About Solio Lodge
Solio Lodge, situated in the extensive, privately owned wildlife sanctuary of Solio Game Reserve, lies on ...
... the southern fringes of Laikipia, close to the foothills of the Aberdare range. Occupying the rolling plains between the Aberdare and Mount Kenya national parks, Solio is a beacon in Kenya's conservation landscape, and the country's pioneer in breeding black rhinos.
This spectacularly conceived and beautifully integrated modern bush lodge with huge rooms is one of central Kenya's very best places to stay. We were instantly seduced by the attention to detail, the delicious meals, the glass-walled mega-showers that look out onto the grounds, the super-comfortable beds and the remarkable wildlife riches of the Solio Game Reserve, in particular the numerous black and white rhinos.
Our view
This spectacularly conceived and beautifully integrated modern bush lodge with huge rooms is one of central Kenya's very best places to stay. We were instantly seduced by the attention to detail, the delicious meals, the glass-walled mega-showers that look out onto the grounds, the super-comfortable beds and the remarkable wildlife riches of the Solio Game Reserve, in particular the numerous black and white rhinos.
Accommodation
6 rooms
Children
Fine for all ages.
Open
16 Nov to 31 Oct (closed 1-15 Nov)
Activities
4WD Safari
Birdwatching
Guided walking safari
Horse-riding
Mountain biking
Night drive
Private activities
Traveller reviews of Solio Lodge
5 real, un-edited reviews from Expert Africa's travellers.
Arrived 26 Jul 2022, 2 nights
"Solio Lodge review"
Overall rating: Excellent
Arrived 3 Feb 2022, 3 nights
"Solio Lodge review"
Overall rating: Excellent
Arrived 5 Jan 2020, 3 nights
"A beautiful place!"
Overall rating: Excellent
Arrived 13 Feb 2018, 3 nights
"So many Rhinos!!"
Overall rating: Excellent
Arrived 28 Jun 2015, 3 nights
"Solio Lodge review"
Overall rating: Excellent
























Expert Africa's gallery
When we travel we take lots of photos ourselves to give you a real and un-edited view of the safaris. See our 24 pictures and 1 videos of Solio Lodge to get the candid view.
View gallerySafaris visiting Solio Lodge
Just ideas, we'll always tailor-make a trip for you


