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Nature & Wildlife

The 5 best places to see lions in Africa

World Lion Day is celebrated annually on 10 August. Want to see these majestic creatures for yourself in the wild? Here are all the top safari options…

Jonathan Scott and Angela Scott
08 August 2025
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No safari would be complete without the sight (or sound) of wild lions. Their thunderous roars echoing across the plains at night, or in the early morning, is a sound to thrill the heart.

The dry season – when the grass is short and the bush less dense – is the easiest time to locate and photograph all the big cats. Lions are territorial making it possible to track their movements year-round.

Some destinations offer a better chance of a sighting than others. Many driver-guides at the camp or lodge you’re staying at will be out on safari every day, so they will know the various lion prides’ current movements – making it much more likely that you will see them.

For World Lion Day (10 August), we thought we’d shine a spotlight on the five best places to see lions in Africa…

1. Masai Mara National Reserve, Kenya

(Shutterstock)

A year-round destination and the best place in the world to watch and photograph wild lions with amazing access and visibility. We have a stone cottage at Governor’s Camp as our base in the heart of Marsh Pride territory.

These are the most famous lion pride in the world. We have been watching the Marsh Pride since 1977.

As you can imagine there are some great place to stay. Governor’s Camp and Rekero Camp are both excellent. And the Wildlife Conservancies bordering the edge of the Reserve – such as Mara North Conservancy (Richard’s Camp) and Olare-Motorogi Conservancy (Kicheche Bush Camp) – also offer wonderful big cat game viewing.

 

Read next: Safari etiquette is about much more than getting the shot – it’s life and death for these animals

2. Serengeti National Park, Tanzania

(Shutterstock)

The Masai Mara’s big brother across the border in Tanzania. The Serengeti is savanna Africa on a grand scale, offering a Pleistocene view of wildlife, with large prides of resident lions staking out their territories among the woodlands.

There are an estimated 4,000 lions roaming the Mara-Serengeti’s rolling plains and woodlands. From January to March, the wildebeest are calving and the massed herds of wildebeest and zebras are spread across the grasslands for as far as the eye can see.

The sight of prides of lions lying up on the rocky granite outcrops – known as kopjes – are a photographer’s dream.

Asilia’s Namiri Plains tented camps is the perfect place to stay on the southern Serengeti Plains.

 

Read next: 12 of Africa’s wildest new safari lodges and camps

3. Okavango Delta, Botswana

(Shutterstock)

The Okavango Delta is often described as the Jewel of the Kalahari, a vast river system of palm fringed islands and winding tributaries that eventually disappears in to the Kalahari sands. The mix of wet and dry landscapes makes it an exciting contrast to the wonders of the Mara-Serengeti.

You can find all of the big cats here as well as packs of wild dogs (another of our favourites). If you are hoping to see lions hunting, Duba Plains is famous for its lion/buffalo encounters.

Either Wilderness Mombo or Chief’s Camp make a great base.

Read next: 6 of the best things to do in Botswana

4. Londolozi Private Game Reserve, South Africa

(Shutterstock)

Londolozi is 150 sq km in extent and part of the Sabi Sands Private Game Reserve, situated on the western border of Kruger National Park.

Although leopards are their speciality, Londolozi offers wonderful views of lions. The bush is thicker than in the Masai Mara, but the driver-guides are top notch ensuring that you enjoy a first class safari away from the madding crowd.

We stayed at Founders Camp.

 

Read next: Unexpected safaris in South Africa, beyond the icons

5. Ngorongoro Crater, Tanzania

(Shutterstock)

Famous for its black-maned lions, the Crater is one of the natural wonders of the world and the largest inactive, intact and unfilled volcanic caldera on the planet.

The balance between the lion and hyena populations on the Crater floor has oscillated over the years. In the 1960s the lions were decimated by a plague of Stomoxys biting flies during a particularly wet spell. Henry Fosbrooke, the Conservator of the crater at the time, reported that these flies literally bled the lions to death.

In time, the lion population recovered and today there are around 65 lions living here. The towering Crater wall and variety of wildlife makes the perfect photographic backdrop for lion ‘landscapes’.

&Beyond Ngorongoro Crater Lodge makes an excellent base for spotting lions, as will the Elewana Ngorongoro Explorer when it reopens later this year.

 

Read next: Best Serengeti trips: 7 tours of Africa’s most spectacular national park

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