Worry-Free Guide to Exploring Tanzania | Insider Tips & Practical Advice

Table of Contents

Worry-Free Guide to Exploring Tanzania | Insider Tips & Practical Advice

Introduction: Tanzania Awaits — But Come Prepared

Tanzania is not a destination you visit once and forget. It gets into your blood — the smell of red dust after rain, the sound of lions calling at dusk, the impossible silence of the Serengeti under a full moon. But arriving unprepared can turn a dream trip into an anxious one. That is why we put this guide together.

At Northern MasaiLand Safaris, we have spent years guiding travellers across this extraordinary country — from the snowy summit of Kilimanjaro to the white sand shores of Zanzibar. This is not a generic checklist. This is the honest, on-the-ground advice we give every guest who books with us, now shared openly so you arrive confident, informed, and ready to fall in love with Tanzania.

1. When to Go: Seasons, Migration & Timing

When to Go: Seasons, Migration & Timing

Tanzania has two dry seasons and two wet seasons. Understanding them is the single most important planning decision you will make — it determines what you see, where you go, and what everything costs.

PeriodConditionsBest ForSeason
June – OctoberDry, cool mornings, minimal rainWildlife viewing, all parks, Kilimanjaro climbingPeak Season
January – FebruaryHot and dry short breakCalving season in Serengeti, fewer crowdsGreat Value
November – DecemberShort rains, lush and greenPhotography, birdwatching, budget travelGreen Season
March – MayLong rains, some roads difficultRemote parks, extreme budget travellersLow Season

The Great Migration is what draws most visitors. This annual movement of over two million wildebeest and zebra follows the rains in a giant circular loop across the Serengeti–Mara ecosystem. In January and February, witness the extraordinary calving season in the southern Serengeti. By June, the herds push northward. The famous river crossings typically occur between July and October near the Mara River in the northern Serengeti.

Insider Tip: Book your Great Migration safari at least six months in advance for peak season. The best mobile camps and river-crossing spots fill up fast. Start planning with us here and our team will map out the timing perfectly for you.

2. Visas & Entry Requirements

Visas & Entry Requirements

Good news: Tanzania is relatively straightforward for most nationalities. Most visitors can obtain a tourist visa on arrival at Julius Nyerere International Airport (Dar es Salaam), Kilimanjaro International Airport (near Arusha), and Zanzibar International Airport. However, applying online before you travel is strongly recommended to avoid queues.

What You Will Typically Need

  • A valid passport with at least six months’ validity beyond your travel dates
  • A completed visa application (available online or on arrival)
  • Proof of onward travel (return or connecting flight ticket)
  • Proof of sufficient funds for your stay
  • Yellow fever vaccination certificate (if arriving from a country with yellow fever risk)

Visa Fees at a Glance

NationalityVisa TypeApproximate Cost (USD)Method
Most nationalitiesSingle-entry tourist visa$50Online or on arrival
USA citizensSingle-entry tourist visa$100Online or on arrival
East African Community citizensExemptFreeN/A
All nationalitiesMultiple-entry visa$100Online or on arrival

For a step-by-step walkthrough — including documents to carry in your hand luggage, processing times, and common pitfalls — read our full guide: Tanzania Visa: Everything You Need to Know Before You Travel.

Also review Tanzania’s current general travel requirements, which covers vaccination certificates, customs rules, and other entry conditions that are easy to overlook until you are standing at the immigration desk.

3. Health, Safety & Travel Insurance

Health, Safety & Travel Insurance

Tanzania is a safe and welcoming destination — hundreds of thousands visit every year without incident. But as with any international trip, especially one that takes you into remote wilderness areas, being well-prepared makes all the difference.

