Is Tanzania the best country in Africa for a safari?
Tanzania is consistently ranked the best safari country in Africa by SafariBookings, Travel + Leisure, and Condé Nast Traveler readers. The reason is unique scale: the Serengeti–Ngorongoro–Maasai Mara ecosystem is the largest connected wildlife habitat in Africa, and Tanzania holds roughly 38% of its total land surface as protected wildlife area — more than any other country on the continent. Tanzania also has the full Great Migration year-round (Kenya only sees it for 2–3 months), the most reliable Black Rhino sighting in the wild (Ngorongoro Crater), and the highest African mountain (Kilimanjaro) for an add-on climb.
How much does a Tanzania safari cost in 2026?
A 7-day Tanzania safari in 2026 costs approximately USD 2,000–2,800 per person sharing for budget camping, USD 4,000–5,500 for mid-range lodges, and USD 8,500–16,000 for luxury fly-in safaris. International flights are excluded. Park fees (USD 70/day for the Serengeti, USD 70.80 for the Ngorongoro Crater descent) are bundled into operator pricing. Green-season rates (April–May) drop by 25–40% with no significant compromise on wildlife viewing.
What is the best time of year for a Tanzania safari?
The dry season from late June through October is the best time for general game viewing across all Tanzanian parks — wildlife concentrates at water sources, vegetation is sparse, and the Mara River crossings happen in the northern Serengeti. February is the best month for the Migration calving in the southern Serengeti (Ndutu) when up to 8,000 wildebeest calves are born per day at the peak. April and May are the cheapest months due to long rains, but lodges are open and parks are stunningly green. November short rains are brief and rarely disrupt safari plans.
How many days do I need for a Tanzania safari?
A minimum of 5 days is recommended for a Tanzania safari to make travel time worthwhile: 1 night Tarangire or Manyara, 2–3 nights Serengeti, 1 night Ngorongoro Crater. Seven days is ideal and gives time to slow down. Ten to fourteen days lets you add Zanzibar (3–4 nights beach extension) or a Kilimanjaro climb (5–8 days), or visit the southern circuit (Nyerere/Selous and Ruaha) which is far quieter than the north.
What animals will I see on a Tanzania safari?
Tanzania has the Big Five (lion, leopard, elephant, buffalo, rhino) plus all other classic East African wildlife. The Serengeti has the highest lion population in Africa (around 3,000), the Ngorongoro Crater has the highest density of large predators per km² in the world, and Tarangire has elephant herds that can reach 3,000 in the dry season. Other regular sightings include cheetah, hyena, giraffe, zebra, wildebeest (1.5 million), hippo, crocodile, baboons, and over 500 bird species.
Which parks should I visit on my first Tanzania safari?
First-time visitors should focus on the Northern Circuit: Tarangire National Park (massive elephant herds, baobabs), Lake Manyara National Park (tree-climbing lions, flamingos), Serengeti National Park (Great Migration, Big Five, predator density), and Ngorongoro Crater (most reliable Black Rhino sighting). This sequence works geographically — you drive in a roughly anti-clockwise loop from Arusha, ending each section in a different ecosystem. Second-time visitors often skip Manyara and add Lake Natron or fly south to Nyerere.
Is a Tanzania safari safe?
Tanzania is one of the safest African countries for tourism, with a stable government, low urban crime relative to neighbours, and no active insurgency in safari areas. The main daily risks on safari are road conditions on long transfers, malaria (mosquito-borne, prophylaxis recommended), and following your guide's instructions around wildlife. Booking with a TATO-licensed operator removes most logistical risk: vehicles are inspected annually, guides are first-aid certified, and emergency evacuation insurance is standard.
Do I need vaccinations or a visa for Tanzania?
Yellow fever vaccination is required if arriving from a yellow-fever endemic country (most of sub-Saharan Africa) and is recommended for everyone else. Routine vaccinations (tetanus, hepatitis A and B, typhoid) should be up to date, and malaria prophylaxis is strongly recommended — consult your doctor 6 weeks before travel. A Tanzania visa costs USD 50 (USD 100 for US passports), available as eVisa or visa-on-arrival at JRO, DAR, and ZNZ airports.