The wildebeest crossings. The crocodiles. The most dramatic wildlife spectacle on earth.
7 Days | Tarangire · Central Serengeti · North Serengeti · Ngorongoro | July – October
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4X4 Safari Landcruiser with Pop Up Roof
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Hotel, Lodges and Tented Camps
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Arusha/ Kilimanjaro International Airport
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July – October
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Tanzania Migration Safari
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Full board
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English, Spanish, French, Chinese
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Easy to Moderate
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2-6 per Vehicle
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12
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65
Overview
Witness the Great Migration river crossings in the North Serengeti. Our 7 day migration safari covers Tarangire, Central and North Serengeti and Ngorongoro Crater. July–October only.
Highlights
- 7 Days / 6 Nights
- 4 Best Parks
- SEASON July – October
- Migration specialists
Itinerary
The Journey
There are wildlife experiences and then there is the Great Migration river crossing. They are not in the same category. Nothing in the natural world prepares you for the scale of it — a million and a half wildebeest moving as a single instinct, the Mara River below them, the crocodiles waiting. When the first animals go in, the whole river becomes chaos: bodies, spray, crocodiles rolling, calves swept sideways, the far bank filling with survivors shaking themselves dry and moving immediately back to grazing, as though nothing remarkable has just occurred.
This itinerary is built around the crossing. Every routing decision — why we go to Tarangire first, why we spend two nights in the North Serengeti, why we return through Central Serengeti before Ngorongoro — is made in service of maximising your time at the Mara River during the peak crossing window of July to October.
We have guided dozens of Migration safaris. We know which crossing points to favour at which times of day. We know when the herds are building on the bank and when they are likely to go. We use the guide radio network that runs across the North Serengeti, sharing real-time crossing intelligence between operators. And we know, from experience, that patience is the single most important thing we can give you at the river.
| A crossing can happen in thirty seconds or take four hours to begin. We stay until it happens. We have never left a Mara River bank without witnessing a crossing. We do not intend to start. |
The Migration circuit begins at Tarangire — a deliberate decision. The contrast between Tarangire's intimate, baobab-shaded elephant country and the vast open drama of what follows makes the Serengeti experience more powerful, not less. We enter Tarangire by mid-morning for a full-day game drive: elephant herds along the river, tree-climbing lions in their favoured acacias, the first big day of game-viewing that sets the standard for everything ahead.
▶ GUIDE TIP: The Tarangire elephant concentrations peak in July–October — the same window as the Migration crossings. The dry season strips the vegetation back and draws the herds to the river in numbers that are impossible to overstate. We give Tarangire a full first day because it deserves it, and because the guests who have seen it say it is the day they most often forget to mention when telling the story of the safari — buried under the Serengeti experience that follows — and that is a shame.
An early departure for the Serengeti — the longest driving day of the circuit, approximately 6 hours including the Ngorongoro highlands crossing. We make it a game drive throughout: the Conservation Area highlands, the descent to the Serengeti gate, and the first afternoon drives in the Seronera Valley. By dusk we are in camp with lions visible from the fire.
▶ GUIDE TIP: Use this day to settle in. The Serengeti can feel overwhelming at first — the scale of it requires adjustment. This afternoon is your orientation. Tomorrow the north awaits.
A dawn game drive in the Seronera Valley — last chances with the central Serengeti's resident predator population — then a mid-morning departure for the North. The drive from Seronera to Kogatende takes approximately 4.5 hours through progressively more dramatic country: the plains give way to rolling hills, rocky outcrops, the Lobo Valley woodlands. The Mara River appears as you crest the final ridge.A short afternoon game drive near the river. The wildebeest will be visible in their thousands on the far bank or moving through the surrounding country. The crocodiles are there too, barely distinguishable from the rocks until you know what to look for.
▶ GUIDE TIP: Keep the camera set and ready from the moment we approach the Mara River on Day 3. Crossings happen unpredictably — including on the day of arrival, during what should be a short afternoon drive. We have witnessed first-day crossings that guests almost missed because they had put the cameras away.
The day the whole itinerary is built towards. We are at the Mara River before 7am. The morning light over the crossing point is extraordinary — low, golden, the river catching the colour of the sky.And then we wait. River crossings are not scheduled. They happen when the pressure of wildebeest builds to a critical mass on the upstream bank, when one animal breaks and the rest follow, when instinct overrides the hesitation that the crocodiles in the shallows create. This can take thirty minutes. It can take four hours. We pack a full lunch, we position in the best available spot based on the morning's animal movement, and we wait with the engine off. When it happens, it is over quickly, The chaos of it — the scale, the noise, the crocodiles rolling, the sheer physical mass of a hundred thousand animals in a hundred metres of river — produces a silence in the vehicle that we have witnessed dozens of times and never tired of. Nobody speaks for a moment after the last wildebeest reaches the far bank. Nobody needs to.
