Southern Africa

Zambia

One of Africa’s best destinations for walking safaris, remote camps and beautifully wild river-based safari experiences.

Major Safari Regions

4

Curated Lodges

40

Peak Season

Jun-Oct

Price Range (per person)

£8-15k

About

Zambia is where the walking safari was born — and where the quality of guiding still defines the experience more than the game count. In 1950, Norman Carr built the first photographic safari camp in the South Luangwa Valley and took guests into the bush on foot instead of behind a rifle. That ethos runs through everything here. I’ve walked South Luangwa at dawn with a guide who read the bush like a language, paddled a canoe past elephants drinking on the Lower Zambezi, and watched wild dog hunt across the Busanga Plains with nobody else for kilometres. Four safari regions span leopard-dense riverine woodland, wide Zambezi floodplain, and one of Africa’s largest and least-visited national parks. For returning safari travellers who want depth over density, and for anyone who believes the guide matters as much as the sighting, Zambia delivers something East Africa’s busier parks cannot.

Discover

The sights and sounds of wild Zambia

Seasons

What is the best time of year to visit Zambia?

Peak Season
Most Underrated
Green Season
Off-season

Zambia’s safari season is tighter than East Africa’s. June to October is the dry season and the window when walking safaris, game viewing, and bush camp access are at their peak. Vegetation thins, animals concentrate at water, and the guiding is at its sharpest. This is also when prices are highest and camps book 6–12 months ahead.

September and October are the hottest months but deliver the strongest game concentrations. Daytime temperatures above 40°C are common in the Luangwa Valley, but early-morning walks and late-afternoon drives work around the heat.

November to May is the rainy season. Many bush camps close entirely — roads flood, rivers rise, and access becomes difficult. Some lodges near Mfuwe in South Luangwa stay open year-round, and the emerald season brings extraordinary birding (over 740 species) and newborn wildlife. But for a walking safari, June to October is non-negotiable.

Victoria Falls is at peak flow from February to May — the opposite calendar to safari season. A combined trip works in June or July, when water levels are still impressive and the parks are fully open.

For UK families: July–August school holidays align with peak dry season. October half-term catches excellent late-season game viewing. Easter falls in the wet season and is not reliable for most safari regions.

Photo of a lion resting on a dry river bed.
Peak Season
Most Underrated
Green Season
Off-season
Styles

What safari styles are available in Zambia?

Walking safaris are Zambia’s signature. South Luangwa offers everything from morning bush walks to multi-day camp-to-camp treks with mobile tented camps. Minimum age is typically 12–16 depending on the operator and format. Zambian walking guides hold some of Africa’s highest qualifications — the ZAWA licensing system requires years of field training.

Game drives in open 4x4s run across all parks. Night drives with spotlights are permitted in South Luangwa and the Lower Zambezi — essential for leopard. Canoe safaris operate on the Lower Zambezi and the upper Zambezi near Livingstone. Motorboat safaris run on both rivers.

Hot air balloon flights operate over the Busanga Plains in Kafue (seasonal, July–October). At Victoria Falls: bungee jumping, white-water rafting, helicopter flights, and the Devil’s Pool swim are all available.

Price

How much does a Zambia safari cost?

A Safari Circle Zambia itinerary typically costs £8,000–£15,000 per person for 7–12 nights. That includes accommodation on a fully inclusive basis, internal light aircraft flights between parks, park fees, and guided activities.

Zambia’s pricing sits between Kenya and Botswana. The intimate camp sizes (4–12 guests is common) and remote fly-in access push per-night rates higher than East Africa, but below the Okavango Delta’s premium tier. Camps like Old Mondoro and Chinzombo command £800–£1,500+ per person per night.

Not included: international flights (London–Lusaka via one connection, approximately £500–£800 economy return), travel insurance, Zambia eVisa or KAZA UniVisa (USD $50), and gratuities.

Take the Safari DNA quiz to surface your archetype, then speak to a specialist matched to your profile.

Fit

Who is a Zambia safari right for?

Returning safari travellers: If you’ve done the Mara, the Serengeti, or the Sabi Sands, Zambia’s walking safaris and guide-led immersion offer a register no game drive can replicate. South Luangwa’s leopard encounters rival anything in Kruger — and you’ll share them with fewer vehicles.

Honeymoon couples: Bush camps with four to eight tents, campfire dinners under the stars, and dawn walks through the Luangwa floodplain. Zambia offers romance built on intimacy and wilderness, not resort infrastructure. Combine with Victoria Falls for a natural counterpoint.

