Tanzania Northern Parks

Mkomazi Parque Nacional

Where conservation triumphed over extinction. Black rhinos. African wild dogs. Ancient baobabs below the Pare Mountains. Tanzania's most dramatic comeback story. And most uncrowded wilderness.

3,245 kmã Park Area
78 Mammal Species
450+ Bird Species
1951 Established
120 km De Moshi
Black Rhino Sanctuary Reserva de Cão Selvagem Africano TsavoãMkomazi Ecosystem Sahel Zone Wilderness
Visão geral

Tanzania's Greatest Comeback

In 1989, only eleven elephants remained in all of Mkomazi. Poachers had gutted the reserve. By then, the black rhino had vanished entirely. Today, over 500 elephants roam freely between Mkomazi and Kenya's Tsavo. And black rhinos breed successfully inside one of Africa's most remarkable sanctuaries. This is conservation at its finest.

Mkomazi National Park sprawls across 3,245 square kilometres of northern Tanzania, pressed against Kenya's Tsavo West National Park along its entire northern boundary. Together, these two parks form one of East Africa's largest and most ecologically significant protected ecosystems. A vast transboundary wilderness of acacia-commiphora savannah, ancient baobab trees, rocky hillscapes and open plains framed by the volcanic profiles of the Pare and Usambara Mountains to the south and Mount Kilimanjaro's snow-capped peak visible on clear mornings to the northwest.

The name Mkomazi derives from the Pare people's word for "scoop of water". A reference to the park's defining character as one of Tanzania's driest landscapes. This is the southernmost extension of the Sahel Biosphere, the biogeographic zone linking the Sahara Desert with Central Africa. As a consequence, several species found in Mkomazi occur nowhere else in Tanzania: o gerenuk, o órix-orelhudo e o kudu menor são todos especialistas em regiões secas da zona do Sahel que estão ausentes dos parques do Serengeti, Ngorongoro e do Circuito Norte.

Despite its formidable size. More than twice the area of London. Mkomazi draws a tiny fraction of the tourists who flock to the Serengeti or Ngorongoro. Game drive vehicles are rare. Walking safaris through acacia woodland pass in complete solitude. A visit to the Mkomazi Rhino Sanctuary feels like a private audience with one of Africa's most endangered animals. For the traveller who values untouched wilderness over safari traffic, Mkomazi offers an Africa that has largely disappeared elsewhere.

Park Statistics
Estabelecido (Reserva de Caça)1951
Status do Parque Nacional2008
Park Area3,245 kmã
Altitude Range225-1,531 m
Mammal Species78
Bird Species450+
Elephant Population500+ (was 11 in 1989)
Distância de Moshi120 km (2-2.5 hrs)
Distância de Arusha200 km (4-4.5 hrs)
Distância de KIA142 km
Rhino Sanctuary OpenSince 2021
TsavoãMkomazi Transboundary Ecosystem
Together with Kenya's Tsavo National Park, Mkomazi forms one of East Africa's largest protected landscapes. A shared migratory corridor for elephants, oryx and zebra.
Landscapes

Three Wilderness Worlds in One Park

Mkomazi's vast terrain encompasses dramatically varied habitats. From the grey-green nyika bush of the Sahel plains to the riverine forests along the Umba, each zone supporting an entirely different cast of wildlife.

