The Mara North Conservancy — 75,000 acres of Maasai-leased private land immediately north of the Masai Mara National Reserve, one of the first Masai Mara ecosystem conservancies established (2009) — is the large Mara conservancy that set the template for what private conservancy experience should look like: very low visitor density (4 camps permitted on 75,000 acres, a ratio of approximately one camp per 18,750 acres — compared to the Masai Mara NR’s hundreds of vehicles on any given game drive), unrestricted off-road driving, night drives permitted after 18:30, walking safari with Maasai guides, and open-sided 4×4 vehicles that provide 360-degree safari experience impossible in any national reserve. The big cat density in Mara North (confirmed as one of the highest lion and leopard densities in Kenya) makes it simultaneously the finest luxury experience and the finest wildlife-intensity experience in the greater Mara ecosystem. This guide covers Mara North for 2025.
Big Cat Territory
Mara North’s big cat landscape: the conservancy is divided among several resident lion prides (the largest, the Mugoro pride at 25+ members, holds territory in the central Mara North plains and is one of the largest pride groupings in the greater Mara ecosystem), leopard (the Mara North riverine forests — the Ntiakitiak River and its tributaries — are excellent leopard territory, with 5–6 resident individuals known to camp researchers), cheetah (2–3 resident females in the open grassland sections of the eastern Mara North plains), and an African wild dog pack that has maintained a consistent territory in the conservancy since 2019. The Mara North camp guides have an unusual level of knowledge about individual big cats — the resident cats’ identities, territories, and current positions are tracked by the guides who drive the same 75,000 acres every day and communicate across camps. The information flow between Mara North’s 4 camp guide teams is a significant advantage over national park driving where vehicles from 30+ different operators may be on the same game drive circuit without coordinated intelligence.
Night Drives
Night drives in Mara North (permitted 18:30 onwards, available through all 4 camps, typically a 2-hour evening drive with spotlight) produce the nocturnal wildlife spectrum absent from any national park drive: aardvark (Orycteropus afer — one of East Africa’s most sought nocturnal mammals, termite-specialist, rarely seen in daylight), serval (Leptailurus serval — the medium-sized spotted wild cat that is East Africa’s most productive nocturnal hunter per strike, found in the long grass sections of Mara North), porcupine (Hystrix africaeaustralis — the large, spine-covered rodent that is significantly more abundant in Mara North than in the national reserve), spring hare (Pedetes capensis — a bipedal rodent that moves in enormous leaps resembling a kangaroo motion), and the big-spotted genet (Genetta tigrina) which frequents the camp’s acacia trees at night. The night drive also produces: the lion prides hunting (Mara North’s night drives occasionally encounter the pride’s hunting sequence — the cooperative pursuit of wildebeest or zebra in the spotlight conditions).
Camps and Access 2025
- andBeyond Kichwa Tembo: USD $600–900/night per person all-inclusive. The conservancy’s original luxury camp, river position, exceptional guiding team.
- Cottar’s 1920s Camp: USD $700–1,000/night per person all-inclusive. The most exclusive Mara North camp, anti-mals colonial aesthetic, the finest food of any Mara camp.
- Mahali Mzuri (Virgin): USD $700–1,000/night per person all-inclusive. 12 tents, private plunge pools, hillside position with conservancy views.
- Access: 45-minute flight from Wilson Airport, Nairobi to Mara North Airstrip (Safarilink daily service). Or 6-hour drive from Nairobi via the Narok road to the Aitong border of the conservancy.