Camping inside East Africa’s national parks puts you inside the wildlife system rather than observing it from outside. It means the lion that walked past the campfire last night is the same lion you photograph at dawn without driving anywhere. It means the hippo grunt that woke you at 3am is coming from the lagoon 50 metres from your tent. It means you see the Serengeti at sunrise from inside the Serengeti rather than from a lodge gate. Self-drive camping in East Africa is the most immersive, cost-effective, and logistically independent way to experience the region’s parks. It also requires genuine preparation. This guide covers what parks allow camping, what the experience is actually like, and the complete equipment list for a first-time East Africa camping circuit in 2027/2028.
Public vs Special Campsites: The Key Distinction
All four East African countries have two categories of park campsite: public campsites and special campsites. They are significantly different experiences and have different costs.
Public campsites are permanent, designated areas with basic shared facilities — typically a long-drop toilet, a cold outdoor shower (when water is available), and a cleared area for tents or rooftop tent vehicles. Multiple parties share the site. Public campsites are located near park headquarters, visitor centres, or high-traffic areas within the park. They are social environments where you will share the site with other self-drive overlanders. Cost range 2027/2028: USD 30 to 40 per person per night across Uganda, Kenya, Tanzania, and Rwanda.
Special campsites are exclusive sites — one party per night, minimum group sizes may apply, no shared facilities. They are located in remote areas of parks far from the main visitor infrastructure, often in prime game habitat. A special campsite on the Serengeti plains in the middle of the wildebeest migration with no other visitors within 20 kilometres is the most profound wilderness camping available in Africa. The trade-off is cost (USD 50 to 80 per site per night plus full park entry fees) and the complete absence of any facilities — you bring everything including water. Tanzania and Kenya have the most developed special campsite networks.
Parks With the Best Public Campsites
Serengeti (Tanzania) — Seronera Campsite
The Seronera public campsite is the most famous self-drive camping spot in Africa — positioned at the park’s wildlife hub, with lion, hyena, and genet regular nocturnal visitors to the site itself. The campsite has reasonable facilities (toilets, limited water), a central fire area, and the Seronera kopjes rising above the site where leopard are often heard at dusk. This is a social campsite — you will share it with other overlanders and learn as much from conversations with experienced East Africa travellers as from the wildlife itself. Book weeks in advance for July to October.
Masai Mara (Kenya) — Sekenani and Talek Campsites
Kenya’s public campsites inside the Masai Mara National Reserve give access to the reserve from before dawn — the decisive advantage over lodge-based visitors who must wait for gate opening. The Sekenani campsite is closest to the central plains and the Mara River crossing area. Lion visits to the campsite perimeter are documented — keep food secured and do not walk between vehicles after dark. The facilities are basic (drop toilet, no shower infrastructure at most sites) but the experience of waking inside the Masai Mara as the sun rises and the kob begin their morning movement is worth the rusticity.
Murchison Falls (Uganda) — Red Chilli and UWA Sites
The Red Chilli Rest Camp near Paraa on Murchison Falls’ south bank is Uganda’s best-known overlander camp — a social hub for self-drive visitors with a bar, basic restaurant, and a mix of banda accommodation and vehicle camping space. Buffalo and hippo are regular nocturnal visitors to the camp perimeter. The UWA riverside campsite near the Nile bank (separate from Red Chilli) is quieter and more remote — a true bush camp with the sounds of the river through the night. Both sites book quickly in peak season.
Wildlife at Night: What Happens and How to Respond
Night wildlife encounters at East Africa campsites are common, generally harmless, and occasionally alarming if you are not prepared. The most frequent nocturnal visitors to public campsites: hippo (grazing on grass after dark, moving from water to land and back), buffalo (wandering through any unfenced camp perimeter, especially near water), hyena (scavenging for food scraps and investigating unfamiliar smells), and elephant (passing through camps near water sources, occasionally pushing against vehicles). Rare but documented: lion investigating campsites after dark, particularly in the Mara, Serengeti, and Murchison.
Response protocol: do not approach or confront any wildlife in camp after dark. If an animal is between you and your tent, wait in your vehicle until it moves on. Never leave food outside overnight — this is the primary reason hyena and other scavengers enter camps. Store all food in hard-sided containers inside the vehicle. Do not urinate near tent entrances — the salt concentration attracts animals. A good head torch in the tent is the most important piece of camping equipment for the first night at a new campsite.
The Essential Self-Drive Camping Kit List
- Sleeping system: rooftop tent (preferred for security) or a high-quality ground tent with a full rainfly and a footprint groundsheet. Inner tent must have sealed seams and intact mosquito netting — Uganda and Murchison Falls are malaria zones
- Sleeping bag: rated to 5°C for any highland camping (Bwindi, Ngorongoro rim, Nyungwe)
- Cooking: two-burner gas stove, nesting pots, frying pan, plates, mugs, cutlery, a sharp knife, a washing-up basin, dish soap, a hand sanitiser bottle
- Water: 10-litre collapsible jerry can for camp water storage, a water filter or purification tablets, drinking bottles (minimum 2 litres per person always accessible in the vehicle)
- Lighting: two head torches per person with spare batteries, a lantern for the camp table area
- Fire: a lighter and fire starters — some campsites allow fires, some prohibit them
- Table and chairs: a lightweight camp table and two to four folding chairs
- Cooler/fridge: 12V compressor fridge is ideal; foam cool box adequate for up to 3 days with ice purchased in the last town
- First aid kit: standard kit plus malaria test strips, rehydration salts, wound closure strips, and any personal medications
- Insect protection: DEET-based repellent (minimum 30% concentration), permethrin spray for treating clothing and tent fabric, a mosquito coil for evenings outside the tent
Malaria Precautions for Park Camping
All four East African countries have malaria transmission risk in lowland national park areas. The risk is highest in Uganda (particularly Murchison Falls, Queen Elizabeth, and Lake Mburo) and in Tanzania’s lowland parks (Serengeti, Tarangire, Nyerere). Rwanda’s high-altitude zones (Volcanoes, Nyungwe) have significantly lower malaria risk due to elevation, but the risk is not zero. Take antimalarial medication prescribed by your travel health doctor before departure and continue the full course after return. Apply DEET-based repellent consistently from dusk onward. Sleep under a treated mosquito net when not using a rooftop tent with intact mosquito netting. A rooftop tent’s sealed perimeter significantly reduces exposure compared to a poorly netted ground tent.