House in Thiès Region, Senegal
Reasons to book
About this house rental
Somone is not Bali. It's not Tulum. It's quieter, more genuine, and for the traveler who's done the obvious places — it's exactly that. A small lagoon village on Senegal's Petite Côte, 45 minutes south of Dakar's international airport, Somone sits between a UNESCO-protected lagoon reserve and a calm Atlantic beach, where pirogues still go out at dawn and the pace of life is something most of us have forgotten existed.
This villa is where you stay while you remember.
Villa Amani is modern, airy, and deliberately comfortable — built for people who want to be fully in West Africa without giving up the things that matter. Think clean lines, full air-conditioning in every room, fast Wi-Fi throughout, and a private pool set in landscaped gardens that catches the afternoon light perfectly.
It works equally well as a family base, a couple's retreat, or a remote work setup that will genuinely make your colleagues jealous on video calls. The kitchen is fully equipped — blender, coffee machine, proper cookware — because the local market in Somone is one of the real pleasures of being here, and you'll want to cook with what you find. A washing machine, hair dryer, and a welcome kit of water, tea, and coffee mean you arrive and immediately exhale, rather than troubleshoot.
Housekeeping and maintenance are handled regularly. A dedicated local contact is available from your first message to your last morning — for check-in, logistics, restaurant recommendations, or arranging a pirogue trip on the lagoon.
Villa Amani sits in a quiet residential quarter of Somone — genuinely peaceful, not isolated. The village beach and lagoon are minutes away on foot. The livelier resort strip of Saly is a short drive for evenings out. Dakar is close enough for a day trip to Gorée Island or the IFAN Museum; far enough that you won't feel it from the pool.
Blaise Diagne International Airport (DSS) is served by direct flights from Paris, Lisbon, Brussels, Madrid, and Istanbul. No long-haul connections, no extreme jet lag. You can leave Europe on a Friday evening and be in the pool by Saturday morning.
Somone is small. The lagoon reserve brings birdwatchers and kayakers. The beach is calm and uncrowded. Evenings are about grilled fish, Touba coffee, and the kind of conversation that only happens when your phone isn't competing with a packed restaurant. There is no casino strip, no jet-ski armada. If that's what you're after, Saly is ten minutes away. But most guests who choose Somone specifically — don't want that.
Senegal is one of West Africa's most politically stable countries, with a long tradition of peaceful democracy and genuine hospitality (teranga in Wolof — it's not a tourism slogan, it's how people actually live here). The country is visa-on-arrival or visa-free for most Western passports. English is spoken in tourism contexts; French opens every door.
The Neighborhood
Somone has a particular quality that's hard to find on the Petite Côte anymore: it still feels like itself. The villa sits in a low-traffic residential quarter — the kind where neighbors greet you in the morning and the loudest thing you'll hear is the call to prayer or birds crossing the lagoon. It is not a gated resort. It's a real place, which is precisely why guests who've stayed in the larger resort towns nearby tend to come back here instead.
From the front door, a short walk brings you to two of the region's defining features in opposite directions: the Somone Lagoon Reserve — a protected natural sanctuary where you can kayak, spot migratory birds, or simply sit and watch the light change across the water — and the Atlantic coastline, where the beach is calm enough for young children and empty enough for early morning solitude. Both within ten minutes on foot. Both genuinely worth the trip on their own.
The immediate neighborhood is quiet and residential, but not cut off. Local restaurants serving fresh grilled fish and Senegalese staples, small boutiques carrying regional crafts, and everyday shops are all a short walk or drive away. You have the calm without the inconvenience.
For families, the environment is straightforward to navigate safely with children. For long-stay guests — those here for weeks rather than days, working remotely or simply decelerating — the neighborhood rhythm becomes its own reward. People come for a week and quietly extend.
Amenities at Private Pool Villa Amani on Senegal's Hidden Riviera — Somone Lagoon
Map of Thiès Region, Senegal
