
The beautiful precipice road to Serra da Leba
Angola, africa
29.7 km
1.845 m
extreme
Year-round
# Serra da Leba: Angola's Legendary Mountain Pass
Perched on the border between Huíla and Namibe provinces in southwestern Angola, about 20 miles west of Lubango, Serra da Leba is one of the world's most famous hairpin-laden mountain roads. The fully paved EN280 (Estrada Nacional 280) has quite the origin story—legend says a Portuguese woman designed and built the road, only to pass away the very day it was completed after viewing her masterpiece.
Built during Angola's colonial era starting in the late 1960s and officially opened in the 1970s, this engineering marvel still turns heads today. The most intense stretch runs 29.7km from Renato Grade to Leba, where the real drama unfolds. You'll spiral down from the high plateau at 1,845 meters to nearly sea level in just over 10 kilometers—essentially dropping through 3-4 completely different climate zones in one drive. Some sections hit a stomach-churning 34% gradient, and the lack of guardrails combined with rainy or dark conditions makes this road genuinely treacherous. Locals call it "the beautiful precipice," and it's earned that nickname through decades as a national landmark and, unfortunately, the site of numerous accidents.
But it's absolutely worth experiencing. The scenery is stunning, so plan to stop and soak it in rather than just barrel through. Head to the communication masts at the top (turn left past the toll station) for an incredible viewpoint where you can watch the steepest sections plunge into the lush green below. There's even a small bar nearby if you need to steady your nerves after the drive down.
Road Details
- Country
- Angola
- Continent
- africa
- Length
- 29.7 km
- Max Elevation
- 1.845 m
- Difficulty
- extreme
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