Travelers planning a safari in Zimbabwe should focus on visiting Hwange National Park, Mana Pools, and Gonarezhou for diverse wildlife experiences, including large elephant herds and walking safaris. Booking guided tours with experienced local guides and scheduling visits during the dry season (May to October) will maximize wildlife sightings and comfort. Lodging ranges from mid-range camps ($150-$300 per night) to luxury lodges ($400+), with many emphasizing authentic wildlife interaction over flashy amenities.
Travelers seeking authentic, low-impact safari experiences with knowledgeable local guides and fewer crowds.
Access to large, unfenced wilderness areas with significant elephant populations and walking safari options uncommon in neighboring countries.
Limited infrastructure and fewer luxury accommodations compared to South Africa or Botswana, requiring more advance planning and flexibility.
Botswana’s Okavango Delta offers similarly rich wildlife but with more established luxury safari lodges and better-developed tourist infrastructure.
Zimbabwe remains one of Africa's premier safari destinations—a country where elephants still roam in herds of two hundred, where wild dogs hunt across unfenced wilderness, and where walking safaris put you on foot in territory shared with lions. While neighboring countries have seen visitor numbers swell, Zimbabwe's parks retain a sense of exclusivity and wildness that defined African safaris a generation ago.
The numbers tell part of the story: Hwange National Park covers 14,650 square kilometers—larger than some European countries—and supports over 40,000 elephants. Mana Pools, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, allows visitors to walk unguided through floodplains where bull elephants stand on hind legs to reach high branches. Gonarezhou's red sandstone cliffs shelter Africa's second-largest tusker population. But numbers miss the essence of what makes Zimbabwe special: guides who grew up tracking animals with their grandparents, lodges where staff have worked for decades, and a bush culture that prioritizes authentic wildlife encounters over luxury vehicles and Instagram shots.
The country's safari history runs deep. Professional guides here undergo some of the most rigorous training in Africa—years of study, field work, and examinations before earning certification. This expertise shapes every aspect of a Zimbabwe safari, from the interpretive walks that reveal the smaller dramas of the bush to the night drives that catch leopards on the hunt. Many lodges operate on private concessions bordering national parks, offering exclusive traversing rights and the freedom to go off-road, track predators, and conduct walking safaris that public park rules prohibit.
This guide covers Zimbabwe's major safari destinations in depth: the elephant-dense plains of Hwange, the wild river frontage of Mana Pools, the remote beauty of Gonarezhou, and the cultural significance of Matobo Hills. you can see practical advice on when to visit, what each season features, how to plan an effective safari route, and where to stay from budget campsites to award-winning lodges. if you are planning your first African safari or returning to renew an acquaintance with Zimbabwe's wilderness, this handbook provides the foundation for an authentic wildlife visit.
Top Zimbabwe Safari Tours and Experiences
Hand-picked tours — sorted by topic relevance, partner priority, and price.

Zimbabwe's Hidden Gems Wildlife Safari
- Elephants regularly visit Camp Hwange
- Private concessions with fewer vehicles

Mana Pools, Hwange & Livingstone Safari
- Private sunrise and sunset cruises on the Zambezi
- Bungee jumping and helicopter flights at Victoria Falls

2-Day Safari trip to Hwange National Park from Victoria Falls
- Opportunity to see Hwange's large elephant herds and diverse ecosystems in a single trip.
- Cost-effective itinerary that includes both day and overnight experiences.

From Victoria Falls Hwange National Park Day Trip
- Enjoy a day trip that maximizes your time without overnight travel.
- Experience guided tours that provide in-depth knowledge about the local flora and fauna.
- 100% ticket guaranteeReceive tickets on time for the experience you’ve booked.
- Free cancellation*Get a refund if your plans change — most options up to 24h before.
- Instant mobile ticketShow your ticket on your phone — no printing needed, confirmed instantly.
Why choose Zimbabwe for a safari?
top-tier Guiding: Zimbabwe's guide training program is legendary. The Parks and Wildlife Management Authority sets examinations that take years to pass, covering tracking, bird identification, botany, geology, and crisis management. Many guides hold Professional Hunter licenses even if they've never hunted—the qualification represents the highest level of bush competence. This depth of knowledge transforms game drives from animal spotting into ecological education.
