Where to Stay in Antsirabe: Highland Hotel Guide 2026

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Where to Stay in Antsirabe: Highland Hotel Guide 2026 — Madagascar

At a Glance

Antsirabe sits 170km south of Antananarivo on the RN7 at 1,500m elevation, making it the coolest and most European-feeling city in Madagascar. Its nickname is the city of pousse-pousse — the hand-pulled rickshaws that still provide genuine transport here rather than tourist theatre. The highland city has colonial-era spa hotels, a busy craft market, and serves as the natural first overnight stop on any RN7 road trip toward Isalo, Ranomafana, or Fort Dauphin.

Colonial Hotels and Thermal Spa Stays in Antsirabe

Hôtel Trianon is the most characterful hotel in Antsirabe — a large colonial building dating from the French spa era, when the town attracted visitors for its volcanic thermal waters. Rooms run $50–80 per night and the hotel maintains its own thermal bath facility, which non-guests can access for a fee. The restaurant is one of Antsirabe’s best, serving French-influenced cuisine with local ingredients. The building’s period architecture — high ceilings, wide verandas, tile floors — is genuinely impressive and worth paying the premium for at least one night.

Hôtel des Thermes, just off the main street, is another colonial-era property with thermal bath access, offering slightly smaller rooms at $40–65 per night. Both hotels accept walk-ins outside peak season but fill completely during the July–August highland festival season. Check room availability for Antsirabe hotels on Agoda to compare current rates before the highland high season arrives.

Mid-Range Hotels in Antsirabe

Hôtel Les Glycines is the most reliable mid-range option — a garden property with 25 bungalows at $35–55 per night, a small heated pool, and an on-site restaurant. The bungalows are newer than the colonial properties and better insulated against highland chill. Staff organise half-day pousse-pousse city tours and arrange drivers for full-day excursions to Lac Tritriva and the craft villages nearby.

Résidence Manara offers apartment-style rooms at $30–50 per night, popular with business travelers and longer-stay visitors. The property has reliable hot water — a genuine merit in a highland city where temperature drops below 10°C at night in June and July — and a kitchen area that guests can use. Both mid-range properties are within walking distance of the main market and the central avenue’s pousse-pousse stands. Book through the hotel directly or compare mid-range Antsirabe options on Agoda for the best price.

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Budget Guesthouses and Rooms in Antsirabe

Hôtel Diamant is the most centrally located budget option — concrete rooms with private bathrooms at $15–25 per night, one block from the main market. Hot water is available in the morning only; bring a light sleeping bag or extra blanket for cold highland nights. The ground-floor restaurant serves Malagasy plates from 6,000 MGA. It is the best-known budget property for backpackers passing through on the RN7 southbound.

Several smaller guesthouses on the side streets near the train station charge $8–12 per night for basic rooms with shared bathrooms. These are acceptable for a single night stopover and safe by Madagascar standards, though comfort is minimal. Antsirabe’s highland position means nights are genuinely cold from May through August — factor in the temperature when choosing budget accommodation with fans instead of heating. The town has functioning ATMs at BNI and BOA, a good pharmacy, and a small supermarket stocking supplies for onward RN7 travel.

Using Antsirabe as a Base: Day Trips and Onward Travel

Antsirabe is 3–4 hours south of Antananarivo by taxi ($25–35 for the whole cab, shared taxi-brousse costs 12,000–15,000 MGA per seat) and works well as the first overnight stop on a full RN7 road trip. From Antsirabe, the next logical stop is Ambositra (craft capital, 3 hours south) then Fianarantsoa (3 more hours). Self-drivers should allow a full week Antananarivo to Fort Dauphin. Book a self-drive 4WD through Carla for the flexibility to stop at Antsirabe, Ambositra, and Fianarantsoa at your own pace.

Day trips from Antsirabe include Lac Andraikiba (15 min by pousse-pousse), Lac Tritriva (extinct volcanic crater lake, 23km, 45 min), and the Soavinandriana craft village known for clay pot making. There is no domestic airport at Antsirabe — all onward flights depart from Ivato (Antananarivo). The train line from Tana occasionally operates but is unreliable; road is the standard approach.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Antsirabe worth an overnight stay or just a day trip?

Overnight is recommended. A day trip from Antananarivo (3–4 hours each way) leaves little time for the city’s thermal baths, craft markets, and lake excursions. Two nights lets you cover Lac Andraikiba, Lac Tritriva, and the pousse-pousse city circuit comfortably.

Are there ATMs in Antsirabe?

Yes. BNI and BOA both have functioning ATMs in the town center. Visa and Mastercard work reliably. Withdraw cash here before continuing south on the RN7, as ATM availability decreases significantly beyond Fianarantsoa.

How cold does Antsirabe get at night?

Antsirabe sits at 1,500m elevation. In June and July, nighttime temperatures drop to 5–10°C. Even in warmer months (October–March) nights are cool. Always bring a warm layer — the thermal baths make much more sense once you’ve experienced a cold highland night.

Antsirabe is an underrated stop that most RN7 road trippers rush through. Take at least two nights to absorb the thermal spa culture, the lake circuit, and the craft market. Before any Madagascar journey, make sure your travel insurance covers medical emergencies in remote areas. Get SafetyWing before you travel — at $1.82/day it covers emergency medical treatment and transport for trips that venture well beyond Antsirabe into the deeper south.

Travel Insurance for Madagascar

Medical evacuation from Madagascar costs $30,000–$80,000. Don’t travel without cover.

  • SafetyWing — Best for budget travelers and long stays. From $1.82/day.
  • World Nomads — Best for adventure activities: trekking, diving, motorbikes.

Jordan Lamont

Jordan Lamont is a Canadian travel writer and the founder of Voyagiste Madagascar, an independent bilingual (EN/FR) travel guide dedicated to Madagascar since 2011.

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