From Savannah to Jungle: 12 Best National Parks in Africa

Elephant-In-Front-Mt-Kilimanjaro-Wide-Angle

Whether you’re a wide-eyed first-timer or an old safari hand, Africa never fails to get under your skin. Understandably so, as this magnificent continent has few peers when it comes to natural beauty or wildlife. As we all like to say, “There is something special about Africa that touches the soul.” Much of the magic happens within the national parks, where there’s a breathtaking mix of thrilling wildlife encounters, magnificent scenery and once-in-a-lifetime experiences. Each of the following national parks is unique and offers something different to the next whether it’s canoeing past crocodiles, gorilla treks or leopard sightings. I suppose the only real question is; which one are you going to go to? Here is the list of the best national parks in Africa, compiled by the travel experts at Rhino Africa.

The 12 Best National Parks in Africa

1. Etosha National Park, Namibia

Etosha is one of the best National Parks
Etosha is one of the best National Parks

One of the largest national parks in the world, Etosha lies in the north of Namibia and has a 5,000 km² pan that was once an ancient inland sea. This park is without doubt one of the best national parks in Africa. The strikingly beautiful setting of Etosha is ideal for spotting wildlife at watering holes, given the open and arid landscape.

 Intense fight between two male Gemsbok on dusty plains of Etosha
Intense fight between two male Gemsbok on dusty plains of Etosha
A herd of zebras in Etosha
A herd of zebras in Etosha National Park savannah’s

Etosha is home to some rare and unusual wild animals, as well as the Big 5, boasting the tallest elephants on the continent. The park is home to hundreds of species of mammals, birds and reptiles, including several threatened and endangered species such as the black rhinoceros.Winter (April to October) is the ideal time to go game viewing, as the vegetation is sparse, animals congregate at the watering holes, and the weather is more accommodating.

2. Serengeti National Park, Tanzania

The Great Migration is one of the most spectacular experiences
River crossing is one of the most spectacular experiences offered by the Great Migration

Stretching across 1.5 million hectares of land, the Serengeti National Park is famous for its astounding amount of wildlife, endless plains and, of course, the annual Great Wildebeest Migration.

Wildebeest running across the Serengeti plains, past a 4x4 vehicle
Wildebeest running across the Serengeti plains, past a 4×4 vehicle, image credit: Serengeti Under Canvas
A black maned lion
A black-maned lion walking in the savannah

The name “Serengeti” comes from the word used by the Maasai to describe the area, siringet, which means “the place where the land runs on forever.” The endless plains of the Serengeti National Park happen to boast the oldest eco-system on the planet. The Serengeti is ideal big cat country. Lions are everywhere – the Serengeti is considered to have Africa’s largest population. Cheetahs are very common on the southeastern plains, while leopards can often be found lazing in one of the big trees along the Seronera River. Much action can be seen near rivers and waterholes where the wildlife assembles. As well as being home to countless hippo pods and crocodiles, the water’s edge is the prime position from which to watch nature unfold—whether it’s simply to see elephants escaping the midday heat or lions and crocodiles compete over food sources.

3. Kruger National Park, South Africa

A cheetah prepares to attack a buck
A cheetah prepares to attack a buck, photo Credit: Mala Mala

Lying in the north of South Africa, the Kruger is one of the world’s great national parks and the largest and oldest national park in South Africa. Stretching over 20,000 square kms, it is bigger than Wales. 

Elephants at Silvan in Kruger, one of Africa's most special national parks
Kruger National Park is a great place to see elephants in the wild

The diversity, density and sheer numbers of animals is almost unparalleled, and all of Africa’s iconic safari species thrive here along with 137 other mammals and over 500 varieties of bird. It’s also regarded as the best place in the world to see a leopard.