Acacia-Commiphora Savannah
Sahel Zone Tanzania's Driest Terrain
The park's defining landscape is classic dry-country Sahel bush. A rolling sea of grey-green nyika, ancient baobab trees standing like petrified giants against wide skies and isolated rocky hills rising from the plains. Umbrella acacias provide dappled shade across open savannah corridors where giraffe, oryx, gerenuk and lesser kudu move through in the early morning light. This is the only place in Tanzania where these true Sahel specialists can be reliably observed.
GerenukFringe-eared OryxLesser KuduBaobabs
Mkomazi Rhino Sanctuary
55 kmã Fenced Open Since 2021
At the heart of the park, a carefully guarded 55 kmã fenced sanctuary protects one of Tanzania's most remarkable conservation achievements: a breeding population of critically endangered black rhinos, reintroduced after poaching had wiped them out entirely. The adjacent Tourist Sanctuary. Opened in 2021. Offers guided 4x4 excursions for close encounters with black rhinos in a natural setting, alongside localized species such as fringe-eared oryx and lesser kudu found in higher concentrations here than anywhere else in the park.
Black RhinoFringe-eared OryxGuided 4x4Conservation
Barragem de Dindira e Rio Umba
Ímã de vida selvagem na estação seca
In the dry season, Dindira Dam becomes the park's beating heart. A permanent water source that draws thirsty wildlife from across the park: elephants, giraffes, eland, zebra, kongoni and the predators that follow them. Early morning game drives at the dam are among Mkomazi's finest wildlife-viewing opportunities. The Umba River in the southeast supports riverine forest, crocodiles, flamingos, kingfishers and a rare population of colobus monkeys. A striking contrast to the dry savannah plains just kilometres away.
ElephantGiraffeCrocodileFlamingoColobus
African Wild Dog Territory
A principal reserva de cães selvagens da Tanzânia
One of Africa's longest-running wild dog conservation programmes was established at Mkomazi in the 1990s and approximately 200 painted wolves now roam freely across the park. Nomadic by nature, wild dog packs cover extraordinary distances and can be encountered almost anywhere. From open plains to acacia woodlands to the park boundary near Same town. A pre-arranged visit to the wild dog conservation area offers one of Africa's most intimate wildlife experiences, with conservation staff guiding guests through the science of pack behaviour and reintroduction ecology.
African Wild DogPack BehaviourConservationPre-Arranged Visit
Cenário da montanha Pare e Usambara
Eastern Arc Dramatic Framing
The park's southern boundary is framed by the spectacular Pare and Usambara mountain ranges. Ancient Eastern Arc massifs of extraordinary ecological importance, rising in steep vegetated walls above the dry acacia plains below. Dindira Hill offers panoramic views across the park to these ranges, with Kilimanjaro's iconic peak visible to the northwest on clear mornings. The contrast between the dusty semi-arid savannah and the lush, forested mountain walls creates one of northern Tanzania's most visually stunning landscapes.
Dindira Hill ViewsKilimanjaro PanoramaPhotographyHiking
Umba Riverine Forest
Eastern Park Rare Colobus Habitat
Along the Umba River in the park's eastern reaches, dense riverine forest creates a habitat unlike anything else in Mkomazi's semi-arid terrain. Here, rare colobus monkeys inhabit the forest canopy. A genuinely surprising find in what is otherwise a dry-country wilderness. Kingfishers hunt along the riverbanks; crocodiles bask on exposed sand; flamingos and waders probe the shallows. In the wet season, this section of the park transforms as migrating elephants pour south from Kenya's Tsavo and the river runs full and green.
Colobus MonkeyKingfisherCrocodileElefante da estação chuvosa
Key Species

Icons of Parque Nacional Mkomazi

Black Rhinoceros
O Rinoceronte Mais Acessível da Tanzânia

The black rhino was poached to extinction in Mkomazi by the late 1980s. In 1989, the Tanzanian government partnered with conservationist Tony Fitzjohn and the George Adamson African Wildlife Preservation Trust to rebuild the park and reintroduce rhinos from South Africa into a heavily guarded, fenced sanctuary. Today the sanctuary holds a viable breeding population. Representing nearly 30% of Tanzania's total black rhinoceros population. The rhino Tourist Sanctuary, opened in 2021, now allows guided 4x4 visits for close encounters. Making Mkomazi the most reliable place in Tanzania to observe a black rhino.

Rhino Sanctuary Guided 4x4 Pre-Arrange
African Wild Dog
~200 Free-Roaming Tanzania's Largest Programme

The African wild dog. Or painted wolf. Is one of Africa's most endangered large carnivores, its range shattered by habitat loss and disease. Mkomazi hosts one of Africa's most successful captive-breeding and release programmes, established in the 1990s and now supporting approximately 200 free-roaming animals across the park. Nomadic by nature, packs can be encountered almost anywhere. Their elaborate social structure, co-operative hunting and extraordinary athleticism make them one of Africa's most captivating wildlife spectacles. And Mkomazi is one of the continent's finest places to see them.

