Samburu National Reserve
Kenya's arid frontier — the Samburu Special Five species found nowhere else on a classic safari circuit.
Reticulated giraffe in Samburu
Grevy's zebra by the Ewaso Ng'iro
Samburu landscape with doum palms
About Samburu National Reserve
Samburu National Reserve covers 165 square kilometres of semi-arid terrain along the Ewaso Ng'iro River in northern Kenya, a landscape of red-earth plains, doum palms, and dramatic kopjes that feels worlds apart from the green rolling hills of the Masai Mara. The reserve is named after the Samburu people — close relatives of the Maasai — who continue to herd cattle and goats on communal lands surrounding the protected area.
Samburu's primary draw is the "Samburu Special Five" — five species found almost nowhere else on a standard East African safari circuit: Grevy's zebra (distinguished by narrow stripes and large rounded ears), reticulated giraffe (a mosaic of liver-coloured patches separated by sharp white lines), gerenuk (the long-necked "giraffe gazelle" that feeds standing on its hind legs), Beisa oryx (a large antelope with rapier-straight horns), and Somali ostrich (with blue-grey neck and legs). These species are adapted to the arid conditions of Kenya's northern frontier and give Samburu a distinctly different character from southern parks.
The Ewaso Ng'iro River is the lifeline of the ecosystem, drawing elephants, buffalo, lion, leopard, and Nile crocodile to its palm-lined banks. The river also supports a diverse community of over 450 bird species, including the palm-nut vulture, Somali bee-eater, and vulturine guineafowl. Samburu gained international attention through the story of Elsa the lioness, made famous by Joy Adamson's "Born Free," and through the Save the Elephants research station, which has tracked the reserve's elephants using GPS collars and individual identification since 1993.
Samburu landscape with doum palms
Best Time to Visit
June to October for dry season game viewing concentrated along the Ewaso Ng'iro River. January to February offers excellent conditions with fewer visitors. Samburu receives less rainfall than the Mara, making it viable year-round.
Wildlife & Ecosystems
The Samburu Special Five: Grevy's zebra, reticulated giraffe, gerenuk, Beisa oryx, Somali ostrich. Plus lion, leopard, elephant, buffalo, Nile crocodile, African wild dog, 450+ bird species including vulturine guineafowl.
Getting to Samburu National Reserve
1-hour flight from Nairobi Wilson Airport to Samburu airstrip. 5.5-hour drive from Nairobi (350 km) via Nanyuki or Isiolo. Samburu is often combined with Laikipia and the Aberdares for a comprehensive northern Kenya circuit.
We Handle It
Seamless Logistics
Transfers, domestic flights, road transport — our ground team manages every detail of getting you to Samburu National Reserve.
Contact Our TeamSamburu National Reserve Safari Packages
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Experience Samburu National Reserve
Our Kenya specialists will craft a bespoke itinerary featuring Samburu National Reserve tailored to your preferences.