Walking Safari Heritage: Zimbabwe pioneered the walking safari concept in the 1960s, and Mana Pools remains the only major African park where unguided walking is permitted. For guided walks, the country has the continent's most developed walking safari infrastructure—multi-day trails, canoe safaris, and walking-focused camps designed around this intimate approach to wildlife.
Low Tourist Density: Political and economic challenges over the past two decades kept visitor numbers low. While this caused hardship, it preserved the wilderness character of Zimbabwe's parks. You can still spend a morning at a Hwange waterhole without another vehicle in sight, or walk Mana Pools floodplains as the only humans for kilometers. As tourism recovers, this exclusivity is becoming increasingly rare.
Authentic Safari Culture: The lodges, camps, and guides here maintain traditions that elsewhere have given way to luxury and spectacle. Canvas tents, campfire dinners, early starts, and genuine bush immersion remain the norm rather than nostalgic marketing. Staff often represent multiple generations working the same concessions—institutional knowledge that enriches every interaction.
Conservation Investment: Safari tourism directly funds conservation in Zimbabwe. Concession fees support national parks, while community conservancies share revenue with rural populations who coexist with wildlife. Your safari spend contributes to anti-poaching operations, wildlife corridors, and programs that give local people economic stakes in preserving wildlife.
What is Hwange National Park known for?
Hwange National Park covers 14,650 square kilometers of Kalahari sandveld, mopane woodland, and teak forest in Zimbabwe's northwest. The park supports the country's highest wildlife densities, including over 40,000 elephants—one of Africa's largest free-roaming populations. During the dry season (July to October), herds of 200-400 elephants congregate at pumped waterholes, creating wildlife spectacles unmatched elsewhere on the continent.
Main Camp Area: The eastern section around Main Camp has the most accessible safari visit, with public campsites, lodges, and well-maintained roads. Waterholes like Nyamandhlovu Pan and Kennedy 1 guarantee elephant sightings in dry season. The area suits self-drive visitors and those seeking affordable accommodation without sacrificing wildlife.
Sinamatella Region: The northern section provides more dramatic scenery—gorges, kopjes, and views over the Lukosi and Deka rivers. Wildlife here is sparser but includes sable antelope, roan, and wild dog packs that den in the rugged terrain. Sinamatella Camp sits on a hilltop with sweeping views and a strong sense of remoteness.
Private Concessions: Exclusive concessions on Hwange's borders—Linkwasha, Davison's, Bomani—offer walking safaris, night drives, and off-road tracking that public park rules prohibit. These properties maintain their own waterholes, often sitting guests beside pools visited by elephants, lions, and wild dogs without another vehicle in sight. Prices range from $400-1,000+ per person per night all-inclusive.
Wildlife Highlights: Beyond the elephant herds, Hwange supports healthy lion and leopard populations, large wild dog packs (30+ individuals), spotted hyena, cheetah, and over 400 bird species. Endangered sable antelope and roan antelope find refuge in the remote western areas. The artificial waterholes, pumped using solar and diesel power, create predictable wildlife viewing that rewards patience.
Hwange National Park - Zimbabwe's largest wildlife reserve
What makes Mana Pools National Park good for walking safaris?
Mana Pools occupies the floodplains of the lower Zambezi River, where broad channels, seasonal pools, and albida woodlands create one of Africa's most photogenic landscapes. UNESCO recognized the park as a World Heritage Site for its exceptional concentration of wildlife along the Zambezi riverfront—hippos, crocodiles, elephants, and lions sharing space with visiting safari guests.
The Mana Visit: What sets Mana apart is accessibility on foot. This is the only major park in Africa where experienced visitors can walk unguided, and even first-timers can arrange walking safaris that put them at eye level with elephants and buffalo. The flat terrain, clear sightlines, and habituated wildlife create conditions where walking feels natural rather than reckless—though the frisson of adrenaline never entirely fades.
The Riverfront: The Zambezi frontage features year-round water in a seasonal landscape. The dry season (July to October) concentrates wildlife along the river, with elephants swimming channels, wild dogs hunting on sandbanks, and lions ambushing prey at drinking spots. Canoeing the river gives a different perspective—floating past crocodile basking sites and hippo pods with fish eagles calling overhead.