Riverside dining at Lion Sands
Riverside dining at Lion Sands, photo credit: Lion Sands

It’s the lodges in the Kruger that really send the experience over the top. Highly-qualified guides, fine cuisine and exceptional service are hallmarks of the Kruger lodges. Think private bush dinners under a starry night sky, romantic chalets with private plunge pools, luxury sleepout decks in trees and every possible whim catered for.

4. Mahale Mountains National Park, Tanzania

A chimpanzee in a forest
A chimpanzee in the forest, photo credit: Greystoke

Located in the far west of Tanzania on the shores of Lake Tanganyika, Mahale boasts the best chimpanzee viewing in Africa – about 1,700 chimpanzees live in the area. The focal point for visitors is the 60-strong ‘M’ group, which has been the subject of research for more than four decades. Interestingly, Mahale is also the only place in the world where chimpanzees and lions live alongside one another.

Mahale Lodge
Mahale Lodge view from the sea, photo credit: Greystoke Mahale
A relaxing chimp
A relaxing chimp, photo credit: Greystroke

In addition to the up-close encounters with chimpanzees, Mahale is absolutely stunning. Forested mountains cascade down to the lake shore, the mist-covered peak of Mount Nkungwe rises up in the background and crystal-clear waters teeming with fish lap against white sand coves. Another unusual feature of the park is that it is one of the very few in Africa that must be experienced by foot. There are no roads or other infrastructure within the park boundaries, and the only way in and out of the park is via boat on the lake.

5. Moremi Game Reserve, Botswana

A herd of elephants in the water
A herd of elephants in the water

Covering one-third of the Okavango Delta, Moremi is one of the finest wildlife reserves in Africa. It consists of a network of waterways surrounding two large islands; the iconic Chiefs Island in the west and Mopane Tongue in the east. In 2008, it was voted the ‘best game reserve in Africa’ by the African Travel and Tourism Association and was the first reserve in Africa that was established by local residents.

Two lion cubs lying together with the sunset behind
Two lion cubs lying together with the sunset behind
Safaris in Botswana are memorable
Sunset as closure of a memorable safari in the Okavango Delta, Botswana

The reserve’s startlingly unique landscape – ranging from riverine forests and marshlands to savannahs and wetlands flecked with palm islands – provide visitors with an awe-inspiring vista. The local BaSarwa bushmen also reside in the area, offering visitors an intimate look into their traditional way of life.The Delta’s meandering waterways are a highlight of Moremi’s experience and offer boat safaris and traditional mokoro rides, while guests can explore the land either by safari vehicle or on foot with a guide.

6. South Luangwa National Park, Zambia

An elephant walks into reception
An elephant walks into reception, photo credit: Mfuwe Lodge

The South Luangwa National Park lies in eastern Zambia, in the Luangwa Valley at the tail end of Africa’s Great Rift Valley. Its remote location and the relatively small number of visitors means it provides an unspoilt haven for wildlife and game viewing, far more exclusive than some of southern Africa’s more famous reserves.

A walking safari group watching a giraffe
A walking safari group watching a giraffe, photo credit: Mfuwe Lodge

South Luangwa is the home of walking safaris and is the ultimate way to experience the African bush. On walking safaris you’re accompanied by an expert guide through the bush, encountering wild animals along the way. You can choose from a one-day trail to a week-long trek, sleeping under the stars at mobile camps each night and makes for one of Africa’s most thrilling experiences!

A leopard close to water in Zambia
A leopard close to water in Zambia, photo credit: Mfuwe Lodge

For scenery, variety and density of animals, South Luangwa National Park is right up there with the best in Africa. Impalas, pukus, waterbucks, giraffes and buffaloes wander on the wide-open plains. Leopards hunt in the dense woodlands. Herds of elephants wade through the marshes. Hippos munch serenely on Nile cabbage. The bird life is also tremendous: about 400 species have been recorded.

7. Bwindi Impenetrable Forest, Uganda

A gorilla with her young one
A gorilla with her young one in Bwindi National Forest

Home to almost half of the world’s surviving mountain gorillas, the World Heritage-listed Bwindi Impenetrable National Park is one of Africa’s special places. Set in improbably steep mountain rainforest, the park is home to an estimated 360 critically endangered gorillas.

