Solo travel to Tanzania is more common than you might think, and it is genuinely rewarding in ways that group or couple travel sometimes is not. When you travel alone, you engage more deeply with the environment, make faster connections with guides and camp staff, and carry none of the compromises that come with shared decision-making. Some of the most insightful, experienced Tanzania travelers we meet are solo adventurers who have returned three or four times precisely because of how the experience felt as an individual.
That said, solo travel to Tanzania requires a few practical considerations that do not apply in the same way to group travel. This guide addresses safety, logistics, costs, and the social dynamics of solo safari travel honestly and practically.
Is Tanzania Safe for Solo Travelers?
Tanzania is one of East Africa’s most stable and visitor-friendly countries. Political violence is rare, tourist infrastructure is well-established, and the national culture is genuinely hospitable. Petty crime — pickpocketing and bag snatching, particularly in Dar es Salaam, Arusha city centre, and Stone Town in Zanzibar — is the primary security concern for solo travelers. It is manageable with basic awareness.
For women traveling solo, Tanzania is generally safe with appropriate precautions. Zanzibar’s Stone Town, as a majority-Muslim community, has specific dress code expectations that are worth respecting — covering shoulders and knees in the historic medina area is both culturally appropriate and reduces unwanted attention. In the safari parks and lodge environments, safety is not a meaningful concern. Read our comprehensive Tanzania travel safety guide for a detailed breakdown of specific risks and how to manage them.
The Single Supplement Challenge
The biggest practical challenge of solo safari travel is the single supplement. Lodges and camps price their rooms on a double-occupancy basis, and solo travelers typically pay a supplement of 25–50% above the per-person rate to occupy a room alone. For a 7-day safari, this can add $500–1,500 to your total cost depending on the accommodation tier.
There are two practical solutions: join a group departure that already includes shared accommodation costing, or specifically choose operators who do not charge single supplements on small private departures. Our dedicated solo safari Tanzania page covers our specific solo traveler options in detail, including group departures where single supplement is waived when sharing with another solo traveler.
Solo Safari: Group Joining Options
| Option | How It Works | Single Supplement | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Group departure | Join existing group of 4–6 on fixed dates | None | Budget travelers, social types |
| Share with matched solo | Operator matches two solos | None (if matched) | Flexible solo travelers |
| Private solo safari | Your own vehicle and guide | Full supplement | Those prioritizing exclusivity |
| Lodge join-in | Base at lodge, join scheduled drives | Room supplement only | Independent-style travelers |
Solo Travel Safety Tips: Arusha
Arusha is the safari capital of Tanzania and your likely entry and exit point for a northern circuit trip. It is a lively, commercial city with genuine character and some excellent restaurants. For solo travelers, a few practical precautions make the difference between a comfortable city stop and a stressful one:
- Use registered taxis arranged through your hotel rather than hailing vehicles on the street. Ask your lodge or hotel to call a trusted driver.
- Avoid displaying expensive cameras, phones, and jewellery in Arusha city centre, particularly near the market areas and the central clock tower.
- The Clock Tower area and the market in Sokoine Road are known pickpocket zones — go with awareness and keep bags in front of you.
- Arusha’s restaurant and lodge district (particularly around the Njiro and Corridor areas) is safe and pleasant in the evenings.
- Confirm your safari departure logistics the day before through your operator — solo travelers sometimes feel less confident asserting themselves on group logistics, but your operator genuinely wants the experience to run smoothly.
Solo Travel Safety Tips: Zanzibar
Zanzibar is generally very safe and relaxed for solo travelers. Stone Town has some specific considerations:
- The narrow alleys of Stone Town can be disorienting at night. Stick to main streets after dark or travel with your guesthouse’s recommended walking guide.
- Negotiate taxi prices before entering the vehicle. Fixed-price tourist taxis from the port area have set rates that are worth confirming upfront.
- Beach areas — particularly Nungwi and Kendwa — have active beach-boy vendor culture. A polite but firm “no thank you” and continued walking is the most effective strategy.
- Keep hotel contact details and a charged phone when exploring independently.
Best Tanzania Experiences for Solo Travelers
| Experience | Why It Works Solo | Where |
|---|---|---|
| Group safari departure | Built-in social dynamic, shared cost | All northern parks |
| Walking safari | Small group intimacy with guide | Tarangire, Serengeti |
| Cultural tour | Personal, immersive engagement | Maasai villages, Lake Eyasi |
| Zanzibar diving / snorkelling | Join group dive boats easily | Mnemba Atoll, Zanzibar |
| Kilimanjaro trek | Groups naturally form on the mountain | All routes |
Health and Insurance for Solo Travelers
Solo travelers should be especially rigorous about travel insurance. If you fall ill or are injured in a remote safari park, medical evacuation is the only realistic option, and without coverage it is prohibitively expensive. Our Tanzania travel insurance page explains exactly what cover you need and what to check in your policy. Ensure your policy includes emergency medical evacuation, trip cancellation, and a 24/7 assistance line.
Carry a copy of your passport, travel insurance policy, and emergency contact numbers separately from your main documents. Share your full itinerary with someone at home before departure. Check the Tanzania travel requirements page for current visa and health documentation needs.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Tanzania safe for solo female travelers?
Yes, with appropriate awareness. Tanzania is significantly safer for solo women than many other travel destinations. The safari lodge and camp environments are completely safe. In Arusha and Stone Town, standard big-city awareness applies. Dress modestly in Stone Town’s historic areas and use hotel-arranged transport. Many solo female travelers return to Tanzania repeatedly specifically because of how safe and welcoming the experience is.
How do I avoid paying the single supplement on a Tanzania safari?
Book a group departure where costs are shared across all passengers. Alternatively, ask your operator to match you with another solo traveler of the same gender for room-sharing. Northern Maasailand Safaris actively helps solo travelers find matching arrangements. Visit our solo safari Tanzania page for current options.
Plan Your Solo Tanzania Safari
Solo travel to Tanzania is genuinely excellent. The countries, the parks, the people, and the experience are all well-suited to independent individual exploration. Our team at Northern Maasailand Safaris works regularly with solo travelers and understands what makes the experience work well for one person. Get in touch today and we will design a solo safari itinerary that fits your budget, your timeline, and your travel style.