Rothschild Giraffe Safari
8 days • 3 locations • 1 country
NAIROBI AIRPORT TO NAIROBI AIRPORT
A example of a luxury Kenyan safari, starting at the iconic Giraffe Manor before fabulous stays on the spectacular Solio Reserve and Sala’s Camp in a remote corner of the Maasai Mara.
Visiting Nairobi, Maasai Mara and 1 other area
US$12,650 - US$17,830 per person
Solio Lodge: Our full report
Solio Lodge, situated in the extensive, privately owned wildlife sanctuary of Solio Game Reserve, lies on ...
... the southern fringes of Laikipia, close to the foothills of the Aberdare range. Occupying the rolling plains between the Aberdare and Mount Kenya national parks, Solio is a beacon in Kenya's conservation landscape, and the country's pioneer in breeding black rhinos.
Unlike many of Kenya's smaller lodges, Solio Lodge has not grown from an original ranch farmstead. Instead, it was built from scratch, in 2010, to provide a permanent base for the increasing numbers of visitors wanting to see Solio's remarkable, long-horned rhinos.
The lodge consists of a dramatic, high-roofed, glass fronted central lounge and dining area and six, well spaced-out cottages built in the same, high, graceful style, with sweeping roofs of thatched tiles. The central building faces east – on a clear morning to a dramatic sunrise over Mount Kenya with the cottages on either side in two wings of three.
Facing the main lawn, the central areas – which also serve as the lodge reception – is a fine place to gather before meals. The lawn is dominated by a freeform deck encircling the base of a venerable acacia tree, and this is where breakfast and lunch are often eaten. Inside the lounge, there's a sit-up bar that gets most use when the lodge is full. As well as contemporary artwork, fascinating photos on the walls depict Solio Ranch's early days.
At the back of the lounge, a dramatic curving staircase sweeps up to a mezzanine platform spanning the lounge, where a small selection of gifts and crafts is for sale and comfy seating looks out from a veranda over the lawn.
Solio's cottages
All Solio's cottage-size rooms can be set up as double or twin-bedded rooms. Each cottage has a design theme reflected in the art on the walls and the room décor. There's a really pleasing design coherence to all of them, with clean lines, comfortable chunky furnishings over the partly carpeted and partly polished cement floors, and each room has its own individual colour palette. The panoramic floor-to-ceiling windows allow natural light to flood each room and French windows (beware of collisions!) give access to the low decks or lawns which front most of the cottages.The cottages each have a large lounge area with plenty of soft seating, set apart slightly from the bedroom area by a bar-console arrangement with reading material, a fridge and a music docking station for playing your music through the room's audio system. Each room has an elegant fireplace in the lounge, and the fire is usually lit, with acacia deadwood, ready for your return from the late afternoon activity. Another fireplace, in the bathroom, can be lit on request. With 24-hour mains electricity and charging points with UK-style sockets in all rooms, there's a solid sense of supreme comfort and contemporary style throughout.
The cottage furthest to the south is cottage #1 (Zebra), which is usually considered the honeymoon suite, furthest from the central area. Wildlife loves coming up to this room, but there is no deck. Rooms #2 (Banana Leaf) and #3 (Cheeseplant ) are also on the south side of the central building. Of the six cottages, Cheeseplant is the most disabled-friendly cottage, being closest to the main area, though none of them have any special adaptations.
On the north side of the main building stands cottage #4 Strelitzia and then the adjoining family cottages, the People rooms (#5 and #6). Although this adjoining pair is usually used as a huge family suite, other guests will often be upgraded here on arrival if it hasn't been taken. Separate groups of guests will never be booked here together, as the rooms share a main area. There are great views of the lodge waterhole from here.
All the cottage bathrooms are enormous and feature deep, freestanding, bathtubs and twin wash basins. Some of the shower areas are floored with wood lattice and all have very high, waterfall-style showers with plenty of pressure. Ample hot water is provided by wood-fired boilers lit for each room, morning and evening. Unusually, the showers have glass walls on the garden side, allowing you to absorb the view and watch the wildlife while showering.
Solio Game Reserve
Solio Game Reserve is Kenya's oldest private rhino sanctuary – a 76km² conservancy carved out of Solio cattle ranch in 1970. Initially a focus for the breeding of crtically endangered black rhinos, it successfully started a white rhino breeding programme alongside the black rhinos and as numbers have burgeoned in the sanctuary, rhinos of both species have often been translocated to other protected areas in Kenya, including Lake Nakuru National Park, Ol Pejeta and Lewa. After some poaching cases, Solio started a photographic database of its rhinos in 2005 and now every individual of both species can be monitored. There are currently more than 45 black rhino and more than 185 white rhino.The extraordinary success of Solio's conservation work means that Solio Game Reserve is chock-full of wildlife. You will see white rhinos in large herds, often out on the open plains, and many of them with impressive horns. The instinctively shyer black rhinos are a shade less outgoing, but still quite easily spotted. When we last stayed in November 2018, we counted nearly 50 white rhino and a pair of black, just on one afternoon game drive. These are the biggest of Solio's megafauna: there are no elephants at Solio, which has the benefit of protecting the splendid stands of yellow-barked fever trees that characterise the reserve. As well as large numbers of plains grazers, including impala, zebra and warthog, Solio has some northern species, including the rapier-horned Beisa oryx and smartly coated reticulated giraffe. On one visit, we followed six male lions on the evening we were there, and the reserve has good numbers of leopards, preying largely on the abundant impala. The opportunity to see some of Solio's fantastic birdlife, with more than 300 species having been spotted here, completes a spectacular wildlife experience.
Solio activities
