The Laikipia Plateau in north-central Kenya — a high-altitude (1,700–2,400 m) plateau north of Mount Kenya, covering approximately 9,700 sq km of mostly private land — is Kenya’s second-largest wildlife zone after the Masai Mara ecosystem, and arguably Kenya’s most conservation-innovative landscape. Where the Masai Mara is a national reserve with defined boundaries and KWS management, Laikipia is a patchwork of private ranches, community conservancies, and wildlife conservancies that have collectively created one of Africa’s most significant private conservation success stories: a landscape with increasing wildlife populations (including lion, elephant, Grevy’s zebra, and African wild dog) despite being entirely outside the national park system. The Laikipia circuit — connecting the major ranches and conservancies by road or light aircraft — is Kenya’s most interesting and diverse multi-day wildlife itinerary outside the Mara. This guide covers the key Laikipia destinations for 2025.
Ol Pejeta Conservancy
Ol Pejeta (362 sq km, on the Laikipia Plateau equator line, 30 km west of Nanyuki) is the most famous Laikipia conservancy for one specific reason: it is home to Najin and Fatu, the world’s last two northern white rhinoceros (Ceratotherium simum cottoni), and the site of the BioRescue northern white rhino rescue programme. Beyond the northern white rhino (which visitors can see on a guided sanctuary walk), Ol Pejeta has: the largest black rhino population in East Africa outside South Africa (120 individuals), significant lion prides (the Ol Pejeta Research Trust tracks individual lions), cheetah (one of Kenya’s most reliable cheetah locations), and the Sweetwaters Great Apes Sanctuary (chimpanzee sanctuary for rescued East and Central Africa chimps). Entry: USD $100/person/day (including conservancy fees and vehicle access). Self-drive: permitted on the main conservancy roads — the circuit covers the Ewaso Nyiro River sections (lion and elephant), the Black Rhino Sanctuary (fence-enclosed, guided walk only), and the open plains.
Lewa Wildlife Conservancy
Lewa (250 sq km, adjacent to the northern border of Mount Kenya Forest, 50 km east of Ol Pejeta) is the Laikipia conservancy most famous for Grevy’s zebra and reticulated giraffe — two northern Kenya specialty species found rarely or never in the Masai Mara or Amboseli circuits. Lewa’s wildlife highlights: Grevy’s zebra (approximately 600 individuals in the Lewa-Borana landscape — approximately 14% of the global Grevy’s zebra population, which is critically endangered at approximately 3,000 total individuals), reticulated giraffe (the northern species with large, precisely outlined brown patches and white lines — visually distinct from the Masai giraffe of the southern circuit), black and white rhino, elephant, and African wild dog (Lewa’s dog packs are among the most reliable in Kenya). No independent self-drive: Lewa operates exclusively through its lodges (Lewa House, Lewa Wilderness, Sirikoi) with included activities in accommodation rates.
Borana Conservancy and Connectivity
Borana (35,000 acres, south of Lewa, connected by a wildlife corridor removed the fence between the two conservancies in 2013 creating a 100,000-acre combined wildlife area) is the most exclusive Laikipia destination — Borana Lodge (8 cottages) and Laragai House (exclusive-use private house, 6 bedrooms) operate at the top end of Kenya’s lodge price range. The Lewa-Borana combined landscape is Africa’s most successful conservation partnership between a private ranch and a wildlife conservancy — the combined area now has free-moving wildlife between the two properties. Borana’s specific wildlife adds: greater kudu (the large spiral-horned antelope is more common in Borana’s dryer bush than in Lewa), and Borana’s higher-altitude terrain (the Laikipia escarpment views from Borana Lodge at 2,200 m are outstanding). Access to Laikipia: Nanyuki Airstrip (daily flights from Wilson Airport, Nairobi, 45 minutes) is the hub for all Laikipia conservancy transfers.