Major Safari Regions
Curated Lodges
Peak Season
Price Range (per person)
Why does South Africa belong on your safari shortlist? South Africa is a major safari destination with direct overnight flights from London, no visa requirements for nationals from UK, US, Australia and Canada, and genuine malaria-free Big Five options. Six safari regions range from the leopard-rich private conservancies of the Sabi Sands to the Kalahari’s pangolin territory at Tswalu. From mornings spent tracking leopard through the Sand River’s riverine bush and evenings watching meerkats at Tswalu, the variety within one country is incredible. For families, honeymoon couples and returning safari travellers ready to look beyond the Big Five, South Africa delivers amazing breadth.
South Africa’s seasons are the reverse of the UK’s. The dry winter (May–September) delivers the best game viewing as vegetation thins, animals gather at water and temperatures are comfortable during the day but cold on early drives. May to August is the most underrated window for the Sabi Sands — winter light is exceptional for photography, rates are lower than December peak and animal concentrations around water are at their highest.
October to April brings lush landscapes, newborn animals, and superb birding. The Sabi Sands and Phinda work year-round. Tswalu’s pangolin and aardvark sightings peak in the cooler winter months when these nocturnal species emerge during daylight.
For UK families:December–January falls in South Africa’s peak summer — hot, green, and busy.October half-term and Easter align with shoulder seasons offering good value.

Game drives in open-sided LandRovers are the foundation. Night drives with spotlights are standard in private reserves — a genuine advantage over Kruger’s public roads. Walking safaris operate in most private reserves with a minimum age of 12. South Africa also supports horseback safaris at Tswalu and in the Waterberg.
Beyond land based safaris, seasonal whale watching from Hermanus (June–November, southern right whales), and the Winelands ’food-and-wine scene offer a variety of activity types that are South Africa’s strongest differentiator — a single itinerary can move from Big Five drives to coastal whale watching.


A Safari Circle South Africa itinerary typically costs £6,000–£15,000 per person for 10–14 nights, including safari, Cape Town, and the Winelands. That range reflects deluxe, luxury and exclusive lodge tiers.
At deluxe level (Sabi Sabi BushLodge, Jaci’s, Shamwari Bayethe) expect strong game viewing with comfortable accommodation. At luxury level (MalaMala Rattray’s, Lion Sands Ivory Lodge, PhindaRock Lodge, Morukuru) the experience steps up in privacy and guiding quality. At exclusive levels (Singita, Londolozi Granite, Molori, Tswalu) you pay for traversing exclusivity or access to species found nowhere else.
Not included: international flights, travel insurance,and gratuities. No visa required for UK citizens under 90 days.
Families with young children: Malaria-free reserves at Madikwe, the Eastern Cape and the Waterberg remove a genuine barrier. Properties like Morukuru and Jaci’s welcome children of all ages.
Honeymoon couples: The Sabi Sands delivers world-class safari, and the Winelands and Cape Town add urban glamour East Africa cannot match. Lion Sands Ivory Lodge and Londolozi PioneerCamp are standout romantic properties.
Returning safari travellers: If you’ve done the Big Five, Tswalu’s pangolin tracking, Kalahari lion and meerkat encounters offer something genuinely new.
First-time safari-goers: Direct flights, English throughout and the ability to combine safari with Cape Town may make the overall trip more appealing than an East Africa deep-bush itinerary.

12-night South Africa highlights: Cape Town → Winelands → Sabi Sands
Cape Town — Table Mountain, Cape Peninsula, Kirstenbosch, V&A Waterfront.
Franschhoek, Winelands — wine tasting, fine dining, Huguenot heritage.
Lion Sands Ivory Lodge, Sabi Sands — leopard tracking, Big Five game drives, night drives.
Londolozi Varty Camp, Sabi Sands — walking safari, photography hides, Sand River sundowners.
No. UK citizens do not need a visa for stays up to 90 days. Your passport must be valid for at least 30 days beyond departure and have at least two blank pages.
South Africa’s safari regions have strong safety records and well-established tourism infrastructure. Standard precautions apply in urban areas. The UK FCDO provides specific travel advice that Safari Circle monitors continuously.
It depends on the region. Greater Kruger and the Sabi Sands are malaria zones — prophylaxis is recommended. Madikwe, the Eastern Cape, the Waterberg, and Tswalu are all malaria-free. South Africa is the only country in Africa that can offer fully malaria-free Big Five safari.
Yes — and most UK travellers do. A typical combination is 3–4 nights in Cape Town, 2–3 nights in the Winelands or Garden Route, and 3–4 nights on safari. Domestic flights between Cape Town and the Kruger area take approximately 2.5 hours.
Ten to fourteen nights is ideal for a safari-and-Cape Town combination. Three nights is a realistic minimum for safari — enough for five or six game drives. If Tswalu is on the itinerary, allow three to four dedicated nights.



Some of the flights and flight-inclusive holidays booked with Safari Circle are financially protected by the ATOL scheme. If you don’t receive an ATOL certificate, the booking will not be ATOL protected. In the unlikely event of our insolvency, the Civil Aviation Authority (CAA) would ensure that you’re not stranded abroad. They will also arrange to refund any funds you have already paid us towards your booking. You can verify our ATOL status on the Civil Aviation Authority website. Please note, we operate as independent partners to Major Travel (ATOL 2933)
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