Although you can go out on a dawn game drive, with the cooler and often slightly damp climate at Solio, and abundant wildlife, morning activities generally start from 07:00 after an early breakfast.Game drives are run in comfortable 5-seater, closed Land Cruisers, with roof hatches, conducted by a driver/guide and a spotter. All guests at Solio have exclusive use of a vehicle and driver. On our most recent visit, we found the guiding to be rather mixed – one guide we had was excellent, and one of the best of the trip, whereas another was quiet and hesitant. In the vehicles, you have the option of sitting up high on roof-mounted seats for a better view, which is good fun, but rather bouncy.
The same vehicles are used for full-day excursions into Aberdare National Park, the gate of which is a 30-minute drive from the lodge. Leaving the farmlands behind, you climb through dense mountain forest, cut through by streams and inhabited by elephant, buffalo, giant forest hog and colobus monkeys. Above the forest, from about 2,400m, there's a dense zone of giant bamboo, growing to 20m or more in height. And climbing above 2,800m you reach more open country, with tall, tussocky grassland and, above the tree line at about 3,000m, the region's famous Afro-alpine vegetation. This includes the same giant groundsel and ostrich plume plant or giant lobelia (a strange, furry-looking giant herb) that can be found on Mount Kenya. The drive can include visits to the top of the Chania waterfall – and, if there's time, also to the Karura Falls lookout, with a stunning view of the Gura Falls across a huge, jungle-swathed chasm. There's no charge for the Aberdare excursion itself, but you do have to pay the park fee.
Having spent considerable time in the Laikipia region during our last visit in 2018, our time in the Abedares was easily one of the highlights – the landscape and vegetation is beautiful and so varied, and we spotted a leopard, plenty of buffalo, giant forest hogs (a real rarity) and many colobus and Syke’s monkeys – just in one morning. We would thoroughly recommend a day here, which is automatically included if staying 3 nights at Solio.
Other Solio activities include running, walking, horse-riding and cycling near the airstrip and in other safe areas outside the rhino sanctuary itself. You'll be accompanied by guides.
If you're feeling more sedentary, the rooms have yoga mats and you can also order a massage and other treatments in your room (extra charges apply for those).
Unusually, Solio offers very interesting back-of-house visits to the kitchen, vegetable and herb garden, stores and office area – neatly and securely organised in shipping containers. The short visit is encouraged and very worthwhile, testament to the high standards maintained here.
Geographics
- Location
- Laikipia, Kenya
- Ideal length of stay
- 3 nights-plus
- Directions
- Solio Lodge is around 60 minutes drive from Nanyuki airport, or 5 minutes from the lodge's own airstrip for private charters.
- Accessible by
- Fly-and-Transfer
Food & drink
- Usual board basis
- Full Board & Activities
- Food quality
- The food quality at Solio is very high and one of the lodge's key experiences. The manager had a five-year stay in Italy and it shows in the attention to vibrant colours and flavours. With its own vegetable and herb garden, and the produce from Kenya's highland farms easily available, you eat very well and in great variety.
On arrival, our November 2018 lunch (from the buffet) on the garden deck included spaghetti with a pesto sauce, vegetable tempura with a honey soy and ginger dip, a mango and avocado salad, Caprese salad, as well as a cheese board. Dessert was a fruit sorbet.
Dinner often starts by the fire in the lounge, with some drinks and bitings. Moving to our table we had an excellent, fragrant Zanzibar fish soup, then a Thai chicken curry with rice accompanied by poppadums and kachumbari (tomato and onion salad) with fresh lime. There was still room for delicious, homemade ice cream made with local strawberries.
Breakfast was lovely, with very good pancakes and lots of fresh fruit, as well as a full English style fry-up.
You can eat more or less when you prefer, but as a guideline, breakfast is usually served between 06:30 and 09:30, lunch between 13:00 and 14:30 and dinner between 19:30 and 20:30. Tea and coffee and biscuits or cakes are also on offer in the main area all afternoon, or they can be bought to your room, as can tea or coffee with a morning wake-up call. - Dining style
- Group Meals
- Dining locations
- Indoor and Outdoor Dining
- Further dining info, including room service
- Solo travellers will always be joined by the lodge manager for meals if appropriate. There are hot drink making facilities in the rooms, but wake-up calls with hot drinks can also be arranged.
- Drinks included
- All drinks, except Champagne, are included.
Special interests
- Riding holidays
- Solio is home to an impressive population of white and black rhinos, and rides take place outside their sanctuary. Explore the woods and rolling plains and keep watch for a diversity of species, including the northern varieties of plains wildlife.
- See ideas for Riding holidays in Kenya
- Wellbeing
- The 6 well-spaced, east-facing cottages provide privacy and stunning sunrise views of Mount Kenya, while the graceful design, ample natural light and glass showers overlooking personal gardens create an ambience suitable for this luxury retreat.
- See ideas for Wellbeing in Kenya
- Luxury
- With its modern design and individually themed cottages, Solio Lodge was purpose-built for luxury. Panoramic windows and open fireplaces add wow-factor, while exploring the private conservancy makes for an exclusive experience.
- See ideas for Luxury in Kenya
Children
- Attitude towards children
- Solio is very flexible in its attitude to children but the lodge does have an adult flavour and children need to be supervised (or well-behaved).
- Property’s age restrictions
- None
- Special activities & services
- Children often play ball games – cricket, football, volley ball – in the grounds, and bush craft skills can be organised with some of the guides, as can torchlight walks in the grounds looking for small, nocturnal wildife such as bushbabies and insects.
- Equipment
- Highchairs and baby cots are available.
- Generally recommended for children
- With the proviso that Solio feels stylish and exclusive rather than family-focused, this is neverthelss a secure and very comfortable safari base for children. The gardens are fine for letting off steam and the impressive fauna in the rhino sanctuary is very easily seen, so game drives are packed with interest.
- Notes
- As ever, very young children will need supervision at the lodge, but older ones, from say 5 and up, should be fine if they behave responsibly.
Our travellers’ wildlife sightings from Solio Lodge
Since mid-2018, many of our travellers who stayed at Solio Lodge have kindly recorded their wildlife sightings and shared them with us. The results are below. Click an animal to see more, and here to see more on our methodology.

