to
Shinyanga. The Tanzania National Roads Agency (
TANROADS) - an Executive Agency under the Ministry of Works, Transport and Communications - came into operation in July 2000 and is the agency responsible for the maintenance and development of the trunk and regional road network in Mainland Tanzania. The total classified road network in Mainland Tanzania was estimated to be based on the Road Act 2007. The Ministry of Works through TANROADS is managing the national road network of about , comprising of
trunk road and of regional road. The remaining network of about of urban, district and feeder roads is under the responsibility of the Prime Minister's Office Regional Administration and Local Government (PMO-RALG).
Trunk roads •
Dar es Salaam and
Dodoma ( entirely paved): The A-7 road links Dar es Salaam and
Morogoro. The B-129 road then connects Morogoro with Dodoma. • Dar es Salaam and
Iringa ( The remainder of the road to Dar es Salaam is paved. The long
Mkapa Bridge is on this stretch of road, spanning the
Rufiji River. • Tanga and
Arusha ( • Dodoma and the border with
Rwanda at
Rusomo Falls ( (entirely paved): From Nzega in the
Tabora Region, the B-3 road leads to the Rwandan border (). • Kigoma and the border with
Burundi at
Manyovu: The road is entirely paved. • Mwanza and
Musoma ( Following is the list of Tanzanian trunk roads. Meanwhile, Tanzania has introduced a numbering system for trunk roads using numbers starting with "T" but so far the "A" designations are visible if at all.
Regional roads near
Mount Kilimanjaro, 2007 •
Mtwara Region: Paved roads link Mtwara and
Masasi and from there almost to
Nangoma. An
unpaved road then leads to
Mtambaswala and the modern
Unity Bridge on the
Mozambique border. The
African Development Bank in April 2012 approved a loan to Tanzania to pave this road, followed in April 2013 with an additional loan of 7.659 billion yen (US$77.9 million) from Japan. • Western regions are the most poorly served, with no paved highways except locally in
Kigoma and
Ujiji. Only one dirt road runs down the western side of the country, it is just a track between
Kasulu and
Sumbawanga and prone to flooding south of
Mpanda. Between
Tunduma in the south-west and Nyakanyazi junction near
Kibondo in the north-west, a distance of nearly 1000 km, there are no highways in the centre of the country.
International highways The
Cairo-Cape Town Highway, Highway 4 in the
Trans-African Highway network, runs between the northern town of
Namanga on the
Kenyan border and the
Zambian border town of
Tunduma in the southwest, via
Arusha,
Dodoma,
Iringa, and
Mbeya. The section between the entrance to
Tarangire National Park and Iringa has been recently paved between Babati-Kondoa-Dodoma-Iringa. There is no longer a need to traverse a longer eastern route from Arusha to Iringa via
Moshi and
Morogoro is paved. This route is versus for the Arusha-Dodoma-Iringa route. In the southwest, from Iringa to Tunduma, the Cairo-Cape Town Highway follows the
Tanzam Highway linking
Zambia and
Dar es Salaam. ==Rail transport==