Albida Groves: The massive winter-thorn trees (Faidherbia albida) produce protein-rich pods during the dry season, attracting elephants that stand on hind legs to reach high branches—a Mana Pools signature behavior. These groves create cathedral-like spaces where photographers capture well-known images of elephants against the riverine forest.
Practical Considerations: Mana Pools is remote—the access road from Harare takes 4-5 hours plus a final stretch of deep sand requiring 4x4. The park closes during the rainy season (December to April) when roads become impassable and malaria risk peaks. Accommodation ranges from national parks campsites (book months ahead) to luxury tented camps charging $700+ per night.
“In forty years of guiding, I've watched Mana Pools elephants learn to trust humans on foot. A bull elephant who accepts your presence at twenty meters—not fleeing, not charging, just acknowledging—that's the real safari experience. You can't buy that from a vehicle with binoculars.”
What wildlife is found in Gonarezhou National Park?
Gonarezhou—"place of many elephants" in Shona—covers 5,000 square kilometers of rugged terrain in Zimbabwe's southeast, bordering Mozambique's Limpopo National Park and South Africa's Kruger. Together they form the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park, allowing wildlife to move across the vast landscape as it did before borders existed.
The Chilojo Cliffs: Gonarezhou's signature landmark rises 180 meters above the Runde River—red and orange sandstone formations that glow at sunrise and provide nesting sites for raptors. The viewpoint from the cliff edge ranks among Africa's most dramatic, with the river winding through riverine forest below and the wilderness stretching to the horizon.
Wildlife Recovery: Poaching during Zimbabwe's political crises devastated Gonarezhou's elephant population. But sustained conservation efforts—supported by the Frankfurt Zoological Society and Gonarezhou Conservation Trust—have enabled remarkable recovery. The park now supports over 11,000 elephants, including bulls with tusks reaching the ground. Lion and wild dog populations are rebuilding through natural dispersal from the Mozambique side.
Remoteness: Gonarezhou receives fewer visitors than Hwange or Mana Pools—roughly 3,000 annually compared to tens of thousands. Infrastructure is minimal: a handful of campsites and two or three lodges. Mobile phone coverage barely exists. This isolation preserves an authentic wilderness character but requires self-sufficiency for self-drive visitors.
Access and Timing: The park lies 5-6 hours from Harare via Masvingo (stop at Great Zimbabwe en route). Dry season (May to October) provides the best wildlife viewing and passable roads. Summer rains make many tracks impassable.
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What can you see at Matobo Hills?
The Matobo Hills rise from the plains south of Bulawayo—granite domes and balanced rock formations shaped by billions of years of erosion. While not a traditional big game destination, Matobo features two experiences found nowhere else in Zimbabwe: reliable white and black rhino sightings, and the highest concentration of San rock art in the world.
Rhino Tracking: The Matobo National Park and surrounding conservancies support both black and white rhino—populations carefully protected and monitored. Walking with rangers to find these critically endangered animals provides a different safari visit: tracking spoor through the granite maze, moving quietly, and encountering rhinos in terrain that predates dinosaurs. Success rates exceed 90%.
Rock Art Heritage: The San people created paintings in these hills over thousands of years—human figures, wildlife, spiritual imagery rendered in ochre, white, and brown pigments. Major sites like Nswatugi Cave and Pomongwe contain hundreds of images, while thousands of lesser sites scatter through the hills. UNESCO recognized Matobo as a World Heritage Site partly for this cultural legacy.
Wildlife Beyond Rhinos: Leopards thrive in the rocky terrain, and the hills support Africa's highest density of black eagles. Sable antelope, zebra, giraffe, and smaller antelope species populate the valleys between the kopjes. The landscape's intimacy—kopjes and valleys rather than vast plains—creates a contemplative alternative to the big game drama of Hwange or Mana.
Cecil Rhodes' Grave: The controversial colonialist chose Matobo as his burial site, on a granite dome he called "View of the World." Regardless of historical perspective, the viewpoint itself features panoramic vistas across the hills—worth the climb for the landscape alone.
Matobo Hills - UNESCO World Heritage Site and rhino sanctuary
What are the best Time for Safari in Zimbabwe?
Zimbabwe's safari seasons break into three distinct periods, each offering different wildlife viewing conditions and experiences.
Dry Season (May to October): This is prime safari time. Vegetation thins, wildlife concentrates at water sources, and clear skies make photography ideal. July to September sees the highest wildlife densities at Hwange's waterholes. October—the "suicide month"—brings intense heat but desperation drives animals to water at any hour. Prices peak and lodges book months ahead for this period.