100% success

100% success

100% success

100% success

100% success

100% success

75% success

33% success

33% success

25% success

0% success

0% success

0% success

0% success

0% success

0% success
Communications
- Power supply notes
- There’s a back-up generator for the occasional mains blackout. Solar water heating is planned though this won’t be feasible all year round. Hot water is supplied by wood- and briquette-burning boilers, with the briquettes partly supplied by the lodge’s own briquette maker, supplied with waste cardboard (other recycling includes tins and plastic bottles returned to Nairobi, kitchen waste to a pig farmer in the local town of Mweiga). Rooms are equipped with hair dryers.
- Communications
- Cellphone network is available, and there's WiFi in the rooms.
- TV & radio
- There are no TVs in the lodge’s rooms or public areas, but guests are welcome to watch big matches or major events with staff or managers.
- Water supply
- Borehole
- Water supply notes
- Borehole water is pumped up to tanks near the stables. This water is actually potable, but guests are nonetheless advised not to drink it and bottled water is provided.
Sustainability

Education and healthcare in the Solio Game Reserve
Nestled in the valleys at the heart of Mount Kenya and surrounded by 45,000 acres of wilderness in the Solio Game Reserve, Solio Lodge provides intimate and unique guest accommodation. A member of the Safari Collection, the lodge is an active supporter of local communities, with projects approved by Kenya Wildlife Trust. Social commitments are twofold, focusing on education and healthcare.
The complete refurbishment of the Honi Primary School and the partial refurbishment of Leburra Primary School outside Solio Lodge have recently been completed with significant help from donors. With support from Solio Lodge, Honi Primary School has now 7 classrooms stocked with new textbooks and furniture, a dining hall with kitchen, staff rooms and playground.
Additionally, to emphasise the importance of education and raise awareness about health issues, an innovative project has been designed. ‘Team Talk’ is intended to encourage empowerment of girls and considerably improve health and sexual education using sport as a medium to achieve this. In partnership with Exploring Global Health Opportunities and The Tag Rugby Trust, Safari Collection is helping children build self-confidence, gain social skills and a desire to invest in their future through education.
When discussing healthcare, numbers show that there is an average of 1 dentist for every 150,000 people in Kenya and over 300,000 people live with blindness, despite over 80% of these cases being preventable or curable. Proving once again its commitment to social investment, the Safari Collection has partnered up with SmileStar, a UK dental charity and Medical and Educational Aid to Kenya (MEAK) to provide free dental and eye treatments for the communities near Solio Lodge. In the past few years, over 1000 patients have undergone dental surgery, while 500 were able to improve their eyesight with using surgical interventions.
See more great sustainability projects in Kenya
Health & safety
- Malarial protection recommended
- Yes
- Medical care
- Solio staff have been on first aid and medical courses and are able to deal with minor problems. The lodge has a good range of first-aid equipment.
- Dangerous animals
- High Risk
- Security measures
- Security is very good at Solio, with askaris at the lodge itself and Kenya Wildlife Service rangers and government General Service Unit officers in the surrounding ranch and sanctuary.
- Fire safety
- There are fire extinguishers throughout the lodge. Staff have all done fire training.
Activities
4WD Safari
Birdwatching
Guided walking safari
Horse-riding
Mountain biking
Night drive
Private activities
Extras
- Disabled access
- On Request
- Laundry facilities
- Fast laundry service – machine washed using GNLD eco-friendly detergents and then tumble-dried – is included in the rates.
- Money
- Each room has a safe. Small amounts of Kenya shillings can usually be exchanged, but for full foreign exhange the lodge suggests guests use the ATMs in Nyeri or Nanyuki.
- Accepted payment on location
- UK pounds, US dollars and Euros are accepted for cash payments. Visa, Mastercard and Amex credit cards are accepted with no surcharge.
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Solio Lodge's location
Look closer at the environment and surroundings of Solio Lodge.
Other lodges in Laikipia
Alternative places to stay in this same area.