Families with teenagers: Walking safaris unlock at 12–16 depending on the operator — the age threshold that separates a game-drive holiday from a genuine bush education. Canoeing, night drives, and Victoria Falls activities round out the range.

Milestone celebrations: Exclusive-use properties like Chongwe River House (8 guests) or Old Mondoro (10 guests) accommodate small groups in total privacy. A 50th birthday spent walking the Luangwa Valley is a different proposition from a lodge-based celebration

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Honest Take

What should you know before choosing Zambia?

Zambia is a seasonal destination in a way that Kenya, Tanzania, and South Africa are not. Many bush camps close from November to May. Roads flood. Light aircraft schedules reduce. If your travel dates fall outside June to October, Zambia’s options narrow significantly. Kenya and South Africa both operate year-round with reliable access.

There are no direct flights from the UK. Every itinerary requires a connection — typically via Johannesburg or Addis Ababa — adding 12–15 hours total travel. Internal flights between parks are essential and add cost. This is not a destination you can drive between parks in the way you can in Namibia or South Africa.

The other consideration is game density. South Luangwa’s wildlife is concentrated and impressive, but a first-time safari traveller expecting Masai Mara levels of volume may find it quieter. What Zambia trades in density, it gains in depth. A walking safari changes what you notice — tracks, dung, alarm calls, the way a woodland opens to a floodplain. If you want to understand the bush rather than photograph it from a vehicle, Zambia is where that education happens.

Journeys

What could your Zambia safari look like?

10-night Zambia highlights: South Luangwa → Lower Zambezi → Victoria Falls

Days 1–4

Time+Tide Chinzombo, South Luangwa — walking safaris, night drives, leopard tracking, Luangwa River sundowners.

Days 5–7

Chiawa Camp, Lower Zambezi — canoe safaris, game drives, motorboat excursions, tiger fishing.

Days 8–10

Thorntree River Lodge, Livingstone — Victoria Falls, sunset Zambezi cruise, Devil’s Pool (seasonal).

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Experience

Our favourite lodges in Zambia

Unfortunately, we have no matching lodges curated at the moment for this destination.
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Answers

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need a visa for a Zambia safari?

Yes. UK citizens require a visa. A single-entry eVisa costs USD $50 and can be applied for online at the Zambia eVisa portal. If combining Zambia with Zimbabwe (for Victoria Falls from both sides), the KAZA UniVisa costs USD $50 and covers both countries with unlimited crossings for 30 days, plus day trips to Botswana. Your passport must be valid for at least six months.

Is Zambia safe for safari tourists?

Zambia’s safari regions have strong safety records. The national parks are well-managed and camps employ experienced guides. The UK FCDO provides specific travel advice that Safari Circle monitors continuously. Standard precautions apply in Lusaka and Livingstone.

What vaccinations do I need for a Zambia safari?

A yellow fever vaccination certificate is required only if arriving from a country classified as at risk of yellow fever transmission. It is not required for direct UK routes via Johannesburg or Addis Ababa. Malaria prophylaxis is strongly recommended for all safari regions — Zambia carries high malaria risk year-round. Consult a travel health clinic at least 6–8 weeks before departure.

Can I combine a Zambia safari with Victoria Falls?

Yes — and it is the natural combination. Victoria Falls is a 90-minute flight from South Luangwa or a short flight from the Lower Zambezi. Most travellers add two to three nights at the falls at the start or end of a Zambia safari. The KAZA UniVisa covers both Zambia and Zimbabwe sides.

How long should I spend on a Zambia safari?

Seven nights is a workable minimum for one park plus Victoria Falls. Ten to twelve nights allows South Luangwa, the Lower Zambezi, and Victoria Falls — the classic combination. Adding Kafue extends the itinerary to 14 nights but delivers a genuinely different perspective.

Take the Safari DNA quiz to surface your archetype, then speak to a specialist matched to your profile.

Discover where else we can take you

Credentials you can trust

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)

ABTA act as a trade association (both commercial & regulatory) for travel agents and tour operators in the UK. As independent partners to Major Travel, all of our bookings at Safari Circle that contain hotels, tours or car hire but do not include international flights are protected under Major Travel’s ABTA Bond. In the unlikely event of an unresolved dispute between you as a passenger and us/Major Travel, you can use the ABTA arbitration service as an alternative to legal action. You can verify our ABTA number (Y6455, P7169) on the ABTA website.

Contact

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