▶ GUIDE TIP: The crossing window in July to September concentrates in the Kogatende/Lamai area of the North Serengeti. In October the herds begin moving south and the main action shifts. We time the itinerary to your exact travel dates and advise on the optimal North Serengeti window. If you can travel in late July to mid-September, do.
A final morning at the Mara River — another chance if yesterday's crossing was short or if conditions favour another. Then the drive south through the Lobo Valley, stopping for game drives as the landscape transitions from hilly north country back to the open Seronera plains. We reach Central Serengeti camp by late afternoon.
▶ GUIDE TIP: The southward drive through Lobo is one of the most underrated game drive routes in the Serengeti. The valley holds large buffalo herds, regular elephant, and a resident lion population that most visitors never encounter because they fly in and out of the north directly.
A dawn game drive in the Seronera, then mid-morning transfer to Ngorongoro. The 5-hour crater descent the following morning is our closing chapter: the black rhino, the crater lion prides, the flamingo lake, the hippo pool picnic lunch. We ascend by early afternoon and drive to Arusha, arriving by evening.
▶ GUIDE TIP: If you want to stay a night on the crater rim and descend at 6:30am rather than rushing the crater into a half-day from Karatu, we build this as a 7-night itinerary with the extra night on the rim. The difference in crater experience is significant. Ask about this option when you enquire.
Transfer to Kilimanjaro International Airport or your Arusha hotel. Seven days. The Migration. The crater. The elephant herds. The silence after the crossing.
Cost
The Cost Includes
- ✓ Private 4x4 safari vehicle throughout
- ✓ Expert born-East-African guide
- ✓ All national park and conservation area fees
- ✓ All accommodation per selected tier
- ✓ Full board throughout
- ✓ All road transfers between parks
- ✓ Ngorongoro crater descent fees
- ✓ Airport transfers (Arusha / KIA)
- ✓ Real-time migration intelligence via guide radio network
- ✓ Drinking water and snacks in vehicle
The Cost Excludes
- ✗ International flights
- ✗ Tanzania e-Visa (USD 50 per person)
- ✗ Travel insurance (mandatory for this itinerary)
- ✗ Hot air balloon safari (USD 520pp — highly recommended)
- ✗ Alcoholic beverages
- ✗ Gratuities
- ✗ Personal expenses
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
The Mara River crossings in the North Serengeti happen between July and October, with the peak window running from late July through mid-September. During this period, the bulk of the wildebeest herd — over a million animals — is concentrated in and around the Kogatende area of the North Serengeti, crossing and recrossing the Mara River as they follow the rainfall and the grass.
Within this window, late July to early September gives the highest crossing frequency. August is statistically the most reliable month. September crossings continue but the herds begin their southward movement from mid-September, reducing the concentration around the main crossing points.
October sees the tail of the Migration in the North Serengeti, with crossings becoming less frequent as the herds disperse south. We will advise you honestly on the expected crossing probability for your specific travel dates when you enquire.
No wildlife experience can ever be guaranteed. The crossings happen on the wildebeest’s schedule, not ours. We have seen crossings take four hours to begin — the animals gathering, hesitating, retreating, regrouping — and we have seen them begin within twenty minutes of arrival at the bank.
What we can tell you is this: we have guided the Migration in the North Serengeti for many years and we have never left the Mara River bank during the July–September window without witnessing at least one crossing. We use the guide radio network across the North Serengeti — a real-time intelligence system that tells us which banks have the largest concentrations, where the crocodiles are positioned, and which crossing points have had recent activity.
We allocate two nights at the North Serengeti specifically to maximise crossing chances. Two mornings at the river is our standard. If you want the highest possible probability, we recommend travelling in August and staying three nights in the north.
The crossings vary in size from a few hundred animals to tens of thousands. Large crossings can involve 50,000 wildebeest crossing in a single event — a process that takes between 30 minutes and 2 hours and fills the river completely with animals, spray, crocodiles and noise.
What happens: the wildebeest gather on the upstream bank in increasing numbers, drawn by the grass on the far side but deterred by the crocodiles they can sense in the water. The tension builds — sometimes for hours — until a critical mass is reached and one animal breaks. The moment the first wildebeest goes in, thousands follow within seconds. The river becomes chaos. Crocodiles roll. Calves are swept sideways. The far bank fills with survivors shaking themselves dry and immediately returning to grazing, as though nothing remarkable has occurred.
It is one of the most raw and extraordinary things in the natural world. Every guest we have brought to the river has said the same thing afterwards: no photograph or film footage prepares you for the sound and scale of it in person.
