The park's landscape is defined by iconic baobab trees (some over 1,000 years old), termite mounds that serve as sentinel posts for dwarf mongooses, and the Tarangire River that acts as the park's lifeline when surrounding areas dry out. It is the sixth-largest national park in Tanzania.
Tarangire National Park covers 2,850 square kilometres along the Tarangire River in northern Tanzania, known for having the highest density of elephants in the country — up to 3,000 during the dry season.
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Explore Safaris →Best Time to Visit
July to October when the river is the only water source, concentrating up to 3,000 elephants and 25,000 wildebeest within the park. The wet season (November-May) offers bird watching with over 550 species.
What You'll See
Up to 3,000 elephants during dry season, large herds of buffalo, fringe-eared oryx, gerenuk, and lesser kudu. Tarangire supports Tanzania's greatest diversity of breeding bird species — over 550 recorded, including endemic ashy starling and yellow-collared lovebird. Tree-climbing lions and pythons are regularly sighted.
Getting There
2-hour drive from Arusha (120 km) to the main gate, making it the closest park on the northern circuit. Flights from Arusha to Tarangire's Kuro airstrip take 30 minutes. Often the first stop on a northern Tanzania safari itinerary.
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Where to Go in Tarangire National Park
Tarangire River Valley
Dry-season elephant herds of 300 along the river — framed by baobabs with 15-metre girths.
The Tarangire River flows year-round through the heart of the park, creating a narrow green ribbon through brown dry-season savannah. During July to October, the river banks become one of East Africa's most dramatic wildlife congregation points, with elephant herds of 200-300 individuals, buffalo in the thousands, and stalking lion prides. Massive baobab trees — some with trunk circumferences exceeding 15 metres — line the valley.
Silale Swamp
Remote southern wetland with massive buffalo herds and python-draped acacias — far from the crowds.
Silale Swamp is a vast seasonal wetland in the southern section of Tarangire, attracting huge herds of buffalo, waterbuck, and reedbuck. The swamp is a critical dry-season refuge and one of the best areas in the park for sighting python draped in acacia trees. Fewer visitors reach this remote southern section, providing a more exclusive game-viewing experience compared to the northern river frontage.
Lemiyon & Northern Boundary
Open cheetah-hunting plains and walking safaris with Rift Valley escarpment views.
The Lemiyon area near Tarangire's northern boundary is characterized by open grassland dotted with termite mounds and scattered baobabs. This area is frequented by cheetah, who use the flat terrain for high-speed hunts, and harrier hawks that hunt from the termite mounds. Several walking safari operations run guided walks along the northern boundary area, which also offers views of the Rift Valley escarpment.
Tarangire National Park Safari Tours
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