The Laikipia Plateau is Kenya’s most important private wildlife area — a 9,500 sq km mosaic of private conservancies, community wildlife areas, and commercial ranches north of Mount Kenya that collectively protects a wildlife population rivalling the Masai Mara in diversity but with a fraction of the visitor density. Laikipia has Kenya’s highest black rhino population outside of parks (approximately 75% of Kenya’s black rhino live in Laikipia), the country’s best wild dog sighting rates, and lion prides with home ranges across multiple conservancies. The plateau’s character is fundamentally different from the classic southern Kenya parks — drier, more open, dominated by red-earth roads through thornbush and scattered acacia, with wildlife encounters typically more intimate and wildlife-researcher interactions with guides more substantive than in the high-traffic southern circuit. This guide covers the Laikipia circuit’s major conservancies for 2025.
Ol Pejeta Conservancy
Ol Pejeta (360 sq km, 20 km west of Nanyuki town) is Kenya’s largest black rhino sanctuary and home to the last two northern white rhino on Earth — Najin and Fatu, the mother-daughter pair that represent the final survivors of the northern white subspecies and are now part of a IVF-based conservation programme with southern white rhino egg donors. Visiting Ol Pejeta’s northern white rhino enclosure (daily access for a small group, 20–30 minutes): USD $70 per vehicle surcharge above standard conservancy fees. The experience of standing 5 metres from the last two members of a species — animals that are the end of an evolutionary lineage stretching back 55 million years — is profoundly moving in a way that no photograph fully captures. Ol Pejeta also has: the highest black rhino density in Kenya outside a national park (approximately 130 black rhino in 360 sq km — you will almost certainly see multiple rhino on any morning drive), lion (4–5 resident prides), cheetah (approximately 30 individuals), African wild dog (resident pack), and buffalo herds of 200–400 individuals. Day visit entry: KSh 3,500 (USD $27) adult/USD $10 vehicle. Night stays: Sweetwaters Serena Camp (USD $200–280/night per person full-board), The Stables (USD $130–180/night per person B&B).
Lewa Wildlife Conservancy
Lewa (250 sq km, 40 km northeast of Nanyuki) is a UNESCO World Heritage Site (as part of the Mount Kenya Ecosystem) and Kenya’s original conservation success story — a cattle ranch converted to wildlife conservancy in 1983 by the Craig family, which pioneered the community conservancy model that has since been replicated across Laikipia and northern Kenya. Lewa has Kenya’s second-largest black rhino population (approximately 140 rhino), an extraordinary reticulated giraffe population (the only area in Laikipia with the distinctive reticulated giraffe — easily distinguished from the common Masai giraffe by the precise network of white lines on the coat), Grevy’s zebra (the rare large-eared zebra of northern Kenya, endangered, with one of the largest single-conservancy populations in Africa at Lewa), and lion. Access to Lewa is exclusively through accommodation — there is no day visitor fee. Lodges: Lewa Wilderness Lodge (from USD $500/night per person all-inclusive), Lewa Safari Camp (from USD $400/night per person all-inclusive), Sirikoi Lodge (from USD $600/night per person all-inclusive).
Borana and Ol Jogi
Borana Conservancy (35,000 acres, adjacent to Lewa, connected through a wildlife corridor) and Ol Jogi (58,000 acres, the largest single private conservancy in Kenya) represent the higher-end of the Laikipia private conservancy experience. Borana is notable for a 9-hole wilderness golf course designed by Seve Ballesteros where elephants and rhino share the fairways — the safari-golf combination unique in East Africa. Ol Jogi is a strictly private conservancy (no day visitors) home to the largest single-property private rhino population in East Africa, with guest access only through the exclusive Ol Jogi Villa (the entire conservancy rented as a single block-booking property at USD $4,000–6,000/night, inclusive of all vehicles and activities). For most visitors, Ol Pejeta and Lewa represent the practical Laikipia options — Ol Jogi is for the private group hire market.
Getting to Laikipia
- By road: Nairobi to Nanyuki (200 km via A2/B5, 3.5–4 hours) — excellent tarmac road through the foothills of Mount Kenya. Nanyuki is the hub for all Laikipia conservancy access.
- By air: Safarilink and AirKenya daily flights from Wilson Airport Nairobi to Nanyuki Airport (40 minutes, USD $90–130 one-way). Lewa Airstrip and Ol Pejeta Airstrip also accept charter flights from Wilson.
- Combining with Mount Kenya: Nanyuki is the eastern base for Mount Kenya routes (Sirimon and Timau) — a Laikipia conservancy stay combined with a Mount Kenya trek (Sirimon route, 4 days to Point Lenana 4,985 m) is one of Kenya’s finest combined safari-trekking itineraries.