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African Safari Trails · Travel Guide

Tanzania National Parks

Ways to explore the region

Tanzania’s national parks hold the great migration, Kilimanjaro, the Serengeti plains and wild southern and western wildernesses. African Safari Trails arranges trips to parks right across Tanzania, from the Serengeti to remote Katavi. This page links to our full guide for each park.

Tanzania has more protected wilderness than almost any country in Africa, from the famous northern circuit to the wild, empty parks of the south and west. Its national parks cover the great migration, the highest mountain in Africa, chimp forests on Lake Tanganyika and reefs where the bush meets the beach. Below is a short guide to each park, with a link to our full article. African Safari Trails ties them together into one trip.

National Parks

Explore the national parks.

East Africa

National Park

Serengeti National Park

The Serengeti is Tanzania’s flagship, an endless plain that stages the great migration and holds some of Africa’s finest big-cat viewing. Its grasslands, kopjes and rivers teem with wildlife year-round. It is the heart of the northern circuit.

East Africa

National Park

Tarangire National Park

Tarangire is famous for its elephants and its giant baobab trees, with dry-season concentrations of wildlife along the Tarangire River that rival the Serengeti. It is quieter than its famous neighbours. The baobab-dotted scenery is striking.

East Africa

National Park

Lake Manyara National Park

Lake Manyara, beneath the Rift Valley wall, is known for its tree-climbing lions, its flamingo-fringed lake and a treetop canopy walkway. Compact and varied, it makes a fine start to the northern circuit. The birdlife is superb.

East Africa

National Park

Arusha National Park

Arusha National Park, in the shadow of Mount Meru, offers giraffe, buffalo and the Momella lakes within a short drive of Arusha, with walking safaris and the Meru climb. It is an easy day trip or warm-up. The mountain scenery is lovely.

East Africa

National Park

Kilimanjaro National Park

Kilimanjaro National Park protects the highest mountain in Africa, the snow-capped dome that rises alone above the plains and is walked to its summit over several days. It is the great prize of African trekking. The climb passes through five climate zones.

East Africa

National Park

Nyerere National Park

Nyerere, the vast southern park once part of the Selous, is built around the Rufiji River, with boat safaris through channels and lakes alongside game drives. It is wild, quiet and full of wildlife. The river is its great feature.

East Africa

National Park

Ruaha National Park

Ruaha, in the remote centre-south, is one of Tanzania’s largest and wildest parks, known for big herds of elephant, strong predator populations and baobab country. It sees few visitors and feels truly wild. The sense of space is the appeal.

East Africa

National Park

Mikumi National Park

Mikumi, the most accessible park from Dar es Salaam, offers open plains rich in plains game, elephants and lions, often likened to a compact Serengeti. It suits a shorter southern trip. The wildlife is easy to see.

East Africa

National Park

Katavi National Park

Katavi, deep in the remote west, is one of Africa’s most untouched parks, with vast floodplains, huge hippo and crocodile gatherings and very few visitors. It is for those seeking true wilderness. The dry-season concentrations are dramatic.

East Africa

National Park

Gombe National Park

Gombe, Tanzania’s smallest park, is where Jane Goodall began her famous chimp study in 1960, a slim strip of forest on Lake Tanganyika. Chimp tracking here is intimate and historic. The forest tumbles down to the lake.

East Africa

National Park

Saadani National Park

Saadani is the one park where the bush meets the Indian Ocean, with elephants and lions roaming near a palm-fringed beach and boat trips on the Wami River. It is a rare wildlife-and-coast combination. The setting is unusual and lovely.

East Africa

National Park

Mkomazi National Park

Mkomazi, in the north-east beneath the Pare and Usambara mountains, is a dry-country park with a rhino refuge and wild dog, set in striking scenery. It is quiet and rarely visited. The mountain backdrops are fine.

East Africa

National Park

Kitulo National Park

Kitulo, the Garden of God, is a high southern plateau famous for its wildflowers and orchids, which carpet the grasslands in the rains, a botanical and walking destination unlike any other park. It is one for plant and nature lovers. The bloom is a spectacle.

East Africa

National Park

Burigi-Chato National Park

Burigi-Chato, in the north-west, is a large, newer park of savanna, lakes and wetland, recovering its wildlife and offering a quiet alternative away from the crowds. It is an emerging destination. The country is open and uncrowded.

Planning a Tanzania Parks Trip with African Safari Trails

Choosing between the famous northern circuit, the wild southern parks and the remote west, linking the bush to Kilimanjaro or the coast and pacing the long distances all go more smoothly with someone who knows the country, so your Tanzania trip is well shaped rather than scattered. African Safari Trails has spent years building itineraries across every park here, from the Serengeti to Ruaha, Mahale and beyond. They will tell you straight which parks suit your time and interests and how to tie them together, and handle the flights, lodges and park fees quietly in the background.

Want a proper quote, or just a steer on planning a Tanzania trip? Reach out to African Safari Trails and a real person gets back to you.

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