most of the big northern cities (Tunis, Bizerte, Beja) and those on the east coast (Sfax, Gabès). The trains are quite slow, but they are economical and punctual. You can get different reduction cards from 25 to 50%: the youth card, the blue card and the museum rail card.
Tuninter serves domestic flights. This company links practically all cities with Tunis.
Buses serve the most remote places in Tunisia.
There are also taxis between towns, called "rental contract taxis". They are group taxis and only leave when they are full. Each town has a rental station. The cars with blue bands serve nearby places, those with red bands the longer distances. In some cases, they are more economical and less restricting than trains. According to the driver's style, the journey may be full of thrills!
- Rail companies
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Tunisian national railway company (SNCFT)
- Flight from Greece
- No aircraft company operates direct flight from Athens to Tunis. There is.
Between Athens and Tunis, the flight takes 2h15.
Traveling by yourself
- Recommendation
- Renting a car can be very useful according to the kind of trip you want to make. You have nothing to fear on Tunisian roads. To make things easier, you should avoid rush hours (12.30 pm and 6 pm). Signs on main roads and motorways are in Arabic and French.
- Road maps
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Road map of Tunisia
- Find an itinerary
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Via Michelin
Visiting
Different forms of tourism
- Historical
- Tunis is rich in fine architecture.
Many archeological sites are part of the world heritage (Carthage, El Jem, etc.).
- Cultural
- Islamic ceramics museum (Tunis), The Bardo Museum (Tunis), National museum of Islamic art (Kairouan).
Sculpture, Paintings, Theater, Concerts, Cinema, Literature, etc.
- Nature
- Many natural and wildlife parks.
- Religious
- Mosques, especially those of Tunis and Kairouan.
- Thermal
- The hot spring areas of Korbouse, Khebayet at Gabès, Hammam bent Jedidi.
- Beach
- All Tunisia's beaches are on the Mediterranean. The one at Djerba is especially renowned.
- Outdoor activities
- In the south of Tunisia, you can do guided tours in the Sahara in 4x4s or by camel.
- Shopping
- Several shopping malls and other shopping places such as Centre el Menzah6 or Berges du Lac.
For local craftsmanship, you will find souks in Tunis or any other town. Be careful, it is common to haggle over prices.
- Tourism organizations
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Tunisian National Tourism Office
Eating
- Food specialties
- Tunisian cuisine is famous for its lamb-based dishes. You can find the following specialties: couscous, tagines, dishes prepared with sheets of "bric" pastry (like filo pastry).
Tunisian dishes are very aromatic. Cumin, coriander, saffron, cinnamon, aniseed, mint, orange, rose water are all used.
- Drinks
- The Tunisian specialty is mint tea after meals or lemonade with almonds. In winter, people often drink fresh orange juice.
- Dietary restrictions
- Pork is prohibited and the sale of alcohol is restricted.
Paying
- Domestic currency
- Tunisian Dinar
- ISO Code
- TND
- To obtain domestic currency
- The most practical way is to withdraw money directly from ATMs. There are many of them and they are easily accessible in airports, city centers, and all over the country.
- Possible means of payment
- Places where you can pay with foreign currency are rare.In stores, restaurants, hotels, cafés, payment is made in cash or by Credit Card, according to the sum. American Express cards are not taken so often.
- Exchange rate on
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- Automatic Teller Machines (ATM)
- To find out the locations of ATMs in in Tunisia, click on the link to your credit card: Visa, Mastercard or American Express
Speaking
- Official language
- In Tunisia, Arabic is the official language. The Arabic which all Tunisians speak in their everyday communications is a dialectal variety called Tunisian Arabic.
- Other languages spoken
- 98 % of the population speak Arabic, the rest speak Berber. French is also spoken by a large majority of Tunisians.
- Business language
- English is not very common. French is the language used in trade, and for some administrative texts.
- Getting some knowledge
- Use the travlang website
- Free translation tools
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Arjeeb - Free translation English-Arabic-English of text and web pages
Ectaco - Free Dictionary Arabic-English-Arabic
Babel Fish - Free Greek-French-Greek translator
Lexicool - Free Greek-Arabic-Greek dictionary
We can translate your foreign-language documents.
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Last updates: February 2012
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