Guides

Solo women on safari

How to plan a safe, well-organised solo safari in southern Africa as a woman

Solo women on safari

More women are booking African safaris on their own terms. Not waiting for the right travel companion, not postponing until circumstances line up. Just booking. Over the past decade I've watched this shift accelerate, and it makes complete sense. Safari is one of the most structured, well-supported ways to travel anywhere. You have a guide, a vehicle, a lodge, and someone who knows your name from the moment you land.

If you've been wondering whether a solo safari is realistic, this is the practical answer. We'll cover safety, single supplements, what to look for in a lodge, and how the logistics actually work.

Why safari suits solo travel so well

City travel alone can feel exposed. You're navigating public transport, reading maps, making quick decisions about where is and isn't safe. Safari is the opposite. From the moment your transfer picks you up at the airport, every movement is coordinated. Pre-arranged transfers hand you between drivers and lodges with WhatsApp pings confirming each leg. Nobody is improvising.

Private reserves like Sabi Sand add another layer. Access is controlled at the gate, vehicles stay on traversing agreements within the reserve, and lodge staff are on-site around the clock. Public national parks are more open by nature, which is worth factoring into your planning if you're doing your first solo trip. We generally suggest starting with a private reserve.

There's something about sitting in a quiet bush at first light, no phone signal, no noise, just watching a herd move through the mist, that cuts through a lot of mental clutter

Choosing the right lodge

Not every lodge handles solo guests equally well. When I'm planning a solo safari for a woman travelling alone, I look for properties with strong female leadership on site, female guides or managers, and a track record of hosting solo women. It changes the dynamic. You're not the odd one out; you're an expected and welcomed guest type.

Communal dining at a lodge is usually a plus for solo travellers. You share the table with the other four or six guests staying that week, the guide often eats with you, and conversation comes naturally. If you'd rather have more privacy, some properties offer the option to dine alone or have meals in your suite. Tell us your preference and we'll match you to the right fit.

For solo travellers who want to go all in, a staffed private villa is worth considering. You have the entire property, your own vehicle and guide, your own schedule. It costs more, but you're not splitting it. Some women find it liberating. More on this in what a luxury safari actually costs.

The single supplement: what to expect

Lodge rooms are priced per person sharing, which means a solo guest occupying a room that was budgeted for two triggers a supplement. This is one of the most asked-about costs in solo safari planning and it's worth being straight about it: the supplement is real, but it's manageable.

A growing number of lodges reduce or waive the single supplement in low season, or have certain room categories priced with solo guests in mind. We know which lodges these are, and we factor it into your itinerary from the start. The supplement question should never be a surprise at the end. More on budgeting in what a luxury safari actually costs.

How transfers and logistics work

This is the part that worries people most, and it shouldn't. A well-planned safari has a handover protocol for every single leg. Your transfer driver picks you up at arrivals with a name board. They drop you at the charter terminal or the lodge gate. Lodge staff or a guide meets you there. If there's a delay, we're informed. You're never standing in an unfamiliar place wondering what's next.

We keep a WhatsApp thread going throughout your trip. Not to check in constantly, but so you have a direct line to us if anything changes. Most of the time it goes quiet because nothing needs resolving. That's the point.

Where to go for a first solo safari

South Africa is a strong starting point. The infrastructure is good, the lodges are polished, and the proximity of Johannesburg and Cape Town to major international hubs keeps flights straightforward. The Sabi Sand, which shares an unfenced border with Kruger National Park, is where we take most of our first-time solo guests. Leopard sightings on the Sabi Sand are among the best in Africa.

Botswana is a natural second step. Lower guest numbers, more remote camps, a different pace. If you want to see how both connect, our 10-day solo Victoria Falls and Botswana journey pairs the two well and is designed specifically for solo travel. For the full planning picture, how we plan a luxury African safari walks through our process.

Common questions

Is safari safe for a woman travelling alone?

Yes, when the planning is solid. Private reserves have controlled access, staffed lodges, and professional guides. The structure of safari travel removes most of the uncertainty that makes solo city travel feel risky. The key is working with someone who vets every supplier and knows the properties personally.

Do all lodges charge a single supplement?

Most do, but not all, and not always at full rate. Some lodges waive it in low season; others have solo-friendly pricing year-round. We know which ones these are and will factor it into your options from the start.

Will I feel lonely on safari?

Rarely. Lodge groups are small, typically four to eight guests, and shared meals and game drives create easy conversation. If you prefer more time to yourself, that's just as easy to arrange. You won't be pushed into group activities.

What should I pack for a solo safari?

Neutral colours, closed shoes, light layers for early morning drives. Most camps offer laundry, so a carry-on is more than enough for two weeks. Leave the overpacking instinct at home.

Can I request a female guide?

At many lodges, yes. Female guides are increasingly common across South Africa and Botswana. It's not always possible to guarantee a specific guide, but we can prioritise properties where it's a realistic option if that matters to you.

Solo safari travel has moved well past being a niche. It's a considered, practical choice, and the planning is straightforward when you have the right people handling it. If you're ready to talk through what a solo itinerary might look like for you, start here.

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