Nomadic Full Park Conservation Visit
Gerenuk
Tanzania's Only Reliable Population

The gerenuk. Called swala twiga in Swahili, meaning "giraffe-antelope". Is one of Africa's most extraordinary-looking animals: a slender-necked, large-eared, alien-headed gazelle that stands upright on its hind legs to browse acacia leaves beyond the reach of other herbivores. Found only in the Sahel and Horn of Africa, the gerenuk's distribution in Tanzania is essentially restricted to Mkomazi. Watching a gerenuk stand tall on its hind legs in the dappled shade of an umbrella acacia. Back straight, neck extended, extraordinary physique revealed. Is one of the park's most unforgettable wildlife moments.

Sahel Specialist Tanzania Exclusive Savannah
Vulturine Guineafowl & 450+ Birds
Tanzania's Finest Dry-Country Birding

Mkomazi is a birder's paradise. And the only place in Tanzania where you are likely to see the striking vulturine guineafowl, its cobalt-blue and white plumage incongruously spectacular in the grey-green bush. Over 450 species have been recorded, including northern dry-country endemics such as Shelley's starling, the Somali long-billed crombec, Friedmann's lark, the yellow-vented eremomela and the violet wood-hoopoe. Along the Umba River: flamingos, kingfishers and cormorants. On the open plains: ostriches, kori bustards and secretary birds. Mkomazi rewards patient birders with extraordinary species rarely or never seen elsewhere in Tanzania.

450+ Species Dry-Country Endemics Year-Round
Haven Trails Mkomazi National Park
"In 1989, eleven elephants and zero rhinos. Today, five hundred elephants and a thriving rhino population. When our guests step into the Mkomazi Rhino Sanctuary and stand thirty metres from a black rhinoceros, they are standing inside one of conservation's greatest victories. No other park in Tanzania offers this."
ã Haven Trails Adventures, Moshi, Tanzania
Vida Selvagem

78 Mammals 450+ Birds

Mkomazi supports 78 recorded mammal species and over 450 bird species. A remarkable number for a semi-arid landscape. The park's position at the convergence of two distinct biogeographic zones. The East African savannah and the Somali-Masai Sahel. Creates an ecological overlap found nowhere else in Tanzania, producing a wildlife list that combines familiar Northern Circuit species with Sahel-zone specialists invisible in any other Tanzanian park.

Unique Dry-Country Specialists
  • Gerenuk Tanzania's only population
  • Fringe-eared Oryx long back-sweeping horns
  • Lesser Kudu spiral-horned forest antelope
  • African Wild Dog ~200 in the park
  • Black Rhinoceros breeding sanctuary
  • Dik-dik abundant in dense bush
Large Mammals & Predators
  • Elephant 500+, migrating with Tsavo
  • Lion present, elusive
  • Leopard present, rarely seen
  • Cheetah open-plains sightings
  • Buffalo, Giraffe, Zebra, Eland
  • Hyena, Jackal, Warthog, Impala
Notable Bird Species
  • Vulturine Guineafowl Tanzania exclusive
  • Shelley's Starling dry-country endemic
  • Kori Bustard, Ostrich, Secretary Bird
  • Long-crested Eagle, Martial Eagle
  • Flamingo, Kingfisher Umba River
  • Violet Wood-hoopoe, Friedmann's Lark
Quando visitar

Guia sazonal para Mkomazi

Mkomazi can be visited year-round. Most roads are all-weather. But the park shifts dramatically between seasons, offering different wildlife experiences and landscapes across the calendar.

Temporada de pico
June October: Dry Season (Best)
  • Optimal wildlife viewing animals concentrate around water sources
  • Dindira Dam reaches peak activity elephant, giraffe, predator
  • Vegetation thins animals visible at greater distance
  • JuneãJuly: cooler temperatures, comfortable game drives
  • Melhor para visitas a santuários de rinocerontes e encontros com cães selvagens
  • Ideal para observação de aves, especialistas em regiões secas e aves de rapina
Wet Season Scenery
November May: Green Season
  • Landscape transforms acacia plains green and lush
  • Elefantes migram para o sul de Tsavo, no Quênia, em grandes rebanhos
  • Excelentes vistas das montanhas Pare e Usambara
  • Peak migratory bird season Eurasian visitors arrive
  • Newborn animals impala, gazelle, eland calves
  • DecemberãFebruary: best photography light, long days
Chuvas Curtas
October November: Transitional
  • Chuvas curtas começam no parque verde rapidamente
  • As primeiras aves migratórias chegam do norte
  • Ainda boa densidade de vida selvagem nas fontes de água
  • Manadas de elefantes começam a sair do Quénia
  • Boa combinação: vida selvagem na estação seca + paisagens verdes
  • Fewer visitors excellent crowd-free experience
Note
March May: Main Rains
  • Some roads may become difficult 4x4 essential
  • Wildlife disperses viewing more challenging
  • Santuário de rinocerontes ainda acessível através de visitas organizadas
  • Lush scenery at its peak dramatic photography
  • Very few tourists near-total solitude
  • Haven Trails advises flexible itineraries in April
Conservation

