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Okavango Delta vs Serengeti National Park

Which destination is right for your next trip?

🏆 Okavango Delta wins 65 OVR vs 59 · attribute matchup 30

Okavango Delta
Okavango Delta

Botswana

65OVR

VS
Serengeti National Park

Tanzania

59OVR

Serengeti National Park
80
Safety
70
30
Affordability
30
72
Food
58
63
Culture
63
44
Nightlife
44
40
Walkability
40
99
Nature
99
81
Connectivity
59
Okavango Delta

Okavango Delta

Botswana

Serengeti National Park

Serengeti National Park

Tanzania

Okavango Delta

Safety: 80/100Pop: No permanent residents (Maun 60K)Africa/Gaborone

Serengeti National Park

Safety: 70/100Pop: No permanent residents; ~350K visitors/yearAfrica/Dar_es_Salaam

💰 Budget

budget
Okavango Delta: $150-300Serengeti National Park: $200-350
mid-range
Okavango Delta: $400-900Serengeti National Park: $400-700
luxury
Okavango Delta: $1,500-3,500+Serengeti National Park: $1,000-3,500+

🛡️ Safety

Okavango Delta85/100Safety Score70/100Serengeti National Park

Okavango Delta

Botswana is one of Africa's most politically stable and low-crime countries, consistently ranking among the safest on the continent for travellers. The Okavango Delta itself is a wilderness reserve with essentially zero crime — the risks here are ecological. Hippos, elephants, lions, crocodiles, buffalo, and malaria are the things to respect. Fly-in camps have excellent medical evacuation protocols; self-drivers through Moremi must be completely self-sufficient.

Serengeti National Park

Serengeti National Park is extremely safe for visitors traveling with registered guides and reputable operators. The principal risks are wildlife-related if you ignore safety protocols, and health-related (malaria, sun, and dehydration). Crime is negligible inside the park. Tanzania itself is a stable country with a long history of safe tourism, though normal urban precautions apply in Arusha.

Ratings

Okavango Delta5/5English Friendly4/5Serengeti National Park
Okavango Delta1/5Walkability1/5Serengeti National Park
Okavango Delta1/5Public Transit1/5Serengeti National Park
Okavango Delta3/5Food Scene2/5Serengeti National Park
Okavango Delta1/5Nightlife1/5Serengeti National Park
Okavango Delta2/5Cultural Sites2/5Serengeti National Park
Okavango Delta5/5Nature Access5/5Serengeti National Park
Okavango Delta3/5WiFi Reliability1/5Serengeti National Park

🌤️ Weather

Okavango Delta

The Okavango's weather is paradoxical: the delta is driest on land when the floodwaters are highest. Angolan summer rains (January–March) take months to travel down the Okavango River, arriving in Botswana between May and August — the southern African dry winter. This means water levels peak while local rainfall is near zero. The classic safari season of May–October is both the driest and the flood-richest time to visit.

Dry & Flood Season (Peak Safari) (May - October)5-30°C
Transition (Hot Pre-Rains) (October - November)20-40°C
Green Season (Wet) (December - March)18-35°C
Shoulder (Early Dry) (April)15-32°C

Serengeti National Park

The Serengeti has a semi-arid climate with two wet seasons and two dry seasons, directly driving the Great Migration cycle. Temperatures are moderate year-round at this altitude (roughly 920-1,850 m), rarely exceeding 30°C or dropping below 15°C. The dry season from June through October is the most popular time to visit, but each season offers distinct wildlife experiences.

Long Rains (March - May)18-27°C
Dry Season (June - October)15-27°C
Short Rains (November - December)18-28°C
Green Season / Calving (January - February)20-30°C

🚇 Getting Around

Okavango Delta

Within the delta, there are effectively no roads — transport is by light aircraft between lodge airstrips, motorboat or mokoro along the channels, and 4x4 game-drive vehicles on the game paths of each concession. All camp-to-camp transfers are by Cessna 206 or Caravan bush planes operated by Mack Air, Moremi Air, or Wilderness Air. Self-drivers can access Moremi and Khwai by 4x4 only; the deep delta is not accessible by road.

Walkability: The delta is not walkable — settled areas are only the lodge footprint and the village perimeter of Maun. Bush walks within private concessions must be accompanied by an armed, licensed guide. Public self-guided walking is prohibited in all game reserves including Moremi. Within lodges and camps, short walks between tents are normal; camp staff may escort guests after dark.

Bush Plane (Light Aircraft)Typically included in all-inclusive camp rates; ad-hoc charter USD 400-700 per leg
Mokoro (Traditional Dugout Canoe)Included in camp rates; budget community trips USD 40-80/day
Motorboat / TinnyIncluded in all-inclusive camp rates

Serengeti National Park

Inside Serengeti National Park, a closed or open-roof 4WD safari vehicle is the only practical and legal mode of transport. Self-drive is technically possible with your own 4WD but almost never attempted by foreign visitors due to road conditions and navigation challenges. The vast majority of visitors travel in operator-supplied Land Cruisers or Land Rovers.

Walkability: There is zero independent walkability inside Serengeti National Park. Walking safaris with armed rangers are offered only by a small number of licensed camps in adjacent private concessions. Inside the park, all movement between destinations must be by vehicle.

Closed 4WD Land Cruiser (Standard)Included in most guided safari packages; self-hire approximately $300-500/day with driver-guide
Open-Roof Safari Vehicle (Premium)Included in luxury concession camp rates ($800-3,000+/night)
Charter Flights Between Camps$200-600+ per flight segment depending on route and operator

The Verdict

Choose Okavango Delta if...

you want the world's largest inland delta — mokoro canoe safaris, Big 5 + wild dogs, and luxury fly-in camps in UNESCO wilderness

Choose Serengeti National Park if...

you want the world's most famous safari — the Great Migration, Mara River crossings, balloon dawns, and the Big Four (rhino is rare here)

Serengeti National Park