| Date | Sunrise | Sunset | Day length |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 June 2026, Monday | 6:08 AM | 6:29 PM | 12h 20m |
| 2 June 2026, Tuesday | 6:08 AM | 6:29 PM | 12h 20m |
| 3 June 2026, Wednesday | 6:09 AM | 6:29 PM | 12h 20m |
| 4 June 2026, Thursday | 6:09 AM | 6:29 PM | 12h 20m |
| 5 June 2026, Friday | 6:09 AM | 6:30 PM | 12h 20m |
| 6 June 2026, Saturday | 6:09 AM | 6:30 PM | 12h 20m |
| 7 June 2026, Sunday | 6:09 AM | 6:30 PM | 12h 20m |
| 8 June 2026, Monday | 6:09 AM | 6:30 PM | 12h 21m |
| 9 June 2026, Tuesday | 6:09 AM | 6:31 PM | 12h 21m |
| 10 June 2026, Wednesday | 6:10 AM | 6:31 PM | 12h 21m |
| 11 June 2026, Thursday | 6:10 AM | 6:31 PM | 12h 21m |
| 12 June 2026, Friday | 6:10 AM | 6:31 PM | 12h 21m |
| 13 June 2026, Saturday | 6:10 AM | 6:31 PM | 12h 21m |
| 14 June 2026, Sunday | 6:10 AM | 6:32 PM | 12h 21m |
| 15 June 2026, Monday | 6:11 AM | 6:32 PM | 12h 21m |
| 16 June 2026, Tuesday | 6:11 AM | 6:32 PM | 12h 21m |
| 17 June 2026, Wednesday | 6:11 AM | 6:32 PM | 12h 21m |
| 18 June 2026, Thursday | 6:11 AM | 6:33 PM | 12h 21m |
| 19 June 2026, Friday | 6:11 AM | 6:33 PM | 12h 21m |
| 20 June 2026, Saturday | 6:12 AM | 6:33 PM | 12h 21m |
| 21 June 2026, Sunday | 6:12 AM | 6:33 PM | 12h 21m |
| 22 June 2026, Monday | 6:12 AM | 6:33 PM | 12h 21m |
| 23 June 2026, Tuesday | 6:12 AM | 6:34 PM | 12h 21m |
| 24 June 2026, Wednesday | 6:12 AM | 6:34 PM | 12h 21m |
| 25 June 2026, Thursday | 6:13 AM | 6:34 PM | 12h 21m |
| 26 June 2026, Friday | 6:13 AM | 6:34 PM | 12h 21m |
| 27 June 2026, Saturday | 6:13 AM | 6:34 PM | 12h 21m |
| 28 June 2026, Sunday | 6:13 AM | 6:35 PM | 12h 21m |
| 29 June 2026, Monday | 6:14 AM | 6:35 PM | 12h 21m |
| 30 June 2026, Tuesday | 6:14 AM | 6:35 PM | 12h 21m |
Douala sits at the mouth of the Wouri River on Cameroon's Atlantic coast. The Bonanjo plateau, wide riverbanks, and the Wouri estuary offer several accessible spots for watching the sun rise and set.
The historic administrative district sits about 30 m above the surrounding city and faces east across Douala's rooftops toward the Wouri River. Boulevard de la République runs along the plateau edge; free access, walkable from most city-center hotels.
Deido is a traditional fishing quarter on the north bank of the Wouri with a low embankment facing east across the river mouth. The fish market starts around 05:30 and is a short walk from the water's edge.
The Akwa district's waterfront faces east across the Wouri River and is one of the most central spots to catch sunrise without leaving the business district. Most hotels in Douala are within a 10-minute walk.
The western edge of the plateau overlooks the Wouri estuary, where the sun drops over open water. Food stalls near Place Ahmadou Ahidjo make it easy to arrive early and wait.
The 1.7 km bridge crosses the Wouri estuary east-west, putting pedestrians above open water with a clear western horizon. Shared taxis from Akwa to the bridge cost around 500 XAF; the sun sets directly down the estuary.
On the western side of the Wouri, the Bonabéri embankment faces open terrain to the west with few obstructions to the horizon. Cross the Pont du Wouri by taxi and follow the riverside road north from the bridge landing.