The North Serengeti between July and October is an extraordinary safari destination even on days when no crossings occur. The resident wildlife — large buffalo herds, elephants, reliable lions in the kopje country, leopards in the riverine forest, and enormous Nile crocodiles sunning on the Mara River banks — provides exceptional game viewing independent of the Migration.
The wildebeest themselves are always present in enormous numbers during this window. Watching a herd of 200,000 animals moving across the northern Serengeti grassland — even without a river crossing — is one of Africa’s great wildlife spectacles.
We also spend time in the Central Serengeti on this itinerary, where the resident predator population in the Seronera Valley provides consistently excellent game viewing regardless of Migration timing. The itinerary is built so that if the river crossings are delayed or infrequent on specific days, the overall quality of the safari remains exceptional.
The Migration happens year-round — it is a continuous movement around the Serengeti ecosystem, not a single event. What changes is where the herd is and what they are doing.
July–October: the northern Serengeti and the Mara River crossings. This is the most dramatic and most visited phase of the Migration.
December–March: the southern Serengeti and Ndutu — the calving season. Half a million wildebeest calves born in three weeks, surrounded by the highest predator concentration of the year. In many ways more intense than the river crossings for guests who prioritise wildlife interaction over spectacle.
April–June: the Migration moves north through the western corridor and the Grumeti River crossings. Less visited, less celebrated, and genuinely spectacular for guests who want the Migration experience with fewer vehicles.
Our dedicated calving season itinerary covers the December–March phase in full.
For July and August travel — the peak Migration months — we recommend booking at least 6 months in advance, and ideally 9–12 months. The best lodges in the North Serengeti fill in those months first, often before the end of the previous year.
September and October are slightly more accessible but still require 4–6 months lead time for preferred accommodation.
The specific lodges we recommend for the Migration itinerary — those with the closest access to the main Mara River crossing points — are the first to close. If you enquire and your preferred dates are already restricted in accommodation options, we will give you honest alternatives.
Send your enquiry now with your preferred dates, even if you are not ready to book immediately. We can hold accommodation options while you finalize your plans.
Yes — and if there is a single activity across all our itineraries that we recommend most consistently, the Serengeti balloon safari during Migration season is it.
Departing at dawn, you drift silently over the Serengeti as the Migration herds move below you — the perspective from above, the scale of the animals against the vast plain, the silence broken only by the burner and the occasional wildebeest call — is entirely different from any game drive experience and, in a real sense, makes the size of the Migration comprehensible in a way that ground-level viewing cannot.
The balloon lands for a champagne bush breakfast in the open Serengeti. One hour in the air, breakfast in the bush, and a perspective on the Serengeti that changes every game drive that follows. USD 520 per person. We book it on your behalf when you confirm the itinerary.
It is the same Migration. The wildebeest do not recognise the international border between Tanzania and Kenya. The Serengeti ecosystem extends north across the border into the Masai Mara in Kenya — the Mara River forms the boundary — and the wildebeest cross the river in both directions throughout the July–October season.
From the Tanzania side (North Serengeti), the crossings are identical to the Kenya side (Masai Mara) in terms of wildlife. The Tanzania side has the advantage of significantly lower vehicle density at most crossing points, particularly at the Kogatende area south of the main Mara crossings that Kenya-focused itineraries use.
Choosing Tanzania for the Migration gives you the same crossings with more solitude, better value accommodation, and the ability to combine the crossing experience with the Ngorongoro Crater and Tarangire — parks that have no equivalent on the Kenya circuit.
Travel insurance is not legally required for Tanzania entry, but we make it a condition of booking for all our safaris — and we consider it non-negotiable for the Migration itinerary specifically.
Medical evacuation from a remote location in the North Serengeti is expensive. A comprehensive travel insurance policy covering emergency medical evacuation, trip cancellation, and personal liability is essential. We recommend policies that specifically cover wildlife safari activities and confirm medical evacuation coverage to Nairobi or Dar es Salaam.
We can recommend reliable travel insurance providers when you confirm your booking. Do not travel to East Africa without comprehensive cover.
Yes — and this is a day we design specifically for guests who want both experiences. The balloon departs at dawn from the Central Serengeti or North Serengeti, depending on the position of the herds, and lands approximately 90 minutes later. After the champagne bush breakfast, we drive directly to the Mara River for the morning crossing vigil.
The balloon gives you the aerial view of the Migration scale. The river bank gives you the ground-level intensity of the crossing. The two experiences together — dawn above the herds, then mid-morning at the river — make for one of the most complete Migration days we know how to build.
This day works best with an early hotel checkout and a full-day schedule built around the balloon timing and the river crossing window. We plan it in detail when we build your itinerary.
