Top 8 Travel Tips for Visiting Kenya

Kenya’s border crossings, wildlife migrations, and city traffic don’t run on the same clock as a printed itinerary. A trip that looks straightforward on paper can shift the moment you land in Nairobi, so knowing what to expect beforehand makes a real difference. These eight tips cover the practical details that trip up first-time visitors and the smaller judgment calls that make a Kenya trip run smoothly.
Table of contents
- 1 Get Your Visa Sorted Before You Fly
- 2 Pack for Temperature Swings, Not Just Heat
- 3 Time Your Trip Around the Wildlife, Not the Calendar
- 4 Budget for Park Fees Separately From Your Trip Cost
- 5 Carry Cash in Kenyan Shillings and Small Bills
- 6 Book a Reputable Safari Operator, Not the Cheapest One
- 7 Respect Local Customs in Maasai and Other Communities
- 8 Protect Yourself Against Malaria and Sun Exposure
Get Your Visa Sorted Before You Fly
Kenya requires an electronic travel authorization for most foreign visitors, applied for online through the official eTA portal before departure. The process typically takes a few business days, so apply at least a week ahead rather than assuming you can handle it at the airport. Have a passport with at least six months of validity remaining and a digital copy of your return ticket ready, since both are commonly requested during the application.
Double-check that you’re using the government’s official site rather than a third-party service charging extra fees for the same process. Print a copy of your approval or save it offline, since airport wifi and cell service can be unreliable when you need to pull up documents quickly.
Pack for Temperature Swings, Not Just Heat
Kenya sits near the equator, but altitude changes everything about how it feels. Nairobi sits at roughly 5,900 feet and can drop into the 50s Fahrenheit at night, while the Maasai Mara and coastal areas around Mombasa stay warm and humid year-round. Pack layers rather than assuming tropical heat everywhere you go.
Early morning game drives in the Mara start before sunrise, when temperatures can feel surprisingly cold in an open vehicle. A fleece or light jacket, plus a hat for sun protection during the day, covers most situations. Neutral-colored clothing (khaki, olive, tan) works better for wildlife viewing than bright colors or all-white outfits, which can spook animals or attract insects.
Time Your Trip Around the Wildlife, Not the Calendar
The Great Migration, when roughly two million wildebeest and zebra move between Kenya’s Maasai Mara and Tanzania’s Serengeti, typically brings herds into Kenya between July and October. This period draws the heaviest tourist traffic and the highest lodge prices, but it also delivers the most dramatic river crossings at the Mara and Talek rivers.
Visiting during the shoulder seasons of January through March offers a genuinely rewarding safari in Kenya, with thinner crowds, lower rates, and still-excellent wildlife viewing since many animals remain in the region year-round. The long rains fall from March through May, which can make some roads difficult to navigate but also brings lush scenery and newborn animals. Research which season matches your priorities rather than defaulting to peak migration months out of habit.
Budget for Park Fees Separately From Your Trip Cost
National park and reserve entrance fees in Kenya are charged per person, per day, and they add up faster than most travelers expect. The Maasai Mara National Reserve charges non-residents around 80 US dollars per adult per day, and Amboseli National Park runs similarly. These fees are usually separate from what you pay a safari operator, so ask specifically whether your quoted price includes them.
Some parks also charge vehicle fees on top of per-person rates. Confirm exactly what’s covered before booking so you’re not surprised by cash-only payment requests at a gate in the middle of your trip.
Carry Cash in Kenyan Shillings and Small Bills
Credit cards work at larger hotels and lodges in Nairobi and major tourist areas, but smaller camps, local markets, and rural fuel stops often operate cash-only. Withdraw Kenyan shillings from ATMs in Nairobi or Mombasa rather than exchanging large sums at the airport, where rates tend to be worse. Keep a stash of small bills for tipping guides, drivers, and camp staff, since tipping is customary and expected but rarely itemized on a bill.
M-Pesa, Kenya’s mobile money system, is used everywhere by locals and increasingly accepted by vendors catering to tourists. It’s worth asking your accommodation whether setting up a temporary account makes sense for a longer stay.
Book a Reputable Safari Operator, Not the Cheapest One
Safari vehicles, guides, and camps vary enormously in quality, and the cheapest listed price often reflects older vehicles, less experienced guides, or crowded group sizes. Look for operators registered with the Kenya Association of Tour Operators and read recent reviews that mention specific guide names, vehicle condition, and how well the itinerary matched what was promised. A knowledgeable guide who can read animal behavior and radio other vehicles about sightings makes a measurable difference in what you actually see.
Ask direct questions before booking: how many people share a vehicle, whether pop-up roofs are included for photography, and what happens if a game drive gets rained out. Operators with clear, specific answers tend to run better trips than those offering vague reassurances.
Respect Local Customs in Maasai and Other Communities
Many safari itineraries include visits to Maasai villages or interactions with local communities near national parks. Ask before photographing people, and expect that a fee or purchase of crafts is often part of the arrangement rather than optional. Dress modestly when visiting towns and villages outside tourist lodges, particularly in more conservative areas along the coast with significant Muslim populations.
Basic Swahili phrases go a long way. “Jambo” (hello) and “asante” (thank you) are simple enough to learn before arrival and are consistently appreciated.
Protect Yourself Against Malaria and Sun Exposure
Most of Kenya, including the Maasai Mara, Amboseli, and coastal regions, falls within a malaria risk zone. Consult a travel medicine provider several weeks before departure about antimalarial medication options, since some require starting doses before you arrive. Combine this with mosquito repellent containing DEET and long sleeves during dawn and dusk hours when mosquitoes are most active.
Equatorial sun is intense even on cloudy days, and reflection off open savanna landscapes increases exposure during long game drives. Reapply sunscreen more often than feels necessary and bring sunglasses rated for high UV protection.
The details that matter most in Kenya are rarely the ones travel blogs mention first. Getting your visa and vaccinations sorted early, budgeting honestly for park fees, and choosing a guide with real local knowledge will shape your trip far more than which lodge you pick. Handle those fundamentals well, and the rest of the trip has room to unfold on its own terms.
Chief editor of Side-Line – which basically means I spend my days wading through a relentless flood of press releases from labels, artists, DJs, and zealous correspondents. My job? Strip out the promo nonsense, verify what’s actually real, and decide which stories make the cut and which get tossed into the digital void. Outside the news filter bubble, I’m all in for quality sushi and helping raise funds for Ukraine’s ongoing fight against the modern-day axis of evil. Besides music I’m also an SEO and AI content flow specialist and have an interest in everything finance from stocks to crypto. There is music in everything!
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