Lake Nakuru National Park is one of Kenya’s most productive game parks in the smallest package — 188 sq km of electrically fenced parkland surrounding the alkaline Lake Nakuru in Kenya’s Rift Valley. The park’s fame rests on two pillars: the soda lake’s flamingo concentrations (lesser and greater flamingo that historically made Lake Nakuru the “greatest ornithological spectacle in the world” in the words of zoologist Roger Peterson) and the rhino sanctuary — both white and black rhino are maintained within the fenced park in significant numbers, making Nakuru one of Kenya’s most reliable rhino destinations. 165 km from Nairobi and 2.5 hours on good tarmac, Nakuru is one of the most accessible East Africa wildlife experiences from a major city. This 2025 guide covers the complete Nakuru experience.
Entry Fees 2025
- Non-resident adult: USD $52 per person per day (KWS, 2025)
- Non-resident child: USD $26 per day
- Vehicle: USD $10 per day
- Distance from Nairobi: 165 km via A104, approximately 2.5 hours
- Park hours: 06:00–18:00
The Rhino Sanctuary
Lake Nakuru NP holds both species of African rhino — a distinction shared with only a handful of parks on the continent. The white rhino (southern white rhino, Ceratotherium simum simum) population: approximately 25–30 individuals, introduced from South Africa in the 1990s as part of the Kenya Wildlife Service breeding programme. White rhino are reliably seen on the open grassland of the park’s southern zone, often in pairs or small groups — the mother-calf pairs are the most frequently photographed. The black rhino (eastern black rhino, Diceros bicornis michaeli) population: approximately 30 individuals — smaller, more solitary, and more secretive than the white rhino. Black rhino sightings require more patience and tracking — the forest margins of the park’s western zone are the best black rhino habitat. The combined rhino population makes a Nakuru visit one of the best value rhino experiences in Kenya — both species in one day, without the specialised sanctuary permit systems of Ol Pejeta. The rhino are fully protected by the park’s electric perimeter fence — poaching risk is effectively zero within the fence.
The Flamingo Lake
Lake Nakuru’s flamingo population has fluctuated dramatically over the past two decades — the lake’s water level rose significantly due to increased rainfall between 2012 and 2018, diluting the alkalinity that supports the blue-green algae the flamingos feed on. The flamingo flocks largely moved to Lake Bogoria (100 km north) during this period. As of 2025, Lake Nakuru’s water level has partially stabilised and flamingo numbers have partially recovered — currently approximately 100,000–400,000 birds depending on season, down from the historic peak of 2+ million in the early 2000s but still producing the characteristic pink lake-shore effect. The viewpoint from Baboon Cliff (a ridge overlooking the lake’s north shore) provides the most comprehensive flamingo overview — when numbers are high, the lake edge from this viewpoint appears to move as the mass of pink birds shifts in response to disturbance. Dawn at Baboon Cliff is the optimal flamingo photography time — the east-facing cliff catches the first light over the lake as the flamingo activity peaks.
Rothschild Giraffe and Other Wildlife
Lake Nakuru NP is one of the principal Rothschild giraffe locations in Kenya — a reintroduction programme of this endangered giraffe subspecies (estimated world population approximately 2,800 individuals) has established a significant Nakuru population. The Rothschild giraffe is distinguished from the Masai giraffe by the paler tan coat with cream-coloured legs (appearing to wear white stockings), more widely spaced spots, and 5 ossicones (the horn-like protrusions — 5 vs 2 in other subspecies). The Nakuru southern zone’s open grassland concentrates the Rothschild giraffe with rhino and buffalo in a remarkable high-density wildlife scenario. Additional Nakuru wildlife: lion (small resident pride, reliable in the forest zone south of the lake), leopard (nocturnal, present along the rocky escarpment), waterbuck, Defassa waterbuck, Thomson’s gazelle, zebra, and the vervet monkey and Sykes’ monkey troops in the forest zones. The olive baboon troops at Nakuru are some of the most photographically accessible in Kenya — large troops at the lakeshore at dawn.
Accommodation 2025
- Sarova Lion Hill Lodge: USD $180–260/night per person full-board. The main mid-luxury park lodge, swimming pool, views over the lake, reliable service. Best overall Nakuru accommodation choice.
- Lake Nakuru Sopa Lodge: USD $150–200/night per person full-board. Good mid-range on the escarpment above the lake, pool, conference facilities.
- Lake Nakuru Lodge: USD $100–140/night per person full-board. Budget mid-range inside the park, functional rooms, the most affordable in-park option.