Kicheche Laikipia
Kicheche Laikipia is the most luxurious tented camp of the handful of places to stay in the Ol Pejeta Conservancy in central Laikipia.

Laikipia Wilderness
Laikipia Wilderness is a rustic owner-managed bush camp, in excellent wild dog territory, offering outstanding guiding.

Lewa Safari Camp
Lewa Safari Camp is a comfortable and homely tented lodge, located in the Lewa Conservancy and offering a relatively exclusive safari away from mass tourism.

Lewa Wilderness
Lewa Wilderness is a comfortable, fenced safari lodge with nine cottages, great views and a huge range of activities.

El Karama Lodge
El Karama is a comfortably rustic, very personal, riverside eco-lodge on a game-rich private ranch in Laikipia, an hour’s drive north of Nanyuki airport.

Sosian
Sosian Lodge is a distinctive, estancia-style ranch house on a former cattle ranch, with great opportunities for riding, relaxing and seeing wild dogs and other savannah wildlife.

Il Ngwesi Eco-Lodge
The community-owned Il Ngwesi Eco-Lodge sits atop a small hill in the remote Il Ngwesi Group Ranch, a two-hour drive north of Lewa Conservancy in north-eastern Laikipia.

Ol Pejeta Bush Camp
Ol Pejeta Bush Camp is a simple camp, with comfortable tents, delivering an authentic wilderness experience backed up by good food and guiding.

Porini Rhino Camp
Porini Rhino Camp is a small, simple, well established tented camp, with a keen focus on sustainable and low-impact tourism.

Borana
Borana is a comfortable and striking lodge on the Borana Conservancy in eastern Laikipia, offering pleasant accommodation with good food and service and a very wide range of activities.

Sirikoi
Sirikoi is a small, very high-quality safari camp with excellent service and food and a wide selection of activities.

Kifaru House
Kifaru House is a small, stylish safari lodge in the Lewa Conservancy, with beautiful views across the landscape.

Lewa House
Lewa House is a very comfortable, boutique safari lodge located on the Lewa Conservancy, north of Mount Kenya.

Loisaba Tented Camp
Loisaba Tented Camp is a luxury safari base of tented rooms, ranged along a ridge in the Loisaba Conservancy, facing Mount Kenya. The camp was completely rebuilt in 2016.

Tassia Lodge
Tassia offers a unique wilderness experience in a remote location: come here for cultural interaction, stunning views and something a bit different.

Loisaba Star Beds
Loisaba Starbeds is a simple camp of 4 rooms with pull-out, open-air 'star beds', located near a dam in the Loisaba Conservancy, in northwestern Laikipia.

Sweetwaters Serena
Sweetwaters Serena is a large, older tented camp – the largest camp in the Laikipia region – in the eastern part of the Ol Pejeta Conservancy.

Karisia Walking Safaris
Karisia Walking Safaris operates camel assisted, multi-day walking safaris from its main camp, Tumaren, set in a remote part of Laikipia.

Sandai
Sandai is a pretty, owner-run homestay, set between the Aberdare Range and Mount Kenya, offering a range of activities at extra cost.

Lodo Springs
Lodo Springs is a spectacularly located luxury lodge in a remote spot in the Loisaba Conservancy, sister lodge to Loisaba Tented Camp and Loisaba Star Beds.

Sanctuary at Ol Lentille
The Sanctuary at Ol Lentille is an unusual safari lodge in northern Laikipia, consisting of three exclusive villas, and offering a huge range of activities.

