
Serengeti National Park
Covering nearly 15,000 square kilometers in northern Tanzania, Serengeti National Park is a world-renowned UNESCO World Heritage Site. Famous for its "endless plains," it hosts the Great Wildebeest Migration and is home to the Big Five (lion, leopard, elephant, buffalo, and black rhino) alongside diverse, sweeping savanna landscapes

Ngorongoro Conservation Area
The Ngorongoro Crater, located in northern Tanzania, is the world's largest intact, unfilled volcanic caldera. Formed roughly 2.5 million years ago, this 610-meter-deep (2,000 feet) natural sanctuary spans about 260 square kilometers and shelters over 25,000 large animals, including the highest density of predators in Africa.

Lake Manyara National Park
Lake Manyara National Park is a compact 330 sq km (127 sq mi) Tanzanian gem. Famous for its spectacular soda lake, tree-climbing lions, massive elephant herds, and prolific birdlife, it is located about 126 km (78 miles) southwest of Arusha and serves as an ideal stopover on the way to the Ngorongoro Crater and Serengeti.

Mkomazi National Park
Covering 3,245 square kilometers, Mkomazi National Park in northeastern Tanzania is a remote, semi-arid sanctuary famous for its dramatic backdrop of the Usambara and Pare mountains and its vital conservation work for the critically endangered black rhino and African wild dog

Arusha National Park
Arusha National Park is a diverse, compact gem covering 137 sq km in northern Tanzania. Located just a short drive from Arusha and Kilimanjaro International Airport, it features three distinct zones: the towering Mount Meru, the wildlife-rich Ngurdoto Crater, and the scenic, alkaline Momella Lakes.

Gombe National Park
Gombe Stream National Park is a rugged, roadless wilderness on the eastern shores of Lake Tanganyika in western Tanzania. Covering only 52 km², it is the country's smallest national park. It is globally renowned as the site where Dr. Jane Goodall pioneered her groundbreaking chimpanzee behavioral research in 1960

Ruaha National Park
Ruaha National Park is Tanzania’s largest national park, covering over 20,226 km². Located roughly 130 km west of Iringa, it is celebrated for its untamed, remote wilderness. It is an extraordinary transition zone where East and West African flora and fauna collide, offering spectacular dry-season wildlife viewing

Selous Game Reserve
The Selous Game Reserve is one of Africa’s largest protected wilderness areas, located in southeastern Tanzania. Covering over 50,000 square kilometers, it is renowned for its untouched miombo woodlands, the life-giving Rufiji River system, and vast, undisturbed habitats hosting some of the continent's largest populations of elephants, buffalo, crocodiles, and wild dogs

Kilimanjaro National Park
Kilimanjaro National Park, located in northern Tanzania near Moshi, covers 1,688 square kilometers. It protects the world's tallest free-standing mountain and Africa's highest peak, the 5,895-meter (19,341 ft) Mount Kilimanjaro. The UNESCO World Heritage Site is celebrated for its unique, multi-zoned ecology and dormant volcanic peaks

Saadani National Park
Saadani National Park is Tanzania's only wildlife sanctuary where the bush meets the sea. Spanning 1,100 square kilometers, it blends an Indian Ocean marine ecosystem with a coastal savanna, offering a unique opportunity to spot lions, elephants, and giraffes just steps away from palm-lined, white sandy beaches

Tarangire National Park
Tarangire National Park is a 2,850 sq km (1,096 sq mi) gem in northern Tanzania, famed for its towering baobab trees, immense elephant herds, and the life-giving Tarangire River. Located just a 2-hour drive from Arusha, it serves as a tranquil, less-crowded alternative on Tanzania’s famous northern safari circuit

Mikumi National Park
Established in 1964, Mikumi National Park is Tanzania's fourth-largest national park, covering 3,230 square kilometers. Famed as the "mini-Serengeti," it offers exceptional wildlife viewing, sprawling savannahs, and a lush mountain backdrop, all located just a few hours west of Dar es Salaam

Udzungwa National Park
Udzungwa Mountains National Park is a 1,990-square-kilometer haven in south-central Tanzania. Famous as the "Galapagos of Africa", it is part of the ancient Eastern Arc Mountains. Uniquely, the park has no drivable roads; it is an exclusive, on-foot destination renowned for its pristine rainforests, towering waterfalls, and high concentration of rare, endemic species.

Kitulo National Park
Kitulo National Park, situated in Tanzania's Southern Highlands, is a breathtaking alpine plateau between the Kipengere, Poroto, and Livingstone ranges. Often called the "Serengeti of Flowers" or "God's Garden", it is the first national park in tropical Africa established primarily to protect its magnificent flora

Mount Kilimanjaro Climbing
Located in Tanzania, Mount Kilimanjaro is the highest mountain in Africa and the world's largest free-standing mountain. Rising 5,895 meters (19,341 feet) above sea level, it is a massive stratovolcano composed of three volcanic cones: Kibo, Mawenzi, and Shira
















