Makgadikgadi Pans
Botswana

Makgadikgadi Pans

12,000 km² of ancient salt flats — zebra migrations, starlit sleep-outs, meerkats, and San Bushmen culture.

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Vast Makgadikgadi salt pans

Salt pans stretching to the horizon

Meerkat family on Makgadikgadi Pans

Meerkats on the pans

Night sky over Makgadikgadi Pans

Star trails over the pans

About Makgadikgadi Pans

The Makgadikgadi Pans are the remnants of an ancient super-lake — Lake Makgadikgadi — that once covered an area larger than Switzerland. Today, two vast salt pans — Ntwetwe Pan and Sua Pan — extend across approximately 12,000 square kilometres of the Kalahari, creating one of the largest salt flats in the world and one of Africa's most surreal and otherworldly landscapes. During the dry winter months (May-October), the pans are blindingly white, cracked expanses stretching to the horizon, where the sky and earth merge in a shimmering mirage.

The transformation begins with the summer rains. From November to April, shallow waters fill the pans, attracting one of Africa's last great zebra migrations — approximately 25,000 Burchell's zebra trek from the Boteti River to the nutritious grasslands that sprout on the pans' edges. This gathering also attracts wildebeest, springbok, and their predators including lion, cheetah, and brown hyena. When conditions are right, breeding colonies of greater and lesser flamingos appear on Sua Pan, their pink masses reflected in the shallow water against the white salt backdrop.

The Makgadikgadi experience is unlike any other in Africa. Quad bike excursions across the pans, sleep-outs under the Milky Way on the salt flats, meerkat habituation experiences at Jack's Camp, and interactions with the San Bushmen — one of the world's oldest continuous cultures — add dimensions of adventure and cultural depth. Chapman's Baobab, one of the oldest and most famous trees in Africa, stands on the edge of the pans, while the Kubu Island granite outcrop, sacred to the San, is strewn with ancient stone tools and offers panoramic views across the salt expanse.

Best Time to Visit

November to April for the zebra migration, flamingos, and green-season wildlife. May to October for dry-season quad bike excursions across the salt pans and sleep-outs under the stars. Meerkat experiences available year-round.

Wildlife & Ecosystems

25,000 migrating zebra, wildebeest, springbok, brown hyena, lion, cheetah, habituated meerkats, greater and lesser flamingos (seasonal), pelicans. The Boteti River supports hippo and crocodile year-round.

Meerkat family on Makgadikgadi Pans

Getting to Makgadikgadi Pans

Light aircraft from Maun to Makgadikgadi airstrips (30-45 minutes). 3-hour drive from Maun to Nata. The pans are often combined with the Okavango Delta for a contrast of water and desert landscapes.

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Seamless Logistics

Transfers, domestic flights, road transport — our ground team manages every detail of getting you to Makgadikgadi Pans.

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Makgadikgadi Pans in Pictures

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