A safari company should be defined by its guides — not its marketing.
Why KisangaraAfrica’s largest protected ecosystem — at 5% of the visitor density.
Southern CircuitClimate varies significantly by altitude, region, and season across Tanzania.
Tanzania sits at the equator and experiences a warm, relatively consistent climate year-round. Temperatures rarely drop below 15°C or exceed 35°C in the safari areas. The variation that matters for visitors is not temperature but rainfall — when it rains, how much, and what effect that has on road access and wildlife distribution.
The Serengeti experiences two rainfall seasons: the long rains (March–May) and the short rains (November–December). The long rains are the more substantial — sustained rain over several weeks that can make some tracks impassable and disperses wildlife as water is available everywhere. The short rains are typically intermittent — afternoon showers that do not significantly affect game viewing but add dramatic cloud formations to the landscape. Between these rainy periods, the climate is dry, warm, and consistently good for safari.
The Ngorongoro Crater rim sits at 2,286 metres and is noticeably cooler than the plains below — expect temperatures 5–8°C lower than the Serengeti, with mist and cloud a regular morning feature on the rim. The crater floor itself is sheltered and warmer. Kilimanjaro creates its own weather system and generates significant cloud cover that extends south across the northern Serengeti — particularly in the afternoon months of March through May.
The Zanzibar coast has different weather patterns from the mainland. The short and long rains align roughly with the mainland but are moderated by the Indian Ocean. The north coast (Nungwi, Kendwa) is the most sheltered year-round and can be swum in any month. The east coast can have strong onshore winds from June through September. The best beach conditions overall are December–March and June–September.