Botswana or Zambia, which safari should you choose
One country is water. The other is silence under your boots
The first time you push off in a mokoro on the Okavango, the sound is the pole hitting the water. A small hollow knock, then the slide. The first time you walk in South Luangwa with a Zambian guide, the sound is your own boot on dry grass and the rifle bolt working once when an elephant breaks cover ahead. Those two sounds are the difference between a Botswana safari and a Zambian one. If you choose right, you will remember whichever one you came for.
We get asked which is better, regularly. The honest answer is that they are good at different things, and what you want from your time matters more than what either country can technically offer.
What Botswana does
Botswana is built for low-impact, high-cost tourism, deliberately. The government decided years ago to keep guest numbers low and concession fees high, and the result is a country where you spend most days seeing one or two other vehicles, often none.
The Okavango Delta is the headline. The water arrives in May, all the way from the Angolan highlands, and slowly fills a vast inland system of channels and islands until it peaks around July or August. You stay on a private island, you fly between camps in a Cessna, and you alternate between game drives, mokoro trips through the lily channels, and walking on the islands. The wildlife is dense, but the experience is even denser: it is the absence of other people that lands first.
Linyanti for big cats. Chobe for elephant herds at the river in the dry season. Makgadikgadi for the salt pans and the zebra migration in the green months. The Kalahari for distance and quiet. None of it is cheap. All of it is well-run.
What Zambia does
Zambia invented the walking safari. South Luangwa is where it started, in the 1960s, and it is still the place you go to do it properly. You get up before light, you walk for three or four hours with an armed guide and a scout, and you stop for tea on a sandbank in the river while a hippo huffs at you from twenty metres downstream. You feel everything at ground level. The sound, the smell of dry grass, the size of an elephant when you're standing on the same plane as it.
Lower Zambezi is the canoeing equivalent: long stretches of water, hippo to weave around, fish eagle calling overhead. Kafue is the bigger, less developed park where camps are still being added, and the price-to-quality ratio is better than anywhere else in the south.
Most Zambian camps are smaller and often owner-run. The owners are usually at dinner. That changes the feel of a stay more than people expect.
Where the prices land
Botswana sits roughly on the same shelf as the most expensive South African private reserves. Plan for $1,500 to $3,500 per person per night at the lodges we'd use, before charter flights between camps. Charter flights add up quickly because almost everything is fly-in.
Zambia is materially less expensive. The same level of guiding and lodge can run $800 to $1,800 per person per night. Walking safaris, in particular, are still genuinely good value. If you want a multi-camp circuit, Zambia gives you more nights for the money.
When to go
Botswana peaks June through October. Water at its highest, animals tightest around remaining sources, sky clear most days. November through March is the green season: rates drop, birds arrive, calves drop, the bush is emerald.
Zambia is sharper. The Luangwa and Lower Zambezi camps mostly close from late November to late April because the roads disappear under water. Walking safaris work best from June through October, with September and October being prime, hot days, animals concentrated, the river at its lowest.
How to choose
If you have one trip, you want every box ticked, you do not love early mornings or walking, and the budget is there: Botswana.
If you want to feel the bush at ground level, you want fewer guests at dinner, you don't mind heat in October, and you'd rather spend the difference on an extra camp: Zambia.
If you have ten nights, do both. Three nights in the Okavango, then a charter into South Luangwa for four. We do this combination often, and the contrast is the whole point.
Africa is waiting
Tell us what you'd want to feel on the third morning, and we'll tell you which country we'd put you in.
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The bush has been expecting you
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