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Safari capital · Northern Tanzania

Arusha

The start line for the northern circuit — and, in Arusha National Park, an under-rated day of its own beneath Mount Meru.
Getting there
~1hr from Kilimanjaro Airport; the circuit's hub
Best for
Arriving, organising, and an Arusha NP day under Meru
The land
A green, busy town below Mount Meru
What it is
The gateway city — most trips begin and end here
What it is
Almost every northern safari begins in Arusha. A few make the most of it.
Arusha is Tanzania's safari capital — the bustling town where trips are outfitted and the northern circuit begins. Most people pass straight through, but it has a quiet ace: Arusha National Park, a compact, scenic park under Mount Meru with giraffe, buffalo, colobus monkeys, the Momela lakes and even walking and canoeing — a genuinely good first or last day while you find your safari legs.
Why you're here

What Arusha offers

A hub to arrive into — and a real little park most people skip.

Arusha National Park

Compact and scenic under Mount Meru — giraffe, buffalo, colobus and the Momela lakes.

Walking & canoeing

One of the few places near the circuit you can safari on foot or by canoe.

Mount Meru

Tanzania's second peak, and a serious acclimatisation trek for Kilimanjaro-bound climbers.

The hub

Outfitters, briefings and the start of nearly every northern itinerary.

An Arusha note

Most itineraries treat Arusha as a transit point, and that's fine — but if you have a spare day at the start, Arusha National Park is a lovely, low-key way to ease in, especially the walking and canoeing you can't do in the big parks.

The overlooked day

The park most people drive past

Arusha National Park is the town's underrated asset: in a single day you get the Momela lakes with their flamingos, black-and-white colobus in the forest, giraffe and buffalo on the slopes, and the chance to walk or canoe — things the Serengeti's rules don't allow. As a first day it shakes off the flight; as a last, it's a gentle wind-down before home.
When to come — honestly

Fine year-round

June – October
Best
Dry season — Clear views of Meru and easy access — the comfortable window.
December – February
Good
Green & clear — Lush and good between the rains; flamingos on the lakes.
The long rains (April–May) bring cloud over Meru and wetter trails, but Arusha as a hub functions year-round.
Where it sits

The crossroads of the north

Arusha sits at the meeting point of the routes north to the Serengeti, the Crater road, and Kilimanjaro and Moshi to the east — which is why it became the safari capital.

It's a real working town, not a resort, with the energy and the rough edges that come with that; most travellers use it as a hinge rather than a stay.

We've kept this practical. Arusha is the start line; the bonus is the small park under Meru if you have a day to give it.

Beyond the obvious

Three things to do from Arusha

Arusha NP day

Momela lakes, colobus and giraffe under Mount Meru.

Walk or canoe

Safari on foot or by canoe — rare this close to the circuit.

Meru acclimatisation

A Meru trek for climbers prepping for Kilimanjaro.

Why Wild Voyager

More than a transit stop

Arusha is where your trip starts; we make the arrival smooth and, if you have the time, put the under-rated park under Meru to good use.

A smooth start

We handle the airport transfer, the briefing and the outfitting so day one is effortless.

The bonus park

If you have a spare day, we build in Arusha NP — walking and canoeing the big parks can't offer.

Our own ground

Tanzania guides and vehicles from the first morning, not a stranger meeting you at arrivals.

Wildlife you may see
Birds Primates

Begin where the
northern circuit begins.

Arusha starts the trip; with a spare day, its park under Meru is a fine, low-key opener.

Plan a northern-circuit safari

Field notes, now and then.

Where to go · When to go · Wildlife in season

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