Como um deserto Was Reclaimed

Mkomazi's story is one of the most dramatic conservation recoveries in African history. A park driven to near-destruction by poaching and overgrazing, then rebuilt from almost nothing through extraordinary human effort and international partnership.

O Santuário do Rinoceronte Negro
In 1989, the Tanzanian government invited conservationist Tony Fitzjohn and the George Adamson African Wildlife Preservation Trust to restore Mkomazi. Black rhinos. Poached to local extinction. Were reintroduced from South Africa into a 55 kmã fenced sanctuary with round-the-clock armed protection. The elephant population grew from 11 to over 500 in three decades. Today the sanctuary holds nearly 30% of Tanzania's total black rhino population and in 2021 TANAPA opened a dedicated tourist sanctuary for close-range viewing. One of Africa's great conservation access stories.
George Adamson Trust TANAPA Save The Rhino
African Wild Dog Reintroduction
Alongside the rhino programme, a parallel captive breeding and release centre for African wild dogs was established in the 1990s. One of Africa's longest-running wild dog conservation initiatives. The programme has successfully released approximately 200 dogs into the broader Mkomazi ecosystem, where they now range freely across the park. Wild dogs are Africa's most endangered large predator and Mkomazi's healthy free-roaming population represents a critical contribution to the species' survival in Tanzania. A visit to the wild dog conservation area is available on pre-arranged basis.
Wild Dog Programme Free-Roaming Population
Rafiki wa Faru Community Education
Mkomazi's conservation success has never been purely about fences and armed rangers. The Rafiki wa Faru programme. Meaning "Friend of the Rhino". Brings children from 14 local villages into the park for educational visits, teaching the next generation about rhino conservation, wildlife ecology and the economic benefits that tourism and conservation management bring to surrounding communities. Prince William visited Mkomazi in 2012 specifically to observe the programme, drawing international attention to the park's community-centred approach to long-term conservation.
Community Outreach 14 Villages Youth Education
Transboundary Elephant Corridor
Mkomazi's northern boundary is shared with Kenya's Tsavo West National Park, forming a vast transboundary ecosystem of mutual ecological importance. Elephants migrate freely between the two parks, following ancient seasonal routes that track rainfall and vegetation. African People & Wildlife, working with TANAPA since 2022, has launched community-based elephant guardian programmes in villages surrounding the park. Training local monitors, deploying GPS collars and building human-elephant coexistence strategies that protect both livelihoods and the migrating herds.
Tsavo Partnership Elephant Corridors Coexistence
Planeje sua visita

Getting There & Essential Information

Getting There
  • 120 km from Moshi approximately 2-2.5 hours by road
  • 200 km from Arusha approximately 4-4.5 hours by road
  • 142 km do Aeroporto Internacional de Kilimanjaro (KIA)
  • Zange Gate (main entry) is 6-7 km from Same town, off a surfaced road
  • Charter flights available to Kisima Airstrip. Near the rhino sanctuary
  • Haven Trails fornece todas as transferências de Moshi, Arusha e KIA
Onde ficar
  • Mkomazi Wilderness Lodge inside park, luxury tented camp
  • Mkomazi Wilderness Retreat near Zange Gate, semi-permanent camp
  • MamboViewPoint Eco Lodge Usambara Mountains, 1.5 hrs away
  • Same Town basic guesthouses for budget travellers
  • Designated campsites bring own gear and food
  • Haven Trails recommends 2-3 nights for full experience
Perguntas frequentes