Governors' Mugie House
Governors' Mugie House – a substantial, luxury safari lodge – is one of only two properties in the Mugie Conservancy in northwestern Laikipia.

Thomsons Falls Lodge
Thomsons Falls Lodge is a simple hotel dating back to the colonial era, located above the falls of the same name, near the western Laikipia town of Nyahururu.

Ekorian's Mugie Camp
Ekorian's Mugie Camp is a pleasant, family-friendly safari camp in a remote location in northwestern Laikipia.
When to go to Laikipia
Our month by month guide: What it's like to visit Solio Lodge in Laikipia
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Laikipia in January
Clear, warm days and mild nights make this a popular time for safaris in Laikipia. It's excellent for game viewing in all the conservancies, where water sources attract diverse wildlife. The dry conditions make it easier to spot black rhinos, lions and leopards. Star bed sleep-out options at a number of lodges are particularly magical under the clear night skies.
After the New Year period, many camps and lodges treat January as mid-season, offering good value. The landscape retains some greenery, enhancing photography.
- Clear days ideal for safaris
- Excellent visibility for wildlife viewing
- Dry riverbeds attract wildlife to water sources
- Calving season for wildebeest and antelopes
- Palearctic migrant birds abundant
Our view
Fantastic: the very best time to visit
Weather in January
Laikipia in February
With the short dry season well established in Laikipia, wildlife gathers close to water points, making it an excellent time for safaris. Ol Pejeta and Lewa Wildlife Conservancies offer prime viewing opportunities for endangered species like black rhinos and Grevy's zebras. Solio Rhino Conservancy provides exceptional black rhino sightings during this period. The grass is grazed down, improving visibility across the region.
February is ideal for walking safaris, where you can appreciate the smaller details of the ecosystem. The clear skies make stargazing from star beds an unforgettable experience. Cultural visits to local communities are particularly rewarding, as the pleasant weather encourages outdoor activities and interactions.
- Prime time for wildlife gathering near water
- Ideal conditions for walking safaris
- Palearctic migrant birds still present
- Low rainfall makes game drives rewarding
Our view
A very good time to visit
Weather in February
Laikipia in March
As March progresses in Laikipia, the weather becomes increasingly hot and humid with more rain likely later in the month. Through most of the month, conditions are still good for game drives in most districts. As the month advances, the buildup to the rainy season becomes apparent.
This period can offer unique photographic opportunities as animals congregate around diminishing water sources. Accommodation costs decrease as the low season approaches.
- Early month offers great wildlife viewing
- Hot weather transitions to occasional rains
- Lower visitor numbers
- Lush vegetation begins to appear
Our view
A good time to visit, with pros & cons
Weather in March
Laikipia in April
April usually sees established, serious rainfall in much of Laikipia, transforming the landscape. The southeast monsoon wind brings cooler temperatures and frequent downpours. While game viewing can be challenging due to lush vegetation, the green season offers unique experiences, with new-born animals visible among the verdant scenery.
The landscape bursts into life with vibrant colours, ideal for photography. Birdwatching is excellent with many species breeding. This is a quieter time for tourism, with lower accommodation rates at many places allowing for a more exclusive safari experience for great levels of service.
- Long rains begin, transforming landscapes
- Green season offers unique photo opportunities
- Lower rates at Laikipia's luxury lodges
- Buffalo and zebra calving season commences
- Birdwatching excellent
Our view
A good time to visit, with pros & cons
Weather in April
Laikipia in May
May in Laikipia is characterised by ongoing rains and lush vegetation. While game viewing can be trickier, the vibrant landscapes offer spectacular photographic opportunities with very little dust. The landscapes are a sea of green, with diverse and thriving flora.
This is an excellent time for birdwatching across the region as breeding season continues. The Ewaso Nyiro river swells impressively. Despite potential challenges, patient visitors may witness dramatic scenes of predators hunting in the thick vegetation.
- Lush vegetation makes wildlife spotting trickier
- Great for landscape and nature photography
- Rutting season for wildebeest and impalas
- Frog breeding season in Laikipia's wetlands
- Mount Kenya views improve with clearer air
Our view
A good time to visit, with pros & cons
Weather in May
Laikipia in June
As June progresses in Laikipia, the rains give way to slightly cooler, cloudy weather. This transition marks the beginning of a long, generally dry, high season for visitors. Game viewing improves as vegetation starts to thin, and conditions are comfortable.
