The dry season is prime time for Zimbabwe safari travel. As waterholes shrink and vegetation thins, wildlife gravitates to the Zambezi and the seasonal rivers of Hwange, making sightings dense and deeply rewarding. Days are warm and bright, evenings carry a crisp chill, and the near-cloudless skies lend every game drive and walking safari a cinematic quality. This is peak season for good reason, and early booking is essential.
Bespoke expeditions in Zimbabwe, designed around you
Bespoke expeditions in Zimbabwe, designed around you
Discover a land of thundering cascades, primeval river valleys, and elephant-laden wilderness, where every journey unfolds on its own extraordinary terms.
Bespoke expeditions in Zimbabwe, designed around you
Discover a land of thundering cascades, primeval river valleys, and elephant-laden wilderness, where every journey unfolds on its own extraordinary terms.
Ancient wonders, untamed wilderness
Zimbabwe is one of Africa’s most quietly magnificent destinations, a country that rewards those willing to look beyond the obvious with experiences that are genuinely humbling. From the raw power of Victoria Falls, one of the Seven Natural Wonders of the World, to the eerie stillness of Mana Pools at first light, it is a place of profound contrasts. Zimbabwe tailor-made expeditions reveal landscapes where baobabs punctuate red-earthed floodplains, where lions walk the sandbanks of the Zambezi, and where the rhythms of the wild have remained largely undisturbed for centuries. With far fewer visitors than many of its neighbours, Zimbabwe offers the kind of space and solitude that defines truly exclusive adventure travel.
A seasonal guide to Zimbabwe
Where our expeditions lead
From the thundering edge of the world's greatest waterfall to the remote floodplains of the Zambezi Valley, Zimbabwe's landscapes carry stories that stretch back beyond memory.
Victoria Falls
The defining icon of Zimbabwe adventure tours, Victoria Falls is a force of nature on a scale that must be witnessed in person to be believed. Standing at the lip of the gorge as the Zambezi plunges 108 metres into the churning abyss below is an experience that leaves no one unchanged. Beyond the spectacle, the surrounding national park offers superb wildlife viewing, white-water rafting, helicopter flights, and some of Africa's most dramatically positioned lodge experiences.
Hwange National Park
Zimbabwe's largest national park and one of Africa's great elephant sanctuaries, Hwange is home to over 45,000 elephants alongside lion, wild dog, cheetah, and an exceptional diversity of birdlife. The camp and hide system here is world-class, allowing guests to observe wildlife arriving at waterholes at close quarters and in complete silence. Hwange is at the heart of many of our Zimbabwe bespoke trips and consistently delivers encounters of rare intimacy.
Mana Pools National Park
A UNESCO World Heritage Site and arguably Zimbabwe's most extraordinary wilderness, Mana Pools sits on the southern bank of the Zambezi and is famous above all for its walking safaris. Here, guests follow experienced guides on foot through floodplain forests where elephants stand on their hind legs to reach albida pods and lions rest in the open shade. Canoeing the Zambezi past pods of hippo and basking crocodiles is among the defining Zimbabwe expedition experiences.
The Chobe River & Kasane Region
Where Zimbabwe, Botswana, Zambia, and Namibia converge at one of Africa's most extraordinary four-nation corners, the Chobe River offers some of the finest elephant and buffalo viewing on the continent. Sunset boat cruises along the water bring guests face to face with herds wading across the shallows, while the riverine forest teems with predators at dawn. This region pairs seamlessly with both Hwange and Victoria Falls on a wider Zimbabwe adventure.
Matobo Hills
A landscape of immense spiritual and geological power, the Matobo Hills rise from the southern plateau in a chaos of ancient granite boulders and sheltered valleys. This UNESCO-listed region holds the world's highest concentration of San Bushman rock art alongside a thriving white and black rhino population. Tracking rhino on foot here with expert guides is one of the most quietly exhilarating encounters on any Zimbabwe responsible travel itinerary.
