Overview
Western Sahara is a recognised territory located in Africa, specifically within the Northern Africa subregion. It covers approximately 266,000 km² and is home to an estimated 600,904 people. The country has coastline along international waters, which has shaped its trade routes, climate, cuisine, and cultural exchanges with the rest of the world. Its capital is El Aaiún, which serves as the political and (in most cases) economic centre of the country, hosting the seat of government and the principal international airport.
This profile pulls together the structured facts that most readers want at a glance — capital, currency, languages, borders — and links onward to the maps and neighbouring countries you are likely to need next. Every figure on this page is rendered server-side from a single dataset, so what you see here matches the regional indexes, statistics rankings, and continental hubs elsewhere on MapVista.
For travellers, students, journalists, and the merely curious, the goal is simple: a single readable page per country that answers the questions you actually asked, without redirecting you to a sign-up screen or a paywall. Citizens of Western Sahara are commonly described as Sahrawi, a demonym you will encounter in news coverage and academic writing alike.
Geography & borders
Western Sahara is a mid-sized country, covering approximately 266,000 km² of land in Africa (specifically the Northern Africa subregion). The country has coastline along international waters, which has shaped its trade routes, climate, and cultural exchanges with the rest of the world. Its approximate geographic centre lies at 24.50° N, 13.00° W, placing it in the northern hemisphere on a line with several other Northern Africa nations. Western Sahara shares land borders with 3 neighbouring states, a typical configuration for Northern Africa which makes overland travel and cross-border trade central to daily life.
Bordering countries
Western Sahara shares land borders with the following 3 neighbours. Each one links to its own full profile so you can hop around the region without losing your bearings:
Live map
Map data © OpenStreetMap contributors, ODbL. · Open in OpenStreetMap · Open in Google Maps
People, demographics & density
With an estimated 600,904 residents, Western Sahara is a small population. That works out to roughly 2.3 people per square kilometre, a low density that reflects vast underpopulated terrain — deserts, mountains, forests, or polar landscape that limits permanent settlement. The capital, El Aaiún, anchors the country's political and often economic life and is usually the first city most international visitors encounter. Citizens of Western Sahara are commonly described as Sahrawi.
Compared with the global mean of roughly 60 people per square kilometre, Western Sahara's figure of 2.3 people / km² places it well below the global average, reflecting either vast remote territory, harsh climate, or a small population spread across a large area.
Languages, currency & culture
Culturally, Berber, Hassaniya, and Spanish are recognised as official or co-official languages in Western Sahara, while the country uses Algerian dinar (DZD), Moroccan dirham (MAD), and Mauritanian ouguiya (MRU) as official currencies. Like every country in the catalogue, the linguistic situation on the ground is often more layered than the official picture, with regional languages, immigrant communities, and minority tongues woven through everyday life.
Official and recognised languages
- BerberISO 639 code: ber
- HassaniyaISO 639 code: mey
- SpanishISO 639 code: spa
Official currencies
- Algerian dinarISO 4217: DZD · دج
- Moroccan dirhamISO 4217: MAD · DH
- Mauritanian ouguiyaISO 4217: MRU · UM
Language and currency data are drawn from open sources and reflect the official position rather than the full sociolinguistic picture on the ground. Many countries recognise minority and regional languages in addition to the official ones listed here, and some use multiple currencies in practice — particularly in border regions and tourist economies.
Practical information
Western Sahara operates on a single time zone, UTC+00:00, and uses the country-code top-level domain .eh online. Vehicles drive on the right-hand side of the road.
- Time zonesUTC+00:00
- Top-level domain.eh
- Driving sideRight
- UN memberNo
- LandlockedNo
- IndependentNo
- DemonymSahrawi
Maps & downloads
The flag image above is available in both raster and vector format. For a full-resolution download, right-click and save the linked file. Map links open in your preferred mapping provider so you can zoom into specific regions or plan a route. For deeper terrain and elevation data, our geographic resource library collects the best free atlases.
About this profile
This page is one of 250 country profiles on MapVista. The structured facts are sourced from open datasets that aggregate official records — see our methodology for the full list of sources and how we handle disputes, succession, and edge cases. The narrative paragraphs are written to give context to the numbers, but the figures themselves are not invented; if a value is missing it is shown as a dash rather than a guess.
If you spot an out-of-date figure or a misclassification, please reach us via the contact page. We refresh the underlying dataset regularly and corrections are applied at the next rebuild.