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Things To Know When Planning Your First Safari

1. Peak season availability books out far earlier than most people expect



If you’re planning your first safari, one of the most important things to understand is how quickly peak season availability disappears. In most safari destinations, July, August, September, and October are considered peak season, and availability during these months can be extremely limited if you don’t book early.


Booking well in advance gives you the widest possible choice of lodges and locations. We often see clients fall in love with a particular itinerary or destination, only to delay their decision and find that, by the time they’re ready to book, it’s already sold out.


Because safari lodges are small by nature, typically between 6 and 20 rooms it doesn’t take long for the best properties in the best locations to fill up. Once those are gone, there are often no comparable alternatives available at the same standard or price. In some cases, travelers are forced to significantly increase their budget to find availability, or unfortunately decide not to travel at all.


If you’re looking to travel during peak season, particularly June through to September, the key takeaway is simple: book as early as you can. This ensures better choice, better value, and a far smoother planning process overall.


As our founder always says, if you are trying to book peak season 6 months before travelling it is like doing your Christmas shopping at 10 pm of Christmas Eve. You will get something, but it may not be what you want.



2. Book with an Africa travel specialist



When planning an African safari, we strongly recommend booking through an Africa travel specialist, whether that’s Untamed Safaris or another experienced operator.


The reason is simple: Africa offers an enormous range of choice. There are 30+ national parks, thousands of lodges, multiple travel seasons, rotating specials and offers, and hundreds of airstrips and airports to navigate. You can easily spend weeks researching and trying to piece everything together yourself.


We find when people to try plan an Africa safari alone, one of two things usually happens.


If you’re extremely lucky and very skilled at online travel planning, you might get it right, but it won’t be any cheaper than booking through a specialist, and you’ll be travelling without on-the-ground support if something goes wrong.


More often, when travellers try to book a complicated itinerary on there own, mistakes are made somewhere along the way: a routing that doesn’t work, the wrong location at the wrong time of year, missed connections, or a lodge that isn’t quite what it appeared to be.


Those mistakes can cost more money and result in a far less seamless safari experience.


We absolutely encourage researching, exploring options, and getting inspired - that’s part of the excitement and anticipation of travel. We’re always happy to help with ideas, lodge comparisons, and inspiration.


But when it comes to actually piecing the itinerary together, expert advice and local support make all the difference.


A safari is a significant investment. It’s not a short city break. Getting it right matters, and that’s where an Africa travel specialist adds real value: better planning, better logistics, and ultimately, a better safari.



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