Health Essentials

  • Malaria: Present in most low-lying areas. Consult your doctor at least six weeks before departure about antimalarial medication. Use DEET repellent (30%+), wear long sleeves at dusk, and sleep under nets.
  • Yellow Fever: Vaccination required if arriving from a country with risk. Carry your certificate — it may be checked at the border.
  • Routine Vaccinations: Hepatitis A, typhoid, and tetanus are advisable. Confirm all are up to date with your travel health clinic.
  • Water: Drink bottled or purified water only. All reputable safari camps and lodges provide safe drinking water.
  • Altitude: Relevant for Kilimanjaro climbers — see Section 7 below.

Is Tanzania Safe? An Honest Assessment

AreaSafety LevelWhat to Be Aware Of
National parks & safari areasVery safeAlways follow guide instructions around wildlife
Arusha cityGenerally safePetty theft in busy markets; keep valuables out of sight
Dar es SalaamGenerally safeUse ATMs in daylight; avoid walking alone at night in unfamiliar areas
Zanzibar (Stone Town)Generally safeWatch for bag snatching in narrow alleys; book reputable transport
Rural and remote areasVery safeInfrastructure is limited; travel with a reputable guide

For a full area-by-area breakdown, read our Tanzania Travel Safety: An Honest Guide for Every Visitor.

Travel Insurance — Do Not Skip It

This is non-negotiable. Safari travel, Kilimanjaro trekking, and coastal adventures carry risks that standard policies may not cover. You need a policy that includes emergency medical evacuation — a helicopter rescue from a remote park or high altitude can cost tens of thousands of dollars without coverage.

Our dedicated resource on Tanzania travel insurance explains exactly what to look for, what to avoid, and how to ensure you are genuinely protected.

4. Money, Packing & Practical Tips

Currency & Money Tips

Money, Packing & Practical Tips
TipDetail
CurrencyTanzanian Shilling (TZS). USD is widely accepted for safaris, parks, and accommodation.
USD notesCarry post-2006 notes only — older bills are often refused.
ATMsAvailable in Arusha and Dar es Salaam. Rarely available in remote parks — carry enough cash before departure.
CardsAccepted at most lodges and larger shops. Always carry backup cash.
TippingExpected and important. Safari drivers: USD $15–25/day. Camp staff: $5–10/day per tent. Kilimanjaro porters: follow official recommended rates.

Packing Essentials

CategoryWhat to PackNotes
ClothingNeutral tones — khaki, olive, beige, brownAvoid white (shows dust), bright colours (disturbs wildlife), and blue/black (attracts tsetse flies)
Sun protectionHigh-SPF sunscreen, wide-brimmed hat, UV sunglassesThe equatorial sun in open-top vehicles is fierce
Insect protectionDEET repellent 30%+, light long-sleeve layers for eveningsEssential in all areas, especially near water
PowerUniversal adapter (Tanzania uses Type G / UK plugs)Camps may only charge devices at set times — download offline content before you go
PhotographyLong zoom lens (300mm+), extra memory cards, dust protection bagYou will never have enough memory cards — double what you think you need
Health kitAntimalarials, hand sanitiser, oral rehydration sachets, blister plastersCarry a small kit in your day bag always

Our complete Tanzania safari packing list covers every scenario — from a luxury lodge stay to a Kilimanjaro summit attempt. And for a clear picture of what everything costs, our Tanzania safari cost guide gives you honest numbers with no vague “it depends” answers.

5. Food & What to Expect

Food & What to Expect

Tanzanian food is honest, warming, and deeply tied to the land and coast. Arrive curious and open, and you will eat extraordinarily well.

