Tanzania Safari Tours & Africa Adventures
Stay at camps that fund anti-poaching and community projects, meet the people protecting Tanzania's wildlife, and travel knowing your trip does good.
A conservation safari is a normal wildlife safari with its money pointed in the right direction. You stay at camps and conservancies that channel a meaningful share of their fees into anti-poaching patrols, habitat protection, and community development — and you get to see that work first-hand, from a rhino-monitoring brief to a school the lodge has built.
Tanzania’s wildlife survives because protecting it pays the people who live alongside it. Choosing conservancy-based camps over busier park lodges directly funds rangers and reduces human–wildlife conflict. The wildlife experience is excellent — often more exclusive — and the impact is real and measurable.
Your bed night directly funds protection and community work.
Ranger briefings, monitoring, or anti-poaching insights where offered.
Visit a school, clinic, or project supported by tourism revenue.
Conservancies allow walking and night drives, with few vehicles.
"Conservation" is a word some operators use loosely, so we steer you to camps with transparent, verifiable programmes — published fees, named projects, real ranger teams. Chosen well, this is among the most satisfying ways to safari: the wildlife is often more exclusive, and your money measurably helps protect it.

Contact us now — we are always here to help with honest, expert advice at no cost.
Tell us about your dream trip and our Tanzania safari specialists will get back to you within 24 hours with a personalised itinerary and no-obligation quote.
A short planning brief gives our team enough context to suggest the right parks, route, pace and accommodation level.