Ruaha National Park — at 20,226 sq km, Tanzania’s largest national park and one of East Africa’s biggest protected areas — is the southern Tanzania circuit’s most compelling destination: genuinely wild (fewer than 15,000 visitors annually, compared to 250,000+ at Serengeti), home to Tanzania’s largest elephant population (over 10,000 individuals), excellent African wild dog (Tanzania’s highest wild dog density), and a landscape of dramatic contrast — the Great Ruaha River (the park’s lifeline, 160 km of game-rich riverbank) flowing through rocky kopje country and miombo woodland. Ruaha is not on the standard Tanzania northern circuit (Arusha-Tarangire-Ngorongoro-Serengeti) and requires either a flight from Dar es Salaam or Arusha or a long drive — a barrier that maintains the low visitor density that is the park’s primary appeal. This guide covers Ruaha for 2025 visitors.
Wildlife: Elephant, Wild Dog and Large Predators
Ruaha’s wildlife highlights: the Great Ruaha River at the dry season (June–October, when the river is low and the wildlife concentration at the remaining water holes is highest). Elephant: Ruaha’s 10,000+ elephants are visible in large groups at the river — 200–300 elephant congregations at prime river sections during the September-October peak concentration. African wild dog: the Ruaha ecosystem has the highest wild dog density in Tanzania and one of the highest in East Africa — dogs use the miombo woodland extensively and the river crossings for pack movements. Wild dog den sites (March–June pupping season) are sometimes located by Ruaha’s camp researchers and the den visits (observing the den with puppies) are extraordinary. Lion: Ruaha’s lion population (approximately 10% of Tanzania’s total lion) is excellent — the open kopje country provides reliable lion sightings, and Ruaha is known for exceptionally large lion prides (15+ individuals). Greater kudu: Ruaha has Tanzania’s best greater kudu viewing — the kudu’s preferred miombo woodland habitat is extensively present and kudu are seen daily at the rocky kopje areas.
The Great Ruaha River Circuit
The principal game-drive circuit at Ruaha runs along the Great Ruaha River — 80 km of river-adjacent tracks between Msembe (the park HQ near the main airstrip) and the western reaches of the park. The river-adjacent drive (morning departure 06:00) covers: the permanent hippo pools (Hippo Pool 1 km from Msembe — 200+ hippos visible), the elephant river crossings (Mwagusi Sand River junction is particularly productive), the wild dog denning area (seasonal — check with camp staff), and the kopje country circuit (turning north from the river toward the Jongomero Kopjes for lion on the rocks). The circuit takes 4–6 hours for a full traverse. A 4×4 is required (the river-adjacent tracks have soft sand sections and the eastern park roads require high clearance).
Access and Accommodation 2025
- Entry: USD $53/person/day (TANAPA rate)
- Access by air: Charter flight from Dar es Salaam to Msembe Airstrip (1.5 hours, USD $200–280 one-way) or Arusha (1.5 hours via Dodoma)
- Access by road: 630 km from Dar es Salaam (9–10 hours via Morogoro-Iringa road) — long but possible as a 2-day drive with overnight in Iringa
- Jongomero Camp: USD $600–800/night per person all-inclusive. The most exclusive Ruaha camp, 8 tents on the Jongomero River.
- Kwihala Camp: USD $450–600/night per person all-inclusive. Excellent guiding programme, river location.
- Mwagusi Safari Camp: USD $350–500/night per person all-inclusive. Long-established, river position, the original Ruaha luxury camp.