Gorilla walking in the rainforest
Gorilla walking in the rainforest , image credit: Gudkov Andrey
A creek through dense jungle
A creek through dense jungle

The Impenetrable Forest is one of the most biologically diverse areas on earth. It’s also one of Africa’s most ancient habitats since it thrived right through the last Ice Age when most of Africa’s other forests disappeared. It contains 120 species of mammal, more than any of Uganda’s other national parks. Sightings are less common due to the dense forest though. Lucky visitors might see forest elephants, 11 species of primate, duiker, bushbuck, African golden cats and the rare giant forest hog.

8. Amboseli National Park, Kenya

An elephant in front of Mount Kilimanjaro
An elephant in front of Mount Kilimanjaro

Amboseli grants its visitors one of the most iconic sights in Africa – big-tusked elephants set against the backdrop of Africa’s best views of Mt Kilimanjaro. The world’s tallest freestanding mountain actually rises just across the border in Tanzania but Amboseli has a postcard-perfect view of its snow-capped peaks.

A herd of elephants with Mount Kilimanjaro in the background
A herd of elephants with Mount Kilimanjaro in the background, photo credit: Cliff Rosenberg

The name “Amboseli” comes from a Maasai word meaning “salty dust”. It is one of the best places in Africa to view large herds of elephants up close. Nature lovers can explore five different habitats here. The habitats are ranging from the dried-up bed of Lake Amboseli, wetlands with sulphur springs, the savannah and woodlands. They can also visit the local Maasai community who live around the park and experience their authentic culture.

9. Mana Pools National Park, Zimbabwe

An aerial view of Mana Pools
An aerial view of Mana Pools, photo credit: Ruckomechi Camp
An elephant climbing tree for fruit in Mana Pools
An elephant climbing tree for fruit in Mana Pools, photo credit: Jez Bennett

Mana Pools National Park is the real deal. If you’re looking to go off the beaten track and find an authentic experience of untouched Africa, then this is the place for you. It’s raw, it’s beautiful and it’s not for the faint-hearted. Mana Pools attracts many large animals in search of water, making it one of Africa’s most renowned game-viewing regions. This UNESCO World Heritage Site has Zimbabwe’s biggest concentration of hippos and crocodiles as well as large dry season populations of elephant and buffalo. Canoe safaris down the Zambezi are one of the best ways to see the wildlife here.

Canoe down Zambezi past elephants
Canoe down Zambezi past elephants, photo credit: Ruckomechi Camp

Other animals can regularly be seen on the river terraces such as eland, impala, waterbuck, baboons, monkeys, zebra and warthog. These animals come out to eat the fallen Albida fruit, a tree that is synonymous with Mana Pools.

10. Andasibe-Mantadia National Park, Madagascar

A group of ring-tailed lemurs in Madagascar
A group of ring-tailed lemurs in Madagascar, image credit: Glenn Weston
Colourful chameleon in Madagascar
Colourful chameleon in Madagascar, image credit: Jean-Louis Vandevivère

Like nowhere else on earth, the magic of Madagascar leaves a vivid impression on all those who visit. It’s the world’s oldest island. 5% of all known animal and plant species can be found here, and here alone. It’s like another planet – home to strange, bulbous trees and enchanting, dancing animals. Andasibe-Mantadia National Park is the best place to see Madagascar’s fascinating wildlife and its most famous residents, the lemurs.The Andasibe-Mantadia National Park is Madagascar’s most accessible rainforest park. It’s famous for the Indri, the world’s largest lemur and the star of the park. Due to the park’s small size, most of it can be covered in short walks. The park is including two small lakes, Lac Vert (Green Lake) and Lac Rouge (Red Lake).

