In this study, the author interrogates the gendered challenges that Somali migrant women experience in South Africa (Gauteng Province) within transnational contexts. Those challenges are interrogated through a feminist intersectionality lens and gendered geographies of power theories. The study is qualitative; therefore, data were gathered through in-depth interviews with 40 participants residing in Gauteng Province, South Africa. The participants were chosen through the snowball sampling technique. Somali women are not a homogeneous community but a heterogeneous entity defined by different social, political and economic backgrounds. In that respect, it is highlighted in this study that gendered challenges facing these women impact them varyingly along multiple factors that facilitate or hinder the negotiation of their space in the transnational context. The Somali migrant women in the spaces explored stand at the intersection of diverse planes of identification, namely gender (as women), nationality (as foreigners), faith (as Muslims) and race (tone and texture of hair and skin).