Your Guide to the Best Places in Africa for a Spectacular Safari
Discover the Best Places to Visit in Africa for an Unforgettable Safari
8 to 14 nights
Most of our guests tend to deploy 8 to 14 nights in Africa, of which anything from 3 to 13 nights are spend actually on safari. Combining with other locations like tropical beaches, rural areas, Victoria Falls and Cape Town can add variety into a trip and help to keep a lid on costs.
12 to 21 nights
Longer trips of 12 to 21 nights tend to include 9-20 nights on safari, usually split across two to five different areas, sometimes in two or more countries. Longer explorations of non-safari areas such as the Western Cape (Cape Town, Whale Coast, Cape Winelands) also become possible and are incredibly good value.
21 to 50 nights
We absolutely love putting together even trips of 21 to 50 nights, or even longer. Sometimes we are lucky enough to work with guests who are taking a sabbatical from work or who are retired and just love to travel. In these trips, the possibilities become almost infinite and can include a half dozen or more countries.
Safaris in Africa range from relatively pricey to eye-wateringly expensive. For the core safari nights in a trip, you can expect to spend £400 to 3000 per person per night.
We are more than happy to work across this range of prices. The only important thing is that we help you find the very best safari to suit your budget.
The two dominant price factors are the specific lodges that you choose to include in your trip and how many people you are bringing (solo safari can be impractically expensive, whilst the economies of scale are usually reached at around 4-6 guests).
If you have a higher budget, we will help you determine which camps do actually deliver elevated levels of service and experience. We will also highlight other subtle ways in which your trip can be raised to another level, including the use of whole camp bookings, private guides and vehicles, helicopter explorations of remote areas etc.
If you have a medium budget, the best ways to keep a lid on costs are to travel out of the Jul-Oct dry season and to carefully choose lower-priced lodges. You can also reduce the number of core safari nights and deploy time in more cost-effective beach, town and rural locations. We will help you understand where to trim and where to splash in order to achieve the best overall experience.
If you have a lower budget, then talk to us about last-minute booking options, which can deliver some extraordinary discounts. Failing that, we can always look at other fundamentally less pricey safari countries.
How much to spend on safari in Africa
Tropical beaches
If you want to include tropical beaches with your safari, the most convenient locations are Kenya, Tanzania and the Kruger area of South Africa. Other safari areas and more remote Indian Ocean islands can be combined, but the connections are more sticky.
Popular extensions
Primate areas
If you also want to go trekking in the tropical forests in search of gorillas and chimpanzees, then you need to head to Rwanda or Uganda, which combine most easily with the Serengeti region of Tanzania for savanna safari.
Rural locations
Some safari locations are located near attractive rural areas, where stylish lodges offer a chance to relax and undertake a whole other range of more culturally-focused activities. The Serengeti region of Tanzania is particularly strong in this respect.
The best safari lodges in Africa
Africa has around 2300 safari lodges.
We are able to include any of these properties in your trip. We ones most like to recommend fall into two categories …
Firstly, there are the truly high-end lodges, which are in the very best locations and offer the highest levels of guiding, hospitality and consistency, suitable for demanding guests.
Secondly, there are the relatively good value camps, which are also in excellent locations and also take their guiding very seriously, but which typically offer lower levels of luxury and have the potential to be slightly less consistent in their delivery, suitable for more easy-going guests.
The properties that we generally prefer to avoid in Africa are the large sausage-factory-type places, which deliver nasty low-quality safari experiences to guests who appear to be on a very different agenda. We also need to avoid very simple lodges, where the experience can be too unreliable for us to recommend.
You can always expect absolute honesty from us when describing the various lodges and camps. Our primary motivation is to figure out which ones will suit you the best.
When to go on safari in Africa
The various safari areas of Africa are not only very seasonal, but even in the same month conditions can vary enormously from place to place. Careful planning is extremely important. The high level view goes something like this …
May-Sep is the main dry season in most safari locations, with dry and sunny conditions, prolific wildlife viewing, high season prices and relatively high visitor traffic.