Lake Kariba
Formed by the construction of the Kariba Dam in the 1950s, this vast inland sea stretches over 280 kilometres along the Zambezi Valley and remains one of Africa's most hauntingly beautiful landscapes. Houseboat safaris drifting past submerged trees and flooded shorelines, where elephants swim between islands and tiger fish break the surface at dusk, offer a genuinely different rhythm to the traditional land-based safari experience.
Victoria Falls
The defining icon of Zimbabwe adventure tours, Victoria Falls is a force of nature on a scale that must be witnessed in person to be believed. Standing at the lip of the gorge as the Zambezi plunges 108 metres into the churning abyss below is an experience that leaves no one unchanged. Beyond the spectacle, the surrounding national park offers superb wildlife viewing, white-water rafting, helicopter flights, and some of Africa's most dramatically positioned lodge experiences.
Hwange National Park
Zimbabwe's largest national park and one of Africa's great elephant sanctuaries, Hwange is home to over 45,000 elephants alongside lion, wild dog, cheetah, and an exceptional diversity of birdlife. The camp and hide system here is world-class, allowing guests to observe wildlife arriving at waterholes at close quarters and in complete silence. Hwange is at the heart of many of our Zimbabwe bespoke trips and consistently delivers encounters of rare intimacy.
Mana Pools National Park
A UNESCO World Heritage Site and arguably Zimbabwe's most extraordinary wilderness, Mana Pools sits on the southern bank of the Zambezi and is famous above all for its walking safaris. Here, guests follow experienced guides on foot through floodplain forests where elephants stand on their hind legs to reach albida pods and lions rest in the open shade. Canoeing the Zambezi past pods of hippo and basking crocodiles is among the defining Zimbabwe expedition experiences.
The Chobe River & Kasane Region
Where Zimbabwe, Botswana, Zambia, and Namibia converge at one of Africa's most extraordinary four-nation corners, the Chobe River offers some of the finest elephant and buffalo viewing on the continent. Sunset boat cruises along the water bring guests face to face with herds wading across the shallows, while the riverine forest teems with predators at dawn. This region pairs seamlessly with both Hwange and Victoria Falls on a wider Zimbabwe adventure.
Matobo Hills
A landscape of immense spiritual and geological power, the Matobo Hills rise from the southern plateau in a chaos of ancient granite boulders and sheltered valleys. This UNESCO-listed region holds the world's highest concentration of San Bushman rock art alongside a thriving white and black rhino population. Tracking rhino on foot here with expert guides is one of the most quietly exhilarating encounters on any Zimbabwe responsible travel itinerary.
Lake Kariba
Formed by the construction of the Kariba Dam in the 1950s, this vast inland sea stretches over 280 kilometres along the Zambezi Valley and remains one of Africa's most hauntingly beautiful landscapes. Houseboat safaris drifting past submerged trees and flooded shorelines, where elephants swim between islands and tiger fish break the surface at dusk, offer a genuinely different rhythm to the traditional land-based safari experience.
The natural wonders
Zimbabwe travel uncovers a land where geology, history, and wildlife converge in ways that are genuinely humbling. The ancient ruins of Great Zimbabwe speak to a sophisticated civilisation that flourished here eight centuries ago. The granite kopjes of the Matobo shelter both San rock art and Cecil Rhodes’ grave. The Zambezi, one of Africa’s four great rivers, carves a course through landscapes of extraordinary beauty and ecological importance. On our Zimbabwe tours, every landscape carries a story worth listening to.
Aerial view of the ruins
Zimbabawe
The natural wonders
Zimbabwe travel uncovers a land where geology, history, and wildlife converge in ways that are genuinely humbling. The ancient ruins of Great Zimbabwe speak to a sophisticated civilisation that flourished here eight centuries ago. The granite kopjes of the Matobo shelter both San rock art and Cecil Rhodes’ grave. The Zambezi, one of Africa’s four great rivers, carves a course through landscapes of extraordinary beauty and ecological importance. On our Zimbabwe tours, every landscape carries a story worth listening to.
Aerial view of the ruins
Zimbabawe
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Every journey I plan starts with a conversation. Tell me what excites you, what you've always dreamed of experiencing, and I'll craft something extraordinary. The best expeditions begin with a single question: What would make this unforgettable for you?
Ashley | Expedition Planner