Tanzania is one of those places that stays with you long after you’ve left. The Serengeti at dawn. Elephants crossing a dusty plain in the Ngorongoro Crater. The silence of the bush at night broken only by a distant lion’s call. But before you can experience any of that, one question needs answering honestly: how much is this going to cost?
At Kimgoni Tanzania Safaris, we get asked this every single day, and we always answer the same way — honestly. There’s no one-size-fits-all number. A Tanzania safari can cost you around $150 per person per day on the lower end, or over $2,000 per day for an ultra-exclusive private experience. The range is wide, and what you pay depends entirely on what you want.
This guide breaks it all down. We’ll walk you through real price bands, the factors that push costs up or down, what’s typically included (and what quietly isn’t), and how to figure out which style of safari suits your budget without sacrificing the magic you came for.
The Quick Answer: Tanzania Safari Price Ranges
Before diving into the details, here’s a practical overview of where safaris in Tanzania sit by budget tier. These are per person, per day estimates — all inclusive of accommodation, meals, and game drives, but excluding international flights.
Entry Level
Budget Safari
$150–$250
per person / per day
Shared group vehicles, basic tented camps or lodges. Ideal for backpackers and first-timers on a tight budget.
Most Popular
Mid-Range Safari
$350–$700
per person / per day
Comfortable lodges, included meals, and qualified guide. The sweet spot for most travellers seeking quality and value.
Top End
Luxury Safari
$800–$2,500+
per person / per day
Private guides, exclusive Tanzania luxury safari lodges, bespoke itineraries, and extraordinary service.
As Africa Gorilla Safaris note in their helpful overview of safari costs across the continent, a 7-day mid-range guided safari tends to come in around $4,000 per person, while a luxury experience can run anywhere from $5,000 to $21,000 depending on the choices you make. Tanzania sits comfortably within those broader African benchmarks — sometimes a little higher given the park fees, but always worth every shilling.
What Actually Drives the Cost of Tanzania Safari Tours?
Understanding where your money goes makes it far easier to decide where to spend and where to save. Here are the core components that build the price of any safari in Tanzania.
1. Accommodation — The Biggest Variable
Where you sleep is the single largest driver of price in Tanzania. A basic tented camp in the Serengeti might cost $80–$150 per person per night, while a renowned luxury camp in the same area could charge $800–$1,500 per night. Tanzania luxury safari lodges — the kind with private plunge pools overlooking the savanna — are extraordinary experiences, but they come with extraordinary price tags. For most of our guests at Kimgoni Tanzania Safaris, a well-chosen mid-range lodge gives the perfect balance of comfort and immersion.
2. Private Safari Tanzania vs. Shared Group Tours
This choice alone can double your cost. A private safari in Tanzania means your own vehicle, your own guide, your own schedule. You stop when you want, stay longer at a leopard sighting, eat lunch wherever the view is best. Shared group departures are significantly cheaper per person, but you’re on someone else’s timetable and packed in with strangers — which, honestly, some people love. Most of our clients who’ve done both say the private experience is transformative in a way that’s hard to fully explain until you’ve had it.
3. Park Entry and Conservation Fees
Tanzania’s national parks charge substantial entry fees, particularly for international visitors. The Serengeti and Ngorongoro Crater are the most expensive, with fees that can reach $70–$80 per person per day on top of your safari package cost. These fees go toward conservation, and Tanzania takes its wildlife seriously — which is exactly why the wildlife here is so remarkable. When you book Tanzania safari private tours through Kimgoni, all park fees are included and itemized clearly on your quote.
4. Your Guide and Vehicle
In Tanzania, a good guide is worth every cent. The best ones have spent years learning animal behaviour, know which waterhole the lions favour in the dry season, and will tell you the Swahili name of every bird that crosses your path. Some operators bundle the guide fee into their package; others list it separately. Always ask. Vehicle quality matters too — a well-maintained 4×4 with a proper pop-up roof for standing game viewing is the standard you should expect.
5. Season — When You Travel Changes Everything
High season in Tanzania (July–October, and January–February for the calving season) brings peak wildlife viewing but also peak prices. Lodges frequently charge 20–40% more during these months. Shoulder season — particularly April, May, and November — offers excellent value, fewer tourists, and lush green landscapes. If you’re flexible, travelling outside peak season is one of the smartest ways to stretch your budget.
6. Internal Flights vs. Road Transfers
Getting between parks like the Serengeti, Ngorongoro, and Tarangire by road can take hours — sometimes six or more. A short charter flight covers the same distance in 40 minutes. Internal flights in Tanzania typically run $200–$450 per person per leg, and while they add cost, they save time and often let you see the landscape from above (which is spectacular in its own right). For longer Tanzania safari tours, we often recommend at least one internal flight to reduce fatigue.
