Kenya and Tanzania Safari

Tanzania vs Kenya: The Key Differences

Tanzania and Kenya share the same wildlife-rich East Africa ecosystem, and both attract safari travellers from across the world. When people search for a “Kenya and Tanzania safari,” they are usually asking the same question: which is better; or can you better do both?

Kenya offers excellent game viewing, particularly in the Maasai Mara, but it also carries significantly higher visitor numbers, especially during the Great Migration crossing season. Tanzania’s Serengeti covers six times the area of the Maasai Mara and sees a fraction of the safari traffic. The result: quieter drives, fewer vehicles at sightings, and a more genuine wilderness experience.

Tanzania also has something Kenya cannot match: the Ngorongoro Crater, one of the most extraordinary wildlife habitats on earth. Tarangire and Lake Manyara add variety that extends a northern circuit itinerary well beyond what Kenya alone can offer.

 

Is a Kenya and Tanzania Safari Combination Worth It?

Crossing from Tanzania into Kenya adds cost, border logistics, and limits what you can include in Tanzania. For most travellers with 7–11 days, focusing on Tanzania delivers more diversity and better value than splitting the trip across two countries.

The Great Migration crosses between the Serengeti and Kenya’s Maasai Mara, but the river crossings happen at the Mara River which sits inside Tanzania’s Serengeti as well as the Maasai Mara. You can witness the crossing without leaving Tanzania.