Foods to Know and Try

Dish / FoodDescriptionWhere to Find It
UgaliDense maize porridge — the cornerstone of the Tanzanian table, eaten with stew, grilled meat, or fishEverywhere — local restaurants and homes
Nyama ChomaGrilled meat (usually goat or beef), slow-cooked over charcoalRoadside grills and local restaurants
PilauSpiced rice cooked with meat — an aromatic East African classic with Indian influenceZanzibar and coastal towns
Zanzibar MixA beloved street food plate of cassava chips, chickpeas, mango, and chilli sauceZanzibar Stone Town
Urojo (Zanzibar soup)Tangy, complex soup made with coconut, mango, lime, and various frittersZanzibar local stalls
Fresh seafoodGrilled lobster, prawns, octopus, and fish — exceptional along the coast and in ZanzibarZanzibar, Dar es Salaam coastline
Safari camp mealsGenerous buffet meals drawing on Tanzanian and international flavours — consistently good even at modest price pointsAll safari lodges and tented camps

Read our full guide to Tanzania food — what to eat, what to expect, and why you will love every bite, including vegetarian options and street food safety tips.

6. Key Destinations You Should Not Miss

Tanzania is vast — the eleventh largest country in Africa — and its wildlife areas alone cover terrain the size of some European nations. Here is an honest guide to the places that consistently deliver.

DestinationWhy GoBest Time to Visit
Serengeti National ParkTanzania’s crown jewel — resident Big Five, the Great Migration, endless open plains and extraordinary sunsetsYear-round; June–October for Migration river crossings
Ngorongoro CraterA volcanic caldera sheltering the densest wildlife concentration in Africa, including Tanzania’s most reliable black rhino populationYear-round; mornings are best before tour traffic
Tarangire National ParkExtraordinary elephant herds and ancient baobab trees over a thousand years old — underrated and magnificentJune–October for large elephant gatherings
Lake ManyaraCompact but wildly diverse — flamingoes, tree-climbing lions, and dense groundwater forestNovember–June for flamingoes; year-round for wildlife
Ruaha National ParkOne of Africa’s largest protected areas — massive lion prides, huge elephant populations, and very few touristsJune–October (dry season)
Selous Game ReserveBoat safaris and walking safaris alongside traditional drives in a vast, wild southern ecosystemJune–October
ZanzibarTurquoise Indian Ocean, spice-scented Stone Town, and languid island life — the perfect safari end chapterJune–October and December–February
Katavi National ParkTanzania’s most remote park — staggering hippo and crocodile concentrations in an almost completely untouched wildernessJuly–October only (flooded in wet season)

Explore all experiences across Tanzania — from hot-air balloon safaris over the Serengeti at dawn to guided walking safaris through the bush, cultural safaris into Maasai communities, and dedicated photographic safaris built around the best light. Our full guide to things to do in Tanzania is your starting point.

7. Climbing Kilimanjaro: What You Need to Know

Climbing Kilimanjaro: What You Need to Know

At 5,895 metres, Kilimanjaro is the highest peak in Africa and one of the world’s great trekking adventures. It requires no technical climbing skill — but it demands respect, preparation, and the right team beside you.

Kilimanjaro Routes at a Glance

RouteDurationDifficultySceneryBest For
Lemosho7–8 daysModerateOutstandingBest all-round choice; excellent acclimatisation and scenery
Machame6–7 daysModerate–ChallengingVery goodMost popular; dramatic profile and great acclimatisation
Northern Circuit9 daysModerateExceptionalMaximum solitude and the highest summit success rate
Rongai6–7 daysModerateGoodQuiet, dry approach from the north; great during wet season
Marangu5–6 daysModerateGoodOnly route with hut accommodation; lower success rate due to short duration
Umbwe5–6 daysChallengingGoodSteep and direct; for fit, experienced trekkers only
Shira7 daysModerate–ChallengingVery goodHigh starting altitude — solid fitness required; joins Lemosho mid-route
Western Breach7–8 daysChallengingDramaticTechnical and remote; for experienced, well-prepared trekkers

Altitude Sickness — The Honest Truth

Altitude sickness does not discriminate by fitness level. It is physiological, not a test of toughness. Symptoms — headache, nausea, fatigue, dizziness — can affect anyone above 2,500 metres. The best mitigation is time: slower routes with more acclimatisation days produce significantly higher summit success rates. Our guides are trained in altitude recognition and will always prioritise your safety over summit glory.