Common Questions

Vale a pena visitar o Parque Nacional Mkomazi em um safári na Tanzânia?
Absolutely. And most guests describe Mkomazi as one of the most surprising and rewarding experiences of their entire Tanzania trip. The park offers something genuinely unavailable anywhere else in the country: reliable black rhino sightings in the Tourist Sanctuary, the highest chance of seeing African wild dogs in Tanzania and the only populations of gerenuk, fringe-eared oryx and lesser kudu you will find south of Kenya. Combined with near-zero tourist traffic, the experience of Mkomazi is fundamentally different from any other Tanzanian park. Quieter, more intimate and richer in conservation story.
Can Mkomazi be combined with a Rota do Circuito Norte safari?
Yes. And Haven Trails considers it the ideal add-on for any Rota do Circuito Norte itinerary. Positioned between Kilimanjaro and the Usambara Mountains or the coast, Mkomazi fits naturally as a standalone 1-2 day extension at the start or end of a safari. Guests flying into Kilimanjaro International Airport can visit Mkomazi on the drive to Arusha (road via Same) or. Most beautifully. As a final wilderness experience before travelling south to Dar es Salaam or east to the coast. The park is the perfect antidote to the crowds of Serengeti and Ngorongoro.
Are there Big Five sightings in Mkomazi?
All five of the Big Five are present in Mkomazi. Elephant, lion, leopard, buffalo and black rhino. But reliable sightings are more selective than in Ngorongoro or the Serengeti. Elephants are reliably seen, especially at Dindira Dam in the dry season. Buffalo are present in good numbers. The rhino is reliably viewed only in the Tourist Sanctuary with a pre-arranged guided excursion. Lions and leopards are present but elusive. Sometimes requiring 3-4 days of game driving to encounter. Mkomazi's strengths lie in its conservation story, its Sahel-zone specialists, its wild dogs and its extraordinary solitude. Not in guaranteed Big Five checklist ticking.
Quantos dias devo passar em Mkomazi?
Two to three days is the ideal duration for a comprehensive Mkomazi experience. Day one covers a full game drive through the acacia-commiphora savannah and a dry-season visit to Dindira Dam. Day two is reserved for the Rhino Tourist Sanctuary. A 4x4 guided excursion that should be pre-arranged. And if possible, a visit to the wild dog conservation area. Day three allows for a walking safari, birding at the Umba River or a morning drive on Dindira Hill for panoramic Kilimanjaro views before departure. Haven Trails offers flexible 1-day, 2-day and 3-day Mkomazi packages that can be integrated into any Rota do Circuito Norte itinerary.
Qual é a diferença entre o Santuário de Criação de Rinocerontes e o Santuário Turístico?
The Kisima Rhino Breeding Sanctuary is the original 55 kmã fenced reserve established in the 1990s. Heavily secured and closed to the public, where black rhinos breed under strict protection. The Mkomazi Black Rhino Tourist Sanctuary is a separate, adjacent area that opened to visitors in 2021. A guided 4x4 experience that allows travellers to observe black rhinos at close range in a natural setting. The Tourist Sanctuary visit is one of Tanzania's most remarkable wildlife encounters: an educational, intimate experience with one of the world's most endangered large mammals. All visits must be pre-arranged through a licensed operator such as Haven Trails.
Mkomazi é adequado para viajantes de safári pela primeira vez?
Yes. With the right expectations. Mkomazi rewards travellers who are curious about conservation, who value solitude and authenticity over high wildlife density and who want to experience Africa away from the tourist mainstream. For those whose primary goal is maximum Big Five sightings in minimum time, Ngorongoro or Tarangire may be more appropriate as the centrepiece of a first safari. The ideal approach is to include Mkomazi as part of a broader Tanzania itinerary. Using it as either an opening introduction to the country's conservation story or a final, crowd-free farewell to Tanzania's wilderness before flying home.

Explore Parque Nacional Mkomazi

Black rhinos. African wild dogs. Gerenuk standing on hind legs. Ancient baobabs below the Pare Mountains. Tanzania's greatest conservation comeback. And it's all yours.

marcação. ║ ║ Edite SOMENTE o bloco WA_CONFIG abaixo. ║ ╚═══════════════════════════════ ═══════════════════════════════╝ -->