Official travel advisories warn against all travel here. Political freedoms are limited and travellers should be mindful of local sensitivities.
Regional breakdown
The official advisory guidance splits Lebanon into two tiers. It warns against all travel to the South and Nabatiyeh Governorates, the Beqaa and Baalbek-Hermel Governorates, Akkar. The city of Tripoli, and parts of southern Mount Lebanon. The 12 Palestinian refugee camps and several southern suburbs of Beirut also fall in this top-risk band. The rest of Beirut and Mount Lebanon, plus the wider Northern Governorate, sit in the second tier. Here official advisory guidance warns against all but essential travel. That covers central Beirut, Jounieh, Byblos and Batroun. Even areas without a no-go label are shaped by checkpoints, road closures and sudden security incidents. The official advisory guidance flags the same hotspots. It singles out southern Lebanon below Saida, where military activity has continued since late 2024, and the Syria-Lebanon border. Where airstrikes and clashes have been reported. Refugee settlements across the country are listed separately because of shootings and explosions inside and around them. Travellers should treat the entire country as one connected risk picture rather than picking 'calmer' pockets.
Recent advisory changes
The official advisory guidance updated its Lebanon advice on 1 April 2026. It points to a sharp escalation since 2 March, with Israeli airstrikes, rocket fire and strikes on civilian infrastructure. The official advisory guidance tells travellers already in Lebanon that if their presence is not essential, they should think about leaving now. Beirut airport is still open but commercial flight options are limited, and official advisory guidance warns travellers to confirm bookings before heading to the terminal. The official advisory guidance reissued its Lebanon advisory on 23 February 2026 at Level 4 — Do Not Travel. It has ordered the departure of non-emergency US government staff and their family members from Beirut. The reasons listed are crime, terrorism, civil unrest, kidnapping, unexploded ordnance and the risk of armed conflict. Embassy staff cannot move around freely without prior authorisation. And the advisory notes that US consular officers may not be able to reach travellers who run into trouble. Both governments are aligned: the situation is fragile and worsening, not improving.
What travellers should know
Anyone weighing a trip should start with travel insurance. Most UK policies are voided when official advisory guidance warns against travel, and Lebanon is firmly in that category right now. Without cover, a single hospital stay or evacuation flight can run into tens of thousands of pounds. Check the wording before booking anything. On the ground, conditions change fast. Roads to Beirut airport have been blocked by protests in the past, and airstrikes have hit areas close to civilian neighbourhoods. Keep travel documents, cash and a packed bag within reach. Register with your embassy, share an itinerary with someone at home, and follow local news in Arabic and English. Avoid demonstrations, military sites and the southern border zone entirely. Unexploded ordnance is a real hazard near the Syrian frontier and in former conflict areas, so stay on paved roads and marked paths. Dual nationals should be aware that Lebanese law may treat them differently from foreign passport holders, including on military service and exit permissions. Anyone with family ties should check their status with the Lebanese embassy before travelling. If already in country, keep reviewing whether the reason for staying still outweighs the rising risk.