Green Season (November to March): The rains transform Zimbabwe's parks into lush, emerald landscapes. Migratory birds arrive—carmine bee-eaters, storks, raptors. Newborn animals appear across the bush. Wildlife disperses across the landscape, making sightings less predictable but often more intimate. Lodge rates drop 20-40%, and you'll have camps nearly to yourself. Mana Pools closes during this period.
Shoulder Season (April to May): The rains end, temperatures moderate, and the bush remains green while wildlife begins concentrating. This sweet spot features good rates, comfortable weather, and improving game viewing. Many consider it the best time for photography.
Victoria Falls Timing: If combining safari with Victoria Falls, note that the falls peak in April-May (dramatic but very wet) while low water season (September-December) allows Devil's Pool swimming and clearer viewing. Consider visiting Hwange in dry season, then the falls for low-water activities.
How do I plan a safari in Zimbabwe?
Duration: A minimum of 4-5 nights in one park allows proper immersion—two nights barely scratches the surface. Combining parks (Hwange + Mana, or Hwange + Victoria Falls) requires 8-10 days minimum. Adding Gonarezhou or extending time in each location means 2-3 weeks for a comprehensive visit.
Budget Breakdown: Self-drive camping in national parks costs $30-50 per person per night (park fees, camping, own food). Mid-range lodges run $200-400 per person sharing, typically including meals and shared activities. Premium lodges charge $600-1,500+ per person all-inclusive with private guiding. Internal flights between parks cost $300-500 per sector.
Classic Itineraries:
- 7 Days: 4 nights Hwange + 2 nights Victoria Falls—the essential Zimbabwe combination
- 10 Days: 4 nights Hwange + 3 nights Mana Pools + 2 nights Victoria Falls
- 14 Days: Add Matobo Hills for rhinos and rock art, or Gonarezhou for wild remoteness
Self-Drive vs. Fly-In: Self-driving saves money and features freedom but requires 4x4 capability, bush-driving visit, and significant time on rough roads. Flying between parks maximizes wildlife time and suits those with limited days. Most visitors combine: drive sections where roads are good, fly where distances are long.
What to Pack: Neutral colors (khaki, olive, brown), layers for cold mornings and hot afternoons, sturdy walking shoes for bush walks, binoculars (10x42 recommended), camera with telephoto lens, and prescribed malaria prophylaxis. Power banks are essential as charging opportunities are limited.
What should I know about walking safaris in Zimbabwe?
Zimbabwe has the most developed walking safari opportunities in Africa, from introductory dawn walks to multi-day trails camping in the wilderness. This is the original safari visit—moving through the bush on foot, reading signs, approaching wildlife at ground level.
What to Expect: Walking safaris prioritize the holistic bush visit over big animal sightings. You'll learn to read tracks, identify medicinal plants, understand elephant behavior from ground signs, and appreciate the smaller dramas—dung beetles, ant lions, scorpions—that vehicles rush past. When you do encounter large animals on foot, the intensity exceeds any vehicle sighting.
Safety: Professional guides carry rifles and undergo extensive training in avoiding and managing dangerous encounters. You'll receive briefings on behavior around elephants, buffalo, lions, and hippos. Walking safari safety records are excellent—incidents are extremely rare despite decades of operation. Operators select routes to minimize risk while maximizing visit.
Mana Pools Walking: The premier destination. Multi-night trails follow the Zambezi escarpment or walk through the floodplains with mobile camping between sites. Day walks from fixed camps work the riverine areas. Qualified visitors can walk unguided—a privilege distinctive to Mana.
Hwange Walking: Private concessions around Hwange offer walking on a smaller scale—typically 2-3 hour morning walks from camp, with chances to track elephant and encounter the smaller bush residents. Some lodges specialize in walking-focused safaris.
Matobo Walking: The rhino tracking visit involves walking through the granite kopjes—scrambling over rocks, moving quietly, reading tracker radio signals until you locate the animals. A distinctive walking visit combining safari and hiking.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Where can I find official Zimbabwe safari resources?
Official park entry fees, accommodation bookings, and conservation information
Registered safari operators and professional guide standards
National tourism information including visa requirements and travel planning







