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Tanzania Safari

Ruaha National Park: Tanzania's Largest and Most Underrated Safari

2 min read Jun 25, 2026

A Ruaha National Park Tanzania safari reaches the country's largest and wildest park. Ruaha National Park is Tanzania's largest national park at 20,226 km² — bigger than Denmark — and one of Africa's most significant wildlife sanctuaries. It's also the park most Kilimanjaro and Northern Circuit visitors never see. While Serengeti and Ngorongoro deal with vehicle pressure and tourism infrastructure, Ruaha operates in near-total wilderness: predator encounters without another vehicle in sight, vast open woodland, and populations of lion, elephant, and African wild dog that rival anywhere on the continent.

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Where Is Ruaha National Park?

Ruaha National Park sits in south-central Tanzania, approximately 625 km southwest of Dar es Salaam and 130 km from Iringa. Access is by charter flight from Dar es Salaam (90 minutes) or Arusha (2 hours), or by road from Iringa — a significant drive on largely unpaved roads. The remoteness is part of the appeal and, practically, the reason it sees a fraction of the Serengeti's visitor numbers.

Wildlife in Ruaha

Elephants

Ruaha holds one of Tanzania's largest elephant populations — approximately 12,000–15,000 individuals, the biggest concentration in any single park outside of the Selous ecosystem. Herds of 100–200 are common along the Great Ruaha River during the dry season. The elephants are enormous — Ruaha is known for its giant-tusker bulls, individuals carrying tusks that reach the ground, increasingly rare elsewhere in Africa.

Lions

Ruaha has one of Africa's highest lion densities per square kilometre of habitat — estimated at over 1,000 individuals. Lion prides in Ruaha regularly reach 20–30 members, larger than typical Serengeti prides. Sightings are almost guaranteed on a full-day game drive during the dry season.

African Wild Dog

This is Ruaha's most significant wildlife distinction. The park holds one of the largest wild dog populations in Tanzania — estimated 200–300 individuals. Wild dog sightings in Ruaha are genuinely common (multiple times per week for guests staying 3+ days), whereas in the Serengeti they are rare and unpredictable. If wild dog is on your list, Ruaha and Nyerere are the only reliable Tanzania options.

Other Wildlife

Ruaha has exceptional leopard, cheetah, buffalo herds exceeding 2,000, greater and lesser kudu (unusual in northern Tanzania), roan and sable antelope, and over 570 bird species. No black rhino — Ruaha's rhinos were eliminated by poaching in the 1970s and have not been reintroduced.

Best Time to Visit Ruaha

The dry season (June–October) is the definitive Ruaha season. The Great Ruaha River becomes the primary water source for all wildlife — elephants, hippos, crocodiles, and predators all concentrate along its banks for extraordinary game viewing. The wet season (November–May) offers lush scenery and excellent birding, but roads in Ruaha can become challenging and some camps close. Most Ruaha camps operate June–October only.

Why Ruaha Stays Off the Radar

Ruaha is not on Tanzania's Northern Circuit — it requires a separate trip, usually combined with Nyerere (former Selous) for a Southern Tanzania safari itinerary. The charter flight costs are real. And unlike the Serengeti, Ruaha has no Great Migration to drive headlines. But for travellers who have done the Northern Circuit and want more, or who specifically want extraordinary wildlife encounters without vehicle pressure, Ruaha is consistently where serious safari travellers end up.

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