The Masai Mara conservancies — private community wildlife areas surrounding and adjacent to the Masai Mara National Reserve — provide the Mara experience with significantly lower vehicle density, night game drives, and walking safaris unavailable inside the reserve. The three main conservancies immediately adjacent to the reserve (Olare Motorogi, Naboisho, and Mara North) collectively cover approximately 75,000 acres of prime Mara wildlife habitat with approximately 50% of the vehicle density of the main reserve. For visitors who have been to the Mara National Reserve and experienced the crowding at predator sightings, or for first-time visitors who want the best possible wildlife experience, a conservancy-based stay is the correct choice. This guide compares the three main conservancies for 2025.
Olare Motorogi Conservancy
Olare Motorogi Conservancy (33,500 acres, north of the Mara National Reserve, shared between two former conservancies that merged in 2017) is the most established of the Mara conservancies and arguably produces the finest wildlife density of any conservancy in the Mara ecosystem. The landscape: open grassland with riverine forest along the Motorogi River tributaries, rolling hills to the north, and excellent cheetah territory on the flat southeast plains. Vehicle limits: a strict ratio of vehicles-to-area limits the total number of vehicles at any time. At predator sightings, the OMC’s rules limit vehicles to 8–10 per sighting (compared to 40–60 in the main reserve). Night drives: available for all OMC guests. Key lodges: Mara Plains Camp (&Beyond, USD $800–1,200/night per person all-inclusive), Ol Seki (USD $600–900/night per person all-inclusive), Cottar’s 1920s Camp (the finest Olare Motorogi camp, USD $900–1,400/night per person all-inclusive, exclusive 10-guest property). Conservancy fee: approximately USD $120–150/person/night additional to accommodation.
Naboisho Conservancy
Naboisho Conservancy (50,000 acres, northeast of the Mara National Reserve) is the largest of the main Mara conservancies and the most committed to its community partnership model — all Naboisho community members receive direct monthly payments from the conservancy’s tourism revenue, providing a consistent income stream that creates strong community support for wildlife conservation over livestock farming. Wildlife: Naboisho has the highest lion density of any Mara conservancy — the landscape’s mix of open grassland, kopje rocky outcrops, and riverine forest supports multiple lion prides with consistent road usage. The Naboisho Crossing (a Mara River access point inside the conservancy boundary) provides river crossing viewing with the vehicle limits of the conservancy rather than the unrestricted vehicle access of the national reserve. Key lodges: Encounter Mara (&Beyond, USD $700–1,000/night per person all-inclusive), Naboisho Camp (USD $500–700/night per person all-inclusive). Conservancy fee: approximately USD $120/person/night.
Mara North Conservancy
Mara North Conservancy (74,000 acres, north of the Mara River, the largest of the three) contains the highest-quality crossing point access during the July–October migration season — the Mara North sector of the river is where many of the most dramatic crossing events occur, and conservancy guests have access with vehicle limits that the main reserve cannot enforce. Mara North’s landscape is more varied than Olare Motorogi — the northern sector’s hills and rocky terrain produce excellent leopard habitat (some of the most reliable leopard sightings in the Mara ecosystem occur in the Mara North rocky areas), while the southern riverside area is prime for river crossing positioning. Key lodges: Governors’ Il Moran Camp (Governors’ Camp consortium, the historic reference lodge for the Mara North river experience, USD $600–900/night per person all-inclusive), Great Plains Mara Toto Bush Camp (USD $700–1,000/night all-inclusive). Conservancy fee: approximately USD $120–150/person/night.
Conservancy vs National Reserve: The Decision
The conservancy premium (additional USD $120–150/person/night above accommodation) buys: night game drives, walking safari access, vehicle limits at sightings, and the less-crowded ambiance. For visitors staying 2+ nights in the Mara ecosystem, the conservancy premium produces a materially better wildlife experience — the ability to spend 2 hours with a leopard at a kill at night, with 2 other vehicles rather than 30, is the kind of experience that changes how you remember the trip. For visitors with a single night in the Mara (in transit to other parks), the reserve accommodation at lower total cost may be sufficient for the general wildlife spectacle. The bottom line: if your budget allows and you have 3+ nights in the Mara, the conservancy is the right choice.