Maasai Mara National Reserve
The Maasai Mara is Kenya's most famous safari destination, a rolling expanse of golden savanna in the country's southwest that forms the northern reaches of the great Serengeti-Mara ecosystem. Renowned for its dramatic Mara River crossings and its extraordinary big-cat populations, the Mara offers some of the finest wildlife viewing anywhere in Africa.
Highlights
- The northern continuation of the Serengeti ecosystem, in southwestern Kenya
- Dramatic Mara River crossings during the Great Migration (July–October)
- Exceptional populations of big cats: lion, cheetah and leopard
- Surrounded by community conservancies on Maasai land
Overview
The Maasai Mara National Reserve lies in southwestern Kenya, close to the Tanzanian border, and covers roughly 1,510 square kilometres of open grassland, gentle hills and riverine forest. It is the Kenyan, northern continuation of the vast Serengeti-Mara ecosystem, joining directly with Tanzania's Serengeti National Park to the south. Wildlife moves freely across the unmarked international boundary, so although the two reserves carry different names and are managed by different countries, they function ecologically as one continuous landscape.
The reserve takes its name from the Maasai people, the pastoralist community whose ancestral lands it occupies, and from the Mara River that winds through it. In the Maa language, "Mara" is often said to evoke the spotted or dappled appearance of the landscape, mottled with trees, cloud shadows and scattered scrub when seen from a distance. Compact compared with the enormous Serengeti, the Mara concentrates a tremendous abundance of wildlife into a relatively small area, which is part of what makes game viewing here so reliably rewarding.
For many travellers, the Maasai Mara is the quintessential Kenyan safari, frequently combined with other highlights such as Amboseli, Lake Nakuru and the coast. Its reputation rests not only on the Great Migration but on the everyday richness of its plains, where lions, elephants, giraffes and vast herds of grazers can be seen on almost any drive throughout the year.
The Great Migration & River Crossings
The Maasai Mara is the northern stage of the Great Migration, the annual movement of around 1.5 million wildebeest together with hundreds of thousands of zebra and gazelle through the Serengeti-Mara ecosystem. For much of the year the herds graze on the Tanzanian side, but during the dry season, broadly from July to October, they push north into the Mara in search of fresh grass, and it is then that the reserve hosts the most celebrated moments of the entire journey.
The signature spectacle is the Mara River crossing. To reach the rich grazing on the northern banks, the herds must descend steep, crowded riverbanks and plunge into water patrolled by large Nile crocodiles. Thousands of animals mass at the water's edge, hesitating and milling until a sudden surge carries them across in a thunder of hooves, spray and dust. Crocodiles seize stragglers, the current sweeps others away, and predators wait on the far bank, making the crossings both thrilling and harrowing to witness. These events are among the most dramatic in the natural world and draw visitors and photographers from across the globe.
It is important to understand that the crossings cannot be scheduled. The herds may cross back and forth several times, and the exact timing shifts from year to year with the rains. Patience is essential: a successful crossing might come after hours of waiting, or not at all on a given day. Even so, the months from July to October offer the best chance, and the sheer concentration of animals in the Mara during this period makes for unforgettable game viewing whether or not a crossing takes place.
Big Cats & Wildlife
The Maasai Mