Kenya / Maasai Mara - Southwest Kenya · 1,510 km²

The Mara.
Where everything
you imagined
turns out to be real.

850+
Lions on the Kenyan side alone
1,000+
Cheetahs. Out of 7,000 left on earth.
1,510
km² of protected reserve
Scroll
Maasai Mara · The Reserve
"Ask anyone who has been. They will not describe a checklist. They will describe a specific morning or afternoon game drive."

The Mara has been filmed more than almost any place on earth; yet, it still manages to surprise you. The Maasai Mara covers 1,510 square kilometres in southwest Kenya, but the wider Mara ecosystem, including the 15 conservancies that ring the reserve, doubles that. Together they form the northern half of the Serengeti-Mara ecosystem, which spans over 25,000 square kilometres across two countries. This is one of the most biologically productive landscapes on Earth.

The lion density here is among the highest recorded anywhere in Africa. Roughly 850 to 900 lions live on the Kenyan side of the ecosystem. In the prime lion viewing areas, counts reach 25 to 30 per 100 square kilometres. The famous Marsh Pride has been studied and filmed continuously since the 1970s. The BBC's Big Cat Diary brought the world here. The world never quite left.

Cheetahs have one of their last great strongholds in this ecosystem. Over 1,000 individuals range across the southwest Kenyan and north Tanzanian grasslands, out of just 7,000 remaining worldwide. On a good morning in the Mara, you can watch a cheetah hunt. On a great morning, you do not need to go looking. It finds you.

Then there is the silence. In the conservancies outside the main reserve, where vehicle density is controlled and night drives are permitted, the Mara operates on a different register entirely. At 6am, with the mist still on the Talek River, the only sound is the grass moving. That, and the hippos.

Big Five, year-round Lion, leopard, elephant, buffalo and black rhino. The rhino population is smaller and mostly concentrated in the Mara Triangle, but all five are present.
Lion, leopard and cheetah: all present The Mara ecosystem supports all three big cats. The Marsh Pride alone has been studied continuously since the 1970s. The cheetah population here represents over 14% of all remaining individuals on earth.
15 conservancies surround the reserve Each operated under strict low-density tourism guidelines. Night drives, walking safaris and off-road driving are permitted here. The main reserve does not allow these.
Over 450 bird species recorded The Mara is one of Kenya's premier birding destinations. Lilac-breasted rollers, crowned cranes, secretary birds and martial eagles are regular sightings.
Altitude: 1,500 to 2,170 metres The elevation keeps temperatures comfortable year-round. Cool mornings. Warm afternoons. Nights that require a blanket.
Lions in the Maasai Mara National Reserve Kenya

The Marsh Pride territory, Musiara sector, Maasai Mara

Maasai Mara · Know the Landscape

The reserve, the triangle,
and the conservancies.

You will hear these names when planning your Mara safari. Here is where they sit, what they are, and why the difference matters for how you experience the ecosystem.

The Reserve
Maasai Mara National Reserve

The core 1,510 km² of protected reserve, open to all operators. Game drives only: no night drives, no off-road driving. The highest wildlife density in the ecosystem. Busy during peak Migration season, but the game viewing justifies it.

The Triangle
Mara Triangle

Separated from the main reserve by the Mara River and managed by a separate trust. Fewer vehicles, better roads, consistently strong game viewing. Worth specifying when you are choosing your camp.

The Conservancies
Mara North, Olare Motorogi, Naboisho

Private community conservancies on leased Maasai land. Each limits the number of camps and vehicles. Night drives and walking safaris are permitted. Staying inside one gives you a quieter, more exclusive version of the Mara.

The Escarpment
Oloololo Escarpment

The ridge forming the western boundary of the Mara Triangle. Angama Mara and The Pearl Mara sit here, elevated above the plains. The Out of Africa picnic site is on this escarpment. The Migration moves beneath you.

Key Sector
Musiara

Prime territory inside the reserve, bordering the Mara Triangle. Home to the Marsh Pride, filmed by the BBC for over three decades. Governors' Il Moran and Rekero both sit within or adjacent to this sector.

"Knowing which part of the Mara you are in changes everything about your experience."
Plan Your Mara Safari
Maasai Mara · Timing Your Visit

The Mara rewards you
every month of the year.
Here is what each season delivers.

Jan – Mar & Jun
Peak Dry

Short grass means predators are highly visible against open ground. The calving season (January through March) brings exceptional predator activity. June is dry season again after the long rains clear, with good game viewing and fewer vehicles than the July migration peak. Strong windows for first-time visitors and photographers.

Apr – Jun
Long Rains

The Mara turns green. Fewer vehicles, lower rates, and a landscape that photographs differently. Bird life peaks dramatically. The conservancies remain excellent for game viewing. Not for those who need dust and open plains.

Jul – Oct
Migration Season

The Great Migration enters from Tanzania. The Mara River crossings begin in July and run through October. This is the most sought safari window on earth. Book your preferred camp six months in advance. The best positions fill early and stay full.

Nov – Dec
Shoulder

Short rains fall in November but pass quickly. December is dry, warm and excellent for wildlife. The festive season brings a quieter Mara than peak migration. A smart window for those who want quality without the peak crowds.

Maasai Mara · What to Do

Eight experiences
the Mara does better
than anywhere else.

Beyond the game drive. These are the experiences Anvir builds into a Mara itinerary for guests who want more than the standard circuit.

01
Signature · Jul – Oct

Mara River Crossing

A thousand wildebeest at the riverbank, reading the water. Then one crosses. Then they all cross. Crocodiles move from the shallows. In thirty seconds, the Mara River becomes something that does not fit in a photograph. Your guide knows which crossing points are active. Timing is everything. We position you correctly.

02
Dawn · Year-Round

Hot Air Balloon Safari

A pre-dawn wake-up. The balloon inflates in darkness. Then you lift off and the Mara opens beneath you, plains stretching to the horizon, the Mara River threading silver through the grass, herds moving below without knowing you are above them. An hour of silence and scale. Bush champagne breakfast follows on the ground.

03
Conservancy · Year-Round

Night Drive

Night drives are only available in the private conservancies, not inside the main reserve. The difference at night is immediate. Leopards that spent the day sleeping in fig trees are now moving. Hyena clans are active and vocal. The spotlight finds eyes in the grass you would never have noticed from a daytime vehicle. What happens after dark in the Mara belongs to the animals, and the conservancies let you in on it.

04
Conservancy · Year-Round

Walking Safari

You leave the vehicle. That is the whole point. On foot, the Mara operates at a different speed. Your guide crouches to show you a track in the dust, still fresh. He knows which direction it is heading. The birds above the tree line are telling him something. A walk here is not a scenic stroll. It is a two-hour conversation between a person who knows this land intimately and a landscape that is constantly talking.

05
Bush · Year-Round

Bush Breakfast & Hippo Pools

Depending on where you are staying in the Mara, you may get the unique chance to have bush breakfast with Bubbly the hippo and family. Breakfast set above a hippo pool at the river edge, at a safe distance and well monitored. You eat while a pod of forty hippos negotiates the morning a couple of metres away. Alternatively, enjoy your hot meals under the open sky in the savannah. A full table set in the open grass, laid with linen, hot food and a view that stretches to the horizon. Both are ordinary mornings in the Mara. Neither one feels ordinary when you are sitting in it.

06
Culture · Year-Round

Maasai Warrior Interaction

The Maasai have managed this land for centuries. The conservancies that now surround the reserve, Naboisho, Olare Motorogi, Mara North, exist because of agreements with Maasai landowners who lease their land for wildlife conservation and receive direct income in return. When you sit with a Maasai warrior and hear him describe his relationship to the ecosystem, the conservancy model stops being a concept and becomes something you understand.

07
Bush · Year-Round

Sundowner in the Plains

Late afternoon, the vehicle stops at a clearing with a westward view. A table is set in the open grass. Drinks poured. The sky shifts through orange and then red and then something for which there is no reliable colour name. The bush is quiet. A family of elephants moves on the ridge to the north. Nobody checks their phone.

08
Conservancy · Year-Round

Horseback Safari

In selected conservancies, you ride through the Mara at the same height as the wildlife, with no engine noise between you and the ecosystem. Zebra graze nearby, unbothered by the horses. Giraffe watch from a distance. For experienced riders, this is the Mara at its most intimate. Nothing else produces the same relationship with the landscape.

Maasai Mara · Where to Stay

Our picks.
Three categories.
All personally vetted.

Category One
Ultra-Exclusive
Boutique. Conservancy-only access. Private game vehicles. Fewer than 20 guests at any time.
Angama Mara lodge Maasai Mara Kenya luxury Ultra-Exclusive
Siria Escarpment · Mara Triangle

Angama Mara

Perched on the edge of the Great Rift Valley escarpment, 500 metres above the Mara Triangle floor. Two intimate camps of 15 tented suites each. The Out of Africa picnic site is below. The view from the tent on a clear morning is the kind that changes how you think about space. Owner-run. Private airfield. Famously warm Kenyan hospitality.