The Ewaso Nyiro river, still full from the rains, attracts diverse wildlife. Accommodation rates begin to rise, reflecting the start of peak season.
- Rains subside, ushering in cooler weather
- High season begins with increased visitors
- Comfortable conditions game viewing
Our view
A good time to visit, with pros & cons
Weather in June
Laikipia in July
July in Laikipia brings cooler temperatures and ideal conditions for safaris. Animals concentrate around water sources on the conservancies, providing excellent game viewing opportunities.
July marks the peak of the high season, with higher accommodation rates and visitor numbers. The dry conditions make it easier to spot elusive species like leopards and black rhinos.
- Cool weather perfect for walking and riding
- Wildlife concentrates around water sources
- Excellent conditions for photography tours
Our view
A good time to visit, with pros & cons
Weather in July
Laikipia in August
August in Laikipia offers mild, dry weather, perfect for safaris. The conservancies teem with wildlife, including endangered species like black rhinos and Grevy's zebras. The landscapes offer stunning vistas and excellent conditions for game drives and walking safaris. The dry conditions make it easier to spot big cats across the region. This is peak season, so expect higher visitor numbers and accommodation rates.
You might consider combining your Laikipia safari with a stay at the nearby Samburu National Reserve, known for its “northern five” species – Grevy’s zebra, reticulated giraffe, beisa oryx, gerenuk and Somali ostrich.
- Peak season for wildlife viewing in Laikipia
- Mild weather ideal for outdoor activities
- Busy period requires advance bookings
Our view
A good time to visit, with pros & cons
Weather in August
Laikipia in September
As September progresses in Laikipia, the weather typically remains dry with clearing skies, signalling excellent safari conditions. Early September can be busy, but visitor numbers decrease later in the month. In the conservancies, game viewing is exceptional as animals congregate around limited water sources.
September generally offers excellent conditions for photography.
- Hot, dry weather with good visibility
- Quieter period for more exclusive safaris
- Natural bush fires flush out insects and small animals for predators
Our view
Fantastic: the very best time to visit
Weather in September
Laikipia in October
October in Laikipia brings generally hot and mostly dry conditions, ideal for safaris. It's a favourite month for many visitors due to the good weather and fewer visitors. The conservancies offer excellent game viewing, with animals concentrated around water sources. The Solio Rhino Conservancy provides exceptional rhino sightings in the dry conditions.
Birdwatching is rewarding as Palearctic migrants begin to arrive. Cultural visits to Maasai communities remain a highlight. Consider combining your Laikipia safari with a trip to the nearby Samburu National Reserve for a diverse wildlife experience.
- Warm or hot and mostly dry conditions for safaris
- Migratory birds start arriving
- Perfect for photography
Our view
A very good time to visit
Weather in October
Laikipia in November
November in Laikipia marks the beginning of the short rains, usually in the latter half of the month. This transition brings about dramatic changes in the landscape. Early November can still offer good game viewing before the rains intensify. Then the bush begins to green, creating beautiful scenery.
As the low season begins, accommodation rates decrease, and visitor numbers drop too, allowing for a more exclusive safari experience. Birdwatching becomes excellent with the arrival of many migratory species. November is ideal for photographers capturing the changing landscapes and dramatic skies, with low dust and clear air. Cultural visits to Maasai communities offer insights into how local life adapts to the changing seasons.
- Short rains begin, transforming landscapes
- Low season offers better rates and privacy
- Excellent time for birdwatching in Laikipia
- Lush scenery provides stunning backdrops
Our view
A good time to visit, with pros & cons
Weather in November
Laikipia in December
In a typical December, Laikipia sees the short rains finish by mid-month, leaving the landscape at its most beautiful. Clear blue skies return, heralding the start of the second peak visitor season from around 20 December onwards. The conservancies offer excellent game viewing with lush backdrops.
Christmas can occasionally be wet, but most years see perfect safari conditions by the festive season. This is an ideal time to combine wildlife viewing with cultural experiences, such as visiting Maasai communities.
- Rains typically end, leaving landscapes lush
- Peak tourist season begins mid-month
- Christmas safaris popular in conservancies
- Night sky clarity ideal for stargazing
Our view
A good time to visit, with pros & cons
Weather in December

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