Ol Pejeta Conservancy self-drive is Kenya’s most conservation-focused wildlife destination — a 364 sq km private conservancy 45km south of Nanyuki that holds Kenya’s largest black rhino population (approximately 130 individuals), a resident lion and cheetah population, and uniquely, Fatu and Najin — the last two surviving northern white rhinoceros on Earth (both females, under 24-hour armed guard within the conservancy). The Ol Pejeta Conservancy self-drive experience combines a standard Big 5 game drive with specific conservation highlights unavailable elsewhere: the northern white rhino enclosure, the Sweetwaters Chimpanzee Sanctuary (East Africa’s only chimpanzee sanctuary for rescued chimps from Central African countries), and the Ol Pejeta black rhino zone with the highest black rhino viewing success rate in Kenya.
Ol Pejeta Entry: Fees and Access
- Adult entry fee (non-resident): USD 100 per person per 24 hours
- Vehicle entry: No separate vehicle fee — included in the adult rate
- Gate location: Main gate on the Nanyuki-Nyahururu road, 10km from Nanyuki town (45km from Laikipia airport / Nanyuki Airstrip). Nanyuki to Nairobi: 195km, 2.5 to 3 hours on A2.
- Operating hours: 6am to 7pm (private conservancy — sunset drives sometimes available through Ol Pejeta partner lodges)
- Additional fees: Northern white rhino enclosure viewing: USD 15 per person additional. Sweetwaters Chimpanzee Sanctuary: USD 30 per person additional.
The Northern White Rhino: Fatu and Najin
Sudan, the world’s last male northern white rhinoceros, died at Ol Pejeta in March 2018 at age 45. The two remaining northern white rhinos — Najin (female, Sudan’s daughter) and Fatu (female, Sudan’s granddaughter) — live in a 700-acre enclosure within Ol Pejeta under 24-hour armed ranger guard. IVF efforts using frozen sperm from Sudan and eggs from Fatu (Najin is too old to provide viable eggs) are ongoing through the BioRescue consortium — as of 2027, this represents the only hope for the subspecies’ future. Self-drive visitors can drive to the northern white rhino enclosure viewing area (marked on the Ol Pejeta map provided at the gate) and observe Fatu and Najin from the vehicle or a raised viewing platform.
Ol Pejeta Self-Drive Circuit
- Black rhino zone (western conservancy): The highest black rhino density in Kenya — drive the western circuit slowly, scanning thickets and grassland edges for the approximately 130 black rhino resident population
- Chimpanzee Sanctuary: The Sweetwaters Chimpanzee Sanctuary (central conservancy area) holds 39 chimpanzees from conflict zones in Central Africa. A guided walk from a designated parking area (self-drive vehicles park; sanctuary visit is on foot with a guide) provides close chimp encounters through a fenced sanctuary area.
- Lion and cheetah zone (eastern plains): Ol Pejeta’s open eastern plains support 15 to 20 lion and 3 to 5 cheetah — good predator viewing in the morning game drive
- Wetlands area (Ewaso Ng’iro north): Hippo pods in the Ewaso Ng’iro River tributary, with waterbuck and buffalo on the margins
4WD Requirements at Ol Pejeta
Ol Pejeta’s internal tracks are well-maintained murram roads — passable in a RAV4 AWD or even a high-clearance sedan in the dry season. The conservancy is significantly more accessible than a wilderness park like the Masai Mara. A Toyota Fortuner, Prado, or Hilux are all appropriate. Visitors with only a saloon car hire can access most of Ol Pejeta but should confirm the current road conditions with the gate rangers for the black rhino zone tracks in wet season.