Oct-Nov is a transition period in most areas, with mixed weather conditions, slightly reduced wildlife sightings, reduced prices and relatively low visitor traffic.
Dec-Jan is usually good in most of East Africa, but hot and rainy in much of Southern Africa, with high season prices and high visitor traffic for the middle two weeks.
Feb-Apr is generally rainy and adverse, but with major exceptions including the migration calving season in the Serengeti area of Tanzania and great low season prices in Botswana. Visitor traffic is generally quite low.
How long to spend in Africa
About us
Expert
Our safari experts are uncommonly knowledgeable and experienced
765,000
The number of superb safaris we have so far created
Seamless
Arranging your trip should be almost as much fun as actually going on safari
Value
Your trip should cost you no more than if you booked all the components directly
Tailored
Your trip will be perfectly tuned to meet your requirements
ATR is widely recognised as the world’s leading tailor-made safari company. We will help you to find a more authentic, more exciting, better value safari.
What our guests say
“We’ve used many different travel organizers and agents, but one truly stands like a giraffe, head and shoulders above all others.”
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“ATR are honest in their appraisal of individual lodges. You can trust their judgement.”
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The year that we started to build great safaris
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True wilderness
Some safari areas are enormous wildernesses, whilst others are small fenced reserves. You will have to decide for yourself how important that is to your enjoyment.
Private or public
Many of the best safari areas in Africa are private conservancies, where visitor numbers are very low and there should be no risk of vehicle traffic.
Seasonality
It is critical that a safari be perfectly tuned to the seasonal patterns of weather, wildlife and visitor traffic. You can rely on us to be particularly obsessive about this issue.
Small lodges
Most of the very best safari lodges have less than ten rooms, some less than five. When a lodge exceeds twenty rooms, alarm bells should really start to sound.
Safari guiding
The quality of the safari guiding is critical your trip. A bad guide can drive past all the animals, a great guide can make an empty landscape entertaining.
Ethos
The best safari operations are run by people who have dedicated their lives to conservation. If an operation feels to commercial, then you’ve taken a wrong turn.
There are certain key traits which betray the quality of a safari. Here are a few things to look out for when making your deliberations …
Best African Countries To Visit For Safari
Botswana
Renowned for offering the purest bush experiences on the continent, Botswana contains vast and iconic safari locations including Okavango Delta, Linyanti Waterfront and Makgadikgadi.
Can be visited year round, but very hot Oct-Nov. The most expensive option during the Jul-Oct dry season, but fabulous value Nov-Mar.
Combines easily with Victoria Falls and the Cape.
Tanzania
The Serengeti region is usually explored overland and delivers a diverse safari experience of volcanic landscapes, prodigious wildlife and tribal peoples.
Ruaha, Selous and Katavi are superb fly-in safari areas, whilst the extremely remote Mahale offers the best primate interaction in Africa. Particularly strong during the May-Oct dry season, but can be visited any time. Relatively expensive year-round.
Combines easily with primate areas and tropical beaches.
South Africa
Kruger is by far the most popular safari area in Africa, with easily accessible wildlife and a huge range of lodges.
The country also contains some interesting lesser-known areas, including Tswalu, Waterberg and Phinda. Not as truly wild as countries further north. Strongest during the May-Oct dry season. Includes the best lower-cost options in Africa.
Combines easily with the Cape and the tropical beaches of Mozambique.
Zimbabwe
The country of Zimbabwe is renowned for having the highest quality of safari guiding in Africa, with a particular focus on approaching potentially dangerous wildlife on foot.
Fabulous wildlife areas include Mana Pools, Hwange and Gonarezhou. Only fully accessible during the May-Oct dry season. Relatively expensive.
Combines easily with Victoria Falls and the Cape.