A lemur family in a huddle
A lemur family in a huddle, image credit: Calgary Zoo

The best time for seeing indris is early in the morning, from 7am to 11am. The park is also known for its biodiversity of other lemur species (there are 11 other species), birds, reptiles, and amphibians.

11. Kibale Forest National Park, Uganda 

Chimpanzee looking up in Kibale forest
Chimpanzee looking up in Kibale forest, image credit: Robin Nieuwenkamp
A beautiful leopard in a tree
A beautiful leopard in a tree

Kibale Forest National Park is a lush tropical rainforest in southern Uganda, with the highest density of primates in Africa. It’s also the second best place in the world, after Mahale, to track wild chimpanzees, with five groups habituated to human contact. It’s home to 13 primate species, with the endangered red colobus monkey and the rare L’Hoest’s monkey the other highlights.

A close up of a chimpanzee
A close up of a chimpanzee, image credit: Martin Mecnarowski

A large wildlife corridor links Kibale to Queen Elizabeth National Park, where herds of African elephants roam freely between both sanctuaries. While the park’s plethora of primates is undoubtedly its main draw, Kibale is also home to other animals such as leopard, buffalo, duiker, and bushpig. Bird lovers will be mesmerised by the park’s 325 recorded bird species. A hard day exploring is best topped off with a cup of coffee made from the park’s wild Robusta coffee tree. There are also an incredible 250 species of butterfly that live here.

12. Hwange National Park, Zimbabwe

Wild dog pups watching their surroundings
Wild dog pups watching their surroundings

Hwange National Park is the biggest, and some say best, wildlife reserve in Zimbabwe. Its sheer size means that it’s an exceptionally diverse park with terrain ranging from the semi-desert scrub in the south, to forests, granite hills and valleys of mopane woodlands in the north. Hwange National Park, pronounced ‘Wang-ee’, is brimming with wildlife and is home to over 100 mammal species, including lion, leopard, cheetah, hyena, wild dogs and rhino.

A walking safari in South Luangwa
A walking safari in South Luangwa, image credit: South Luangwa
A baby elephant walking
A baby elephant walking

Hwange is best known for its elephants and has one of the world’s largest populations of around 40,000 tuskers. The highest numbers of animals are spotted in the dry season (August to October). During this period, the wildlife congregates around the shrunken water holes.

Book your safari in one of the best national parks in Africa

Africa has so much to offer. The sheer diversity of landscapes, animals, and activities will never let you down!

We have first-hand experience of all these national parks. We can tailor-make your trip to enable you to enjoy the best national parks in Africa.

Contact our Travel Experts today, and let’s start planning!

Baby Gorilla with mother in Uganda

Bananas, Rolexes, boda-bodas and Michelle Pfeiffers. These are some of the things that await visitors to Uganda’s capital, Kampala.

Bananas are everywhere you go in Uganda. Everywhere. Often you will see them stacked up impossibly high on top of the equally ubiquitous motorcycle taxis called boda-bodas. Everything and anything is carried by the boda-bodas. Fruit, livestock, bricks, furniture, people – all are piled on. Five people on one boda-boda is a Michelle Pfeiffer. A Rolex is Uganda’s version of a breakfast burrito. It is a rolled up chapati with scrambled eggs in it. That’s where the name “Rolex” comes from, rolled eggs. These quirky idiosyncrasies are a small part of what make Kampala such a vibrant African city and a traveler’s favourite. It is outside of the city, however, in Uganda’s national parks and reserves that travelers are most likely to be charmed.

The Pearl of Africa

As Lonely Planet explains, “Emerging from the shadows of its dark history, a new dawn of tourism has risen in Uganda, polishing a glint back into the ‘pearl of Africa’. Travellers are streaming in to explore what is basically the best of everything the continent has to offer.”

