LILONGWE.ORG

Capital of Malawi · 13.96°S 33.77°E · 1,050 m

Lilongwe, the capital city of Malawi

The seat of government and the country's largest city — a plateau capital of numbered areas, riverside markets, and a wildlife centre in its heart. This is the complete, independent guide.

~1.34MCity population (2026 est.)
1975Became national capital
393 km²City jurisdiction area
1,050 mElevation above sea level

The place in short

A capital built on purpose

Lilongwe sits on the fertile Central Region plateau of Malawi, roughly a kilometre above sea level, on the banks of the Lilongwe River after which it is named. It grew from a small colonial administrative post into a market town, and in 1975 replaced Zomba as the national capital — a deliberate move to spread development into the centre of the country. The last government offices completed the transfer in 2005.

The city has two hearts. Old Town is the older, denser southern half — markets, bus depots, shops and everyday life. City Centre, sometimes called the Capital City or New City, is the planned northern district of ministries, embassies, banks and the Capital Hill government complex. Between and around them, Lilongwe is organised into numbered Areas, the local shorthand everyone uses for an address.

Its economy runs on government and public institutions, tobacco (stored and traded at Kanengo in the north), finance, retail and construction. It is one of Africa's faster-growing cities, expanding by around four percent a year, which shapes almost everything about how it looks and moves.