Browse all our Kilimanjaro routes and packages, or jump straight to our most popular treks:


8. How to Plan Your Trip with Northern MasaiLand Safaris

We are a Tanzanian-based safari company rooted in the communities and landscapes we show you. Every itinerary we create is tailored — there is no one-size-fits-all in a country this extraordinary.

Whether you are dreaming of a romantic honeymoon safari under canvas in the Serengeti, a family safari built around early morning game drives and afternoon downtime, or an adventure safari pushing into the wild southern parks — we will build it around you.

Popular Ready-Made Packages

PackageDurationHighlights
Tanzania Classic Safari3 daysPerfect introduction for time-pressed travellers; Ngorongoro and Tarangire
Tanzania Safari6 daysThe sweet spot between depth and efficiency; Serengeti, Ngorongoro, Tarangire
Big Five Luxury Safari5 daysPremium camps, exclusive drives; focused Big Five experience
Luxury Tanzania Safari8 daysThe finest lodges across Tanzania’s iconic northern circuit
Great Serengeti Migration Safari7 daysPurpose-built around the river crossings and calving season
Tanzania Luxury Honeymoon Safari10 daysRomantic, intimate camps and exceptional service throughout
Luxury Honeymoon Safari & Zanzibar Escape15 daysOur most romantic itinerary — safari wilderness followed by Indian Ocean paradise
Tanzania Luxury Safari & Zanzibar12 daysClassic northern safari combined with a Zanzibar beach extension

Have questions before committing? Our FAQ page answers the most common questions we receive. Or get in touch directly — a real person from our team will respond, usually within a few hours.

Tanzania is waiting. Let us take the worry out of planning and put the wonder back in. Start planning your trip with Northern MasaiLand Safaris today.

PLAN YOUR TRIP

Customise one of our recommended trips or design your own from scratch

Chat to an expert

Get advice and suggestions to make your perfect trip.

or call us on: +255754982525

Safari Tours Itinerary

Every Tanzania safari we offer is crafted from scratch, fully customized to match your preferences, travel style, and budget. The sample itineraries below are simply starting points, designed to spark ideas and showcase the incredible possibilities for your personalized safari adventure.

$3,716 / Person
7 Days

Serengeti Migration Safari

Serengeti National Park, Ngorongoro Crater, Tarangire National Park

Based on 110+ Reviews
$16,957 / Person
15 Days

Honeymoon Safari & Zanzibar

Serengeti National Park, Lake Eyasi, Ngorongoro Crater, Zanzibar

Based on 110+ Reviews
$1,578 / Person
6 Days

Classic Tanzania Safari

Tarangire National Park, Serengeti National Park, Lake Manyara National Park

Based on 110+ Reviews
$1,005 / Person
3 Days

Tanzania Classic Safari

Serengeti National Park, Ngorongoro Crater

Based on 110+ Reviews
$2,031 / Person
8 Days

Unforgettable Safari

Tarangire National Park, Serengeti National Park, Lake Eyasi, Lake Manyara National Park, Ngorongoro Crater, Materuni

Based on 110+ Reviews
$1,527 / Person
5 Days

Tanzania Big Five Safari

Tarangire National Park, Serengeti National Park, Ngorongoro Crater

Based on 110+ Reviews
$2,618 / Person
8 Days

Luxury Tanzania Safari

Serengeti National Park, Ngorongoro Crater, Tarangire National Park, Lake Manyara

Based on 110+ Reviews
$3,419 / Person
12 Days

Luxury Safari and Zanzibar

Tarangire National Park, Serengeti National Park, Ngorongoro Crater, Zanzibar

Based on 110+ Reviews
$4,720 / Person
10 Days

Luxury Honeymoon Safari

Tarangire National Park, Serengeti National Park, Lake Manyara National Park, Ngorongoro Crater

Based on 110+ Reviews