Rekero Camp Maasai Mara River Kenya Ultra-Exclusive
Musiara Sector · Mara River

Rekero Camp

Ten tents on the Talek River, 150 metres from a prime migration crossing point. Runs entirely on solar power. Gold Eco Rating from Ecotourism Kenya. Victorian-style baths, recycled wood interiors, raised decks over the river. Over 80% of staff from local Maasai communities. Rekero closes in April and May to reduce ecological impact during the long rains. That discipline tells you what kind of operation this is.

The Pearl Mara Oloololo Escarpment Mara Triangle Kenya Ultra-Exclusive
Oloololo Escarpment · Mara Triangle

The Pearl Mara

Perched on the Oloololo Escarpment with uninterrupted views over the Mara Triangle, where the Migration moves through below each year. Four luxury suites, two family suites and seven tented rooms, each with a private deck and personal butler. The position here is the story: elevated above the plains, looking down over one of the most productive wildlife corridors in the ecosystem. Front row, every morning.

Category Two
Premium Luxury
Full-service. Excellent guides. Strong value for the calibre of experience.
JW Marriott Masai Mara Lodge luxury safari Premium Luxury
Olare Motorogi Conservancy

JW Marriott Masai Mara Lodge

The first JW Marriott property in the African bush, and a strong choice for travellers who want international brand consistency alongside genuine safari access. Spacious rooms, multiple dining venues, a full-service spa. The Marriott Bonvoy points redemption makes this a practical option for premium travellers with accumulated points. Inside a private conservancy, so vehicle density is controlled.

Governors Il Moran Camp Mara River Kenya Premium Luxury
Musiara Sector · Mara River

Governors' Il Moran Camp

The smallest and most exclusive of the three Governors' camps, positioned on a Mara River meander 1km north of the main camp. Ten tents only. The Musiara sector is prime big cat territory. Hippo pools at arm's length. The guiding here is consistently excellent. A sundowner cocktail watching baboons in the river is not a manufactured experience. It just happens.

Saruni Mara lodge Mara North Conservancy Kenya Premium Luxury
Mara North Conservancy

Saruni Mara

A small lodge of five cottages and a private villa, perched on a forested hill above the Mara North Conservancy. Thatched roofs, open fireplaces, al fresco dining and a secluded mezzanine for private dinners. Pioneer of community-based conservation in the Mara. Staff are known by name by returning guests. The Italian culinary influence gives the food a quality level that distinguishes the camp from most of its peers.

Category Three
Well-Appointed
Comfortable, reliable and well-located. Strong game access, good guiding, solid service.
Mara Serena Safari Lodge Kenya Well-Appointed
Mara Triangle · Elevated Position

Mara Serena Safari Lodge

Set on a hill inside the Mara Triangle with 360-degree views over the plains. One of the best-positioned large lodges in the reserve. The Mara Triangle has lower vehicle density than the main reserve, which improves the quality of game viewing. The Serena is a reliable, well-run property with a strong track record for group and family stays. The sunrise view from the room stops you getting to breakfast on time.

Ilkeliani Camp Talek River Maasai Mara Kenya Well-Appointed
Talek River · Reserve Edge

Ilkeliani Camp

A smart, elegant tented camp on the Talek River, on the boundary of the reserve. Good access to the core game viewing areas without the price point of the conservancy camps. Expert Africa describes it as smart and elegant, which is a precise characterisation. Well-suited to travellers who want a genuine tented camp feel, river views, and solid value within the Mara ecosystem.

Soroi Luxury Migration Camp Maasai Mara Kenya Well-Appointed
Mara River Views

Soroi Luxury Migration Camp

A first safari destination that delivers. Guests consistently note the food quality, the river views and the staff warmth as exceeding expectations. Soroi does not try to compete with the ultra-exclusive camps on exclusivity. It competes on hospitality and value, and it wins. "We were treated like royalty" is a phrase that appears repeatedly in the reviews. The team here takes that seriously.

How we plan
your Mara safari.

1
Discovery

We start with a conversation. Who you are, what you have done before, what matters to you and the vision you have for the trip. We listen before we plan.

2
We build the itinerary around you

Every transfer, every activity, every morning is designed for your pace. Nothing generic. Nothing templated.

3
We match you to the right camp

Not the most expensive. The right one. Location, season, access and your priorities all determine where you stay.

4
We are with you throughout

One point of contact from departure to return. You do not have to think about who is doing what. You just show up and enjoy your safari.

Begin Your Journey.

Let's make this happen.

Start Planning

The first step

Your Mara safari
begins with a conversation.

Tell us what you are looking for. We will design the rest around you.