Victoria Falls
The Victoria Falls are very conveniently combined with the safari areas of Botswana, Zambia, Zimbabwe. There are even direct flight connections with the Kruger area of South Africa.
Cape Town
Cape Town, the Whale Coast and the Cape Winelands are extremely beautiful and ridiculously good value. Adding them to a safari can really help keep a lid on the total cost of a trip.
Madagascar
Madagascar is a vast place that really needs a bare minimum of ten nights to even scrape the surface. It therefore tends to be combined with safari on the mainland in trips of three or more weeks.
Popular types of safari
Honeymoon safaris
There is no better and no more romantic honeymoon than a safari honeymoon.
We have been helping guests to build awesome honeymoons for many years. We very much understand the importance of such a trip. We know that it needs to really reach the heights and to be a truly life-punctuating experience.
Family safaris
An African safari should be one of the most wonderful things that your family will ever do, on so many levels. The deep sense of adventure, coupled with a wide range of unforgettable experiences, enriches the memory bank like no other type of trip.
Our experts have a great deal of experience of creating truly remarkable family safaris for a very wide range of tastes and budgets.
Luxury safaris
If your dream safari involves beautifully designed lodges, wonderful food and elegant service, then there’s a very wide range of lodges in Africa from which to choose.
Usually, higher levels of luxury also imply higher prices, but this is not necessarily the case. There are some very well-priced options in parts of South Africa in particular.
Adventure safaris
If you are more focused on the intensity of the experience, then that’s no problem. We can dial up the heat on a safari as high as you wish. Most commonly this means simpler stripped-down camps and raw experiences such as approaching lions and elephants on foot.
Some of our safari experts are particularly experienced in this kind of thing. They delight in putting together trips that go far beyond the usual envelope.
There are nine main safari countries in Africa, which vary enormously in terms of landscapes, climates, wildlife, safari styles, visitor facilities and visitor numbers. Deciding the best countries to include in your trip is a fundamentally important issue.
Zambia
A genuine backwater, safari in Zambia has a particular focus on authenticity and intimacy.
The country contains the fabulous safari areas of South Luangwa, Lower Zambezi and Kafue.
Only fully accessible during the May-Oct dry season. Relatively expensive.
Combines easily with Victoria Falls and the Cape.
Namibia
Comprised of a dazzling array of remarkable desert landscapes, Namibia is relatively weak for classic savanna safari but superb for more diverse adventures.
The only country in Africa that is most commonly explored by self-drive (which can be extraordinarily cost-effective, typically over 12-24 nights), but also with some fabulous flying safari and overland expedition options. Can be visited year round, but strongest May-Dec. Combines easily with the Cape.
Kenya
The original home of the photographic safari, contemporary Kenya is an unusual contradiction of superb high-end safaris and awful mass-market tours. The most famous locations are Maasai Mara, Amboseli and Samburu, but we love to include more remote options like Mathews Range, Chyulu Hills and Tsavo East. Particularly strong during the May-Oct dry season, but with options in every month. Relatively expensive year-round.
Combines easily with primate areas and tropical beaches.
Uganda
The main reason to visit Uganda is to interact with gorillas in Bwindi Forest and chimpanzees in Kibale Forest, often with trips as short as 4-7 nights. The savanna safari extensions to Queen Elizabeth and Murchison Falls are reasonably interesting, whilst the very remote Kidepo Valley is a real trophy location. The tropical forest areas can be visited year-round, but Kidepo is limited to Nov-Feb. Relatively expensive year-round.
Combines easily with safari in Serengeti.
Rwanda
Similarly, the main reason to visit Rwanda is to interact with gorillas in Virunga Mountains, often with trips as short as 4-7 nights.
The savanna safari extensions to Akagera are reasonably interesting, but it’s more common to hop across Lake Victoria to Serengeti. The tropical forest areas can be visited year-round.
Increasingly, Rwanda is focused on very high-end lodges, which are very expensive.
What makes a good safari in Africa