Tsavo East National Park is Kenya’s largest national park — 13,747 sq km of flat, open semi-arid plains in southeastern Kenya, crossed by the Galana River system and characterised by the distinctive red laterite earth that covers the entire landscape and its elephant population. Tsavo East’s “red elephants” — animals that dust-bathe in the red laterite clay, covering their grey skin in an orange-red crust — are one of Kenya’s most distinctive wildlife images and make the Tsavo East elephant immediately recognisable in photographs. The park’s flat topography (unlike the broken landscape of Tsavo West) provides excellent long-distance game drive visibility, and the Aruba Dam in the park’s eastern sector creates a year-round wildlife concentration that rivals the Masai Mara’s waterhole areas. This guide covers Tsavo East in full for 2025.

Entry Fees and Access 2025

  • Non-resident adult: USD $52 per person per day (KWS, 2025)
  • Vehicle: USD $10 per day
  • Distance from Mombasa: 160 km via A109 north, approximately 2.5 hours
  • Distance from Nairobi: 330 km via A109, approximately 4.5 hours
  • Main gate: Voi Gate (west, on A109), Sala Gate (east)

The Red Elephants

Tsavo East’s elephant population (estimated 12,000–14,000 individuals in the broader Tsavo ecosystem — the largest elephant population in Kenya) is distinctively red-coloured due to the regular dust-bathing behaviour using Tsavo’s red laterite iron-rich soil. The elephants excavate dry river bed banks and termite mound soils, then roll and spray the red dust over their entire body — a thermoregulation and parasite-control behaviour. The resulting appearance — an elephant coated in vivid orange-red dust against the equally orange-red laterite plains — is immediately different from any other elephant population in Africa. Photography: red elephant photography at Tsavo requires the golden hour (the red dust intensifies in warm light, and the combination of orange elephant against orange soil under orange dawn light creates images of unusual colour intensity). Dawn at the Galana River or Aruba Dam produces the best red elephant photography conditions in East Africa.

Aruba Dam: The Wildlife Concentration Point

The Aruba Dam (a 1952-built stone dam on the Voi River, 45 km from Voi Gate on the main circuit road) is Tsavo East’s most productive single wildlife watching location. The dam’s permanent water in a dry landscape concentrates: large elephant herds (50–200+ individuals drinking simultaneously at peak dry-season periods), buffalo (herds of 100–400), large Nile crocodile (adults up to 4 metres on the dam banks — some of the largest crocodile in Kenya), lion (the Aruba Dam resident pride controls the dam access and are reliably seen in the dawn hours), cheetah (the open plains around the dam are excellent cheetah habitat), and exceptional bird diversity at the water edge. Dawn at Aruba Dam (arrive by 06:30 for the best hour): it is common to spend 3–4 hours at the dam without moving the vehicle as successive elephant herds arrive and depart, predators active in the adjacent plains, and the bird activity at the water’s edge provides continuous entertainment. The dam area accommodates multiple vehicles without the crowding of the Mara — even in peak season, 5–10 vehicles at Aruba Dam is manageable compared to 40+ at a Mara lion sighting.

The Galana River Circuit

The Galana River (running west-to-east through Tsavo East’s northern sector, eventually joining the Sabaki River at the Kenya coast) is the park’s permanent water source and the primary game drive circuit. The riverside circuit road follows the north bank of the Galana from Lugard’s Falls (a series of dramatic compressed gorge falls where the Galana squeezes through a 4-metre-wide rock slot) westward to the main circuit. Lugard’s Falls are approximately 40 km from Voi Gate on the main road — the falls are a signed viewpoint. At the falls, the Galana compresses from 50 metres wide to 4 metres wide through the gorge — the pressure creates a turbulent, churning channel that produces the best Tsavo East landscape photograph. Large crocodile sunning on the rocks above the falls and hippo in the calmer pools below are reliably present.

Accommodation 2025

  • Ashnil Aruba Lodge: USD $200–280/night per person full-board. On the Aruba Dam, excellent position for dam wildlife viewing from the lodge terrace and swimming pool. The standard Tsavo East mid-luxury choice.
  • Voi Safari Lodge: USD $150–200/night per person full-board. On a hill above a waterhole, elephant visiting the waterhole are visible from rooms and restaurant. TANAPA-managed, reliable service.
  • Satao Camp: USD $250–350/night per person full-board. Tented camp near the Aruba Dam area with outstanding guiding and one of Tsavo East’s most active waterhole setups.

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