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Tunisia Visa & Entry Rules for Australian and New Zealand Travelers (2025)
Tunisia welcomes travelers from Australia and New Zealand with one of the easiest visa-free entry systems in North Africa.
Stay up to 90 days without paperwork, just a valid passport, return ticket, and an open mind for the country’s calm rhythm and warmth.

Safouane Ben Haj Ali
Oct 163 min read


Choose Your Own Rhythm : The Art of Slow Shopping
Slow shopping is self-trust in motion. In Tunisia, buying has always followed conversation, not speed. My Chakchouka brings that rhythm online : calm, intentional, and free from pressure.

Aya Omrani
Oct 152 min read


How Fairness Became Our Design Principle
Fairness isn’t a slogan, it’s structure.
In Tunisia, craft has always carried its own balance: trust for trust, skill for respect.
At My Chakchouka, we rebuilt that rhythm for today: transparent pricing, no middlemen, and calm predictability for every maker.

Safouane Ben Haj Ali
Oct 152 min read


Bonjour or Salam? The Language Dance of Tunisian Gen Z
In Tunisia, Gen Z moves between Arabic, French, and English like second nature.
It’s not confusion, it’s identity.
This is the quiet intelligence of a generation fluent in context, rhythm, and belonging.

Safouane Ben Haj Ali
Oct 152 min read


Do You Tip in Tunisia?
Learn how tipping works in Tunisia, from cafés and taxis to hotels and artisans. A calm guide to respect, rhythm, and local manners.

Aya Omrani
Oct 93 min read


Sidi Bou Saïd: Myths and Truths About the Blue and White
Sidi Bou Saïd’s blue and white were not imported or invented : they were lived. Long before decrees or myths, locals painted for light, salt, and climate. This is the quiet truth behind Tunisia’s most photographed village.

Safouane Ben Haj Ali
Oct 72 min read


Sidi Bou Saïd: The Quiet Blue-and-White Hill Over the Mediterranean
Sidi Bou Saïd’s calm blue-and-white streets have inspired travelers and artists for centuries. Once a Sufi retreat, today it remains Tunisia’s most iconic village — quiet, sunlit, and overlooking the Mediterranean.

Safouane Ben Haj Ali
Oct 73 min read


Carthage: Layers of a Lost Empire
Overlooking the Gulf of Tunis, Carthage feels both ancient and alive. Among olive trees and broken columns, the sea still glows blue against Mount Bou Kornine. It’s a view that holds millennia, from Punic traders to Roman builders, and still whispers of power, loss, and return.

Aya Omrani
Oct 72 min read
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