A luxury safari in Tanzania is one of the few experiences left on earth that still feels genuinely rare. Picture sundowners on the rim of the Ngorongoro Crater, a private balloon flight over the Serengeti’s wildebeest migration, or breakfast served from a Land Cruiser bonnet while a leopard slips through the acacia. Tanzania concentrates more megafauna into more dramatic landscapes than almost any country on the continent — and its top camps deliver the comfort and discretion to match. Here are the best luxury safari camps and lodges in Tanzania to book in 2026, plus everything you need to plan a trip you’ll talk about for the rest of your life.
Why a Luxury Safari in Tanzania Beats the Alternatives
Kenya, Botswana, and South Africa are all legitimate choices, but Tanzania has three structural advantages. First, it holds the largest section of the Great Migration — roughly two million wildebeest, zebra, and gazelle moving in a 1,800-mile circuit, with the most dramatic Mara River crossings inside Tanzania’s northern Serengeti from July to October. Second, the country protects 38% of its land surface, more than any other African nation. Third, its top operators run fly-in circuits using private bush planes and exclusive concessions, so even peak-season game drives feel uncrowded.
The 7 Best Luxury Safari Camps & Lodges in Tanzania
1. Singita Sasakwa Lodge — Grumeti Reserves
If money is no object, Singita Sasakwa is the answer. Set on a 350,000-acre private concession bordering the western Serengeti, the lodge’s nine Edwardian-style cottages each include their own infinity pool overlooking the migration corridor. The fleet of vintage horses, private spa, observatory, and on-site equestrian centre mean you can spend a week here and never repeat an experience. Singita’s anti-poaching and conservation programmes are the gold standard.
Best for: Multi-generational families and travelers who want exclusivity at scale.
2. &Beyond Klein’s Camp — Northern Serengeti
Perched on a hillside overlooking a private 25,000-acre concession on the border of the Serengeti National Park, &Beyond Klein’s Camp is the rare luxury property where you can leave the vehicle and walk. The 10 stone-and-thatch cottages have outdoor showers, plunge pools, and unobstructed views toward the Kuka Hills. Night drives — illegal inside the national park — are permitted here, dramatically increasing your odds of seeing the big cats hunt.
Best for: Repeat safari-goers who want walking safaris and night drives.
3. Asilia’s Sayari Camp — Mara River Crossings
Located in the far northern Serengeti within striking distance of multiple Mara River crossing points, Sayari Camp is the camp to book if witnessing the migration is your priority. The 15 tented suites are airy, contemporary, and have outdoor copper bathtubs. Asilia’s guides are widely considered the best-trained in East Africa.
Best for: Travelers obsessed with the Great Migration’s river-crossing drama.
When to go: July to October.
4. The Highlands — Ngorongoro Crater
Asilia’s The Highlands reinvents the Ngorongoro experience with eight glass-fronted, geodesic-dome suites set high on the Olmoti volcano. The lodge’s elevation (8,500 feet) means cool nights, wood-burning stoves, and a view back down toward the crater rim. From here you can descend into Ngorongoro for a day, then track Maasai cattle herds or climb to extinct volcanic craters with a local guide on the way back.
Best for: A high-altitude alternative to the standard crater-rim lodges.
5. Chem Chem Lodge — Tarangire / Lake Manyara
An award-winning private concession between Tarangire and Lake Manyara, Chem Chem Lodge trades the wildebeest crowds for elephant herds, baobab forests, and flamingo-pink lakes. The eight tented suites are some of the most beautifully appointed in Africa, with handcrafted Maasai textiles, copper bathtubs, and private decks.
Best for: Honeymooners and quieter, more intimate safaris.
6. Roving Bushtops — Mobile Migration Camp
Roving Bushtops follows the migration through the Serengeti’s seasons, moving between the southern plains (December–March, when wildebeest calve), the central Seronera (April–June), and the northern Mara River area (July–November). Each of the 12 mobile tents includes a private deck, butler, and copper bathtub. It’s the most authentic way to chase the migration at the highest standard of comfort.
Best for: Travelers who want the migration without the crowds at fixed camps.
7. Greystoke Mahale — Chimpanzees on Lake Tanganyika
For travelers willing to fly deep into western Tanzania, Greystoke Mahale is unforgettable. The six driftwood-built bandas sit on a private beach on Lake Tanganyika, backing onto the Mahale Mountains where roughly 1,000 wild chimpanzees live. Mornings are spent trekking with researchers; afternoons are spent kayaking or sailing on a traditional dhow.
Best for: A bucket-list add-on for repeat safari-goers.
When to go: Dry season, June to October.
How to Build the Perfect Tanzania Safari Itinerary
A textbook 10-day luxury circuit links Tarangire (2 nights), Ngorongoro Crater (2 nights), and Serengeti (5 nights), with bush flights between camps to save road time. Extend to 14 days to add chimpanzee trekking at Mahale or a beach decompress on Zanzibar — the spice island’s white-sand beaches make a perfect post-safari closer.
When to Go on a Tanzania Safari
- July–October: Dry season; Mara River crossings in the northern Serengeti; peak prices and demand.
- December–March: Calving season in the southern Serengeti; predator action peaks; better value.
- April–May: Long rains; many camps close, but prices fall and crowds disappear.
- June & November: Shoulder seasons; great wildlife, fewer travelers, mid-range pricing.
Getting There
Most luxury safaris start with a flight into Kilimanjaro International (JRO) or Arusha (ARK). From there, bush planes operated by Coastal Aviation and Auric Air connect to camp airstrips. Travelers who want maximum privacy and speed can charter a private jet directly into the Serengeti — a service we cover in our private jet charter guide.
Budget Expectations
A genuinely luxurious 10-day Tanzania safari typically costs $18,000–$35,000 per person, all-inclusive of camps, bush flights, guides, park fees, and most beverages. Singita and the larger Bushtops mobile camps can push that figure significantly higher. Always book through a specialist operator who can secure conservation-fee discounts and complimentary nights on longer stays.
Final Word
The best luxury safari camps in Tanzania aren’t simply hotels with a view of the savanna — they’re conservation outposts with extraordinary guides, exclusive concessions, and standards of comfort that quietly outpace most five-star city hotels. Pair the right camp with the right season and you’ll have the kind of trip that recalibrates what travel can be.
For more African luxury inspiration, see our pillar guide to the best luxury safari lodges in Africa.