Uganda is home to the Rwenzoris, the tallest mountain range in Africa, which is the source that feeds the Nile, the world’s longest river and Lake Victoria, the continent’s largest lake. The country is also one of the best places in the world to see gorillas and chimpanzees and also has a range of Big 5 game parks with abundant wildlife. This place is a thriving destination with a range of diverse offerings for the more adventurous traveller. These are our top five things to see in Uganda:

What to do in Uganda: Our Top 5

1. Gorilla Trekking in Bwindi Impenetrable Forest

Baby gorilla in Bwindi National Park
Gorilla in Bwindi Impenetrable National Park, Uganda

The Bwindi Impenetrable Forest is a national park that is home to almost one-half of the world’s population of the endangered mountain gorilla, making it an extremely valuable conservation site and one of Uganda’s chief tourist attractions.

It is situated in the south west of Uganda on the edge of the Great Rift Valley and is considered the most diverse forest in Uganda. Encompassing an ancient and vast stretch of lush rainforest, it is one of the few large expanses of forest in East Africa where lowland and mountain habitats meet.

2. Chimpanzee Tracking in Kibale National Park

Schimpanse im dichten Busch

Kibale is one of the best places in the world to go chimpanzee tracking with about 500 of these primates spread around the park. The chimpanzee tracking tours leave twice a day with an expert guide who will lead you on a trek through the verdant rainforest.

The Kibale forest is rich in wildlife and is most noted for its primate population. Other than chimpanzees, Kibale has populations of red-tailed monkey, diademed monkey, olive baboon, and black and white colobus.

3. Queen Elizabeth National Park

Uganda is not just about gorillas and chimpanzees. You can also enjoy a traditional East African safari in one of the game parks dotted around the country. The Queen Elizabeth National Park is considered the best option as it contains a wide variety of wildlife and is easily accessible in the western corner of Uganda. The park is famous for its tree climbing lions that can sometimes be spotted resting in the branches of the large fig trees in the area.

Queen Elizabeth National Park is located at the base of the Rwenzori Mountains and the views from some of the camps are simply spectacular. The park boasts an array of wildlife such as lion, leopard, elephant, antelope including the native Ugandan kob and the park is home to over 600 bird species which makes up a quarter of Africa’s total birdlife.

4. The Mountains of the Moon

Crater Lakes, Uganda
Image credit: Matti Saranpää

In ancient times, it was reported that the much-debated source of the Nile was a group of massive mountains in East Africa. It was said that the Nile flowed from the mountains into a series of large lakes. The natives called this range the Mountains of the Moon because of their snow-capped whiteness.

These mountains turned out to be the Rwenzoris, which means “maker of rain” in local dialects, which are a dramatic range just to the northwest of Lake Victoria. Their highest peak is Mount Stanley, Africa’s third highest mountain at 5,109m. These mountains experience regular and significant snowfall and hold several significant glaciers. Today these are among the most endangered glacial formations on the planet. These impressive mountains can be admired from afar or, for the more adventurous, can be traversed with challenging multi-day hikes.

In the foothills of the range lie the crater lakes, also called explosion craters, which are extinct volcanoes. These picturesque crater lakes (some over 400m deep), are ringed with improbably steep hills. It’s a great spot to settle in for a few days to explore the footpaths or cycle the seldom-used roads.

5. Murchison Falls

Murchison Falls National Park
Image credit: Luz D. Montero Espuela

Murchison Falls National Park is Uganda’s largest and the location of the famous waterfall of the same name. The park is bisected by the Victoria Nile, which first races down 80km of white-water rapids before squeezing through a narrow gorge, only seven metres wide, to create a spectacular waterfall that plunges 43 metres below. The Murchison Falls, the park’s greatest draw card, drains the last of the river’s energy, transforming it into a broad, slow river that flows quietly across the rift valley floor for 55km to Lake Albert. The river’s banks are thronged with hippos and crocodiles, waterbucks and buffaloes. Wildlife includes lions, leopards, elephants, giraffes, hartebeests, oribis, Uganda kobs, chimpanzees, and many bird species.