The best Tanzania safari isn’t necessarily the most expensive one. It’s the one that was planned honestly — with a guide who knows the land, an itinerary that fits your rhythm, and a price that leaves nothing hidden in the fine print.— Kimgoni Tanzania Safaris Team
Sample 7-Day Tanzania Safari Budgets
Here’s what a 7-day trip with Kimgoni Tanzania Safaris looks like at each price level, including the main extras. These are realistic, not aspirational.
Budget 7-Day Tanzania Safari — Shared Group
Safari package (basic camp, shared vehicle, 7 days)$1,050
Park entry fees (Serengeti + Ngorongoro)$490
Internal transfers (road)$180
International flight (estimate)$900
Visa, travel insurance, vaccinations$250
Tips & incidentals$120
Estimated Total~$2,990 per person
Mid-Range 7-Day Tanzania Safari — Private Vehicle
Safari package (lodge, private guide + vehicle, 7 days)$3,500
Park fees (bundled in package)Included
One internal flight (Arusha–Serengeti)$350
International flight$1,000
Visa, insurance, extras$280
Estimated Total~$5,130 per person
Luxury 7-Day Tanzania Private Safari
Tanzania luxury safari lodges package (7 nights, all inclusive)$9,800
Private guide & dedicated vehicleIncluded
Internal charter flights (2 legs)$800
International flights (business class estimate)$3,200
Optional activities (hot air balloon, walking safari)$700
Gratuities, visa, insurance$500
Estimated Total~$15,000 per person
When to Go: Seasons and Their Impact on Price
Highest Cost
Peak Season
July–Oct & Jan–Feb. Great Migration, dry season game viewing. Book 6–12 months ahead.
Best Value
Shoulder Season
March & June. Good wildlife, fewer crowds, lodges often offer 15–25% off peak rates.
Lowest Rates
Low / Green Season
April & May. Lush landscapes, baby animals, dramatic skies. Some roads can be challenging.
Tips for Getting Better Value on Your Tanzania Safari Company
You don’t have to compromise on the experience to be smart about cost. Here are the moves that actually make a difference:
- ✈Travel shoulder season. April through early June and November offer excellent wildlife, emptier parks, and meaningfully lower lodge rates — often 20–30% below peak pricing.
- Combine parks efficiently. Routing your itinerary so parks are geographically connected (Tarangire → Ngorongoro → Serengeti) reduces backtracking and internal flight costs.
- Consider mobile or semi-permanent tented camps. These often cost less than fixed lodges while offering an equally authentic and intimate bush experience.
- Always request a line-item quote. A trustworthy Tanzania safari company will show you exactly what’s included and excluded — no surprises at checkout. Kimgoni Tanzania Safaris provides this as standard.
- Don’t skip travel insurance. Medical evacuation from a remote Serengeti camp can cost tens of thousands of dollars. Comprehensive travel insurance is one of the best investments you can make.
- Book early for peak season. The best camps in the best locations during Great Migration months sell out. Booking 9–12 months ahead gives you access to the best options at the best rates.
What’s Typically Included — and What’s Not
When you’re comparing quotes from Tanzania safari tour operators, the difference between a $350/day package and a $500/day package often comes down to what’s bundled. Here’s what a solid mid-range package from Kimgoni Tanzania Safaris includes:
Usually included: all accommodation, all meals, twice-daily game drives, park entry fees, an English-speaking guide, drinking water in the vehicle, and all ground transport between parks on the itinerary.
Usually excluded: international flights, visas (currently $50 for most nationalities), travel insurance, vaccinations, alcoholic beverages, optional activities like hot air balloon flights or cultural village visits, and tips for your guide and camp staff (typically $15–$25 per person per day for the guide, and $5–$10 for camp staff).
Always ask for a clear written breakdown before you commit to any booking. The best safaris in Tanzania aren’t necessarily the most expensive — they’re the ones where you know exactly what you’re getting.
Why Tanzania? Why Now?
Tanzania is home to some of the greatest wildlife spectacles on Earth. The Serengeti hosts the largest animal migration on the planet — over 1.5 million wildebeest moving in a great circular route that defies belief when you witness it in person. Ngorongoro Crater is one of the world’s most concentrated wildlife areas, a natural amphitheatre where lions, rhinos, elephants, and flamingos share the same ancient caldera floor. Tarangire draws massive elephant herds during the dry season. Selous — now Nyerere National Park — offers walking safaris and boat trips through a wilderness larger than Switzerland.
As a dedicated Tanzania safari company, Kimgoni Tanzania Safaris has one focus: Tanzania. We don’t spread ourselves thin across a dozen countries. We know these parks, we know the best guides, we know which camp has the best sundowners and which concession gives you the best chance of a cheetah sighting. That depth of knowledge is something you can’t put a price on — but it does make every trip we plan worth every dollar spent.













