Amboseli National Park
Kenya

Amboseli National Park

Africa's most iconic photo — big-tusked elephants framed by Kilimanjaro's snow-capped peak.

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Elephant herd below Mount Kilimanjaro at Amboseli

Elephants with Kilimanjaro backdrop

Mount Kilimanjaro sunrise from Amboseli

Kilimanjaro at sunrise over the marsh

Large bull elephant feeding in Amboseli swamp

Bull elephant in the swamp

About Amboseli National Park

Amboseli National Park encompasses 392 square kilometres of savannah, swampland, and dried-up lake bed at the foot of Mount Kilimanjaro, providing what is arguably Africa's most iconic photographic backdrop — herds of large-tusked elephants silhouetted against the snow-capped peak of the continent's highest mountain. The park's relatively small size belies its enormous wildlife significance and its role in some of the longest-running mammal research projects in Africa.

The Amboseli Elephant Research Project, initiated by Dr Cynthia Moss in 1972, has individually identified and tracked over 3,200 elephants across more than five decades, making the Amboseli elephant population the best-studied in the world. The park's approximately 1,800 elephants include matriarchs whose life histories span 60-70 years and bulls carrying some of the largest tusks remaining in Africa. Their tolerance of vehicles — a result of decades of benign research presence — allows for extraordinarily close encounters.

Amboseli's ecosystem centres on springs fed by Kilimanjaro's underground meltwater, which emerge as permanent swamps (Enkongo Narok and Ol Tukai) amid otherwise semi-arid terrain. These wetlands attract dense concentrations of hippo, waterfowl, and wading birds, while the surrounding dry savannah supports lion, spotted hyena, zebra, wildebeest, and giraffe. The park's open landscapes and consistent clear mornings — Kilimanjaro is typically visible before cloud cover builds — make Amboseli a photographer's paradise. Over 400 bird species have been recorded, and the combination of wetland and savannah habitats produces exceptional birding year-round.

Mount Kilimanjaro sunrise from Amboseli

Kilimanjaro at sunrise over the marsh

Best Time to Visit

June to October for dry season game viewing with Kilimanjaro visible in early mornings. January to February is also excellent. Kilimanjaro views are clearest at dawn, typically obscured by clouds by mid-morning year-round.

Wildlife & Ecosystems

1,800+ elephants with some of Africa's largest remaining tuskers, lion, spotted hyena, cheetah, hippo, zebra, wildebeest, giraffe, 400+ bird species. The swamps support pelican, African jacana, malachite kingfisher, and goliath heron.

Large bull elephant feeding in Amboseli swamp

Getting to Amboseli National Park

30-minute charter flight from Nairobi Wilson Airport to Amboseli airstrip. 4-hour drive from Nairobi (240 km) via Namanga. Road conditions are generally good on the main route. The park can be combined with Tsavo for an extended southern Kenya circuit.

We Handle It

Seamless Logistics

Transfers, domestic flights, road transport — our ground team manages every detail of getting you to Amboseli National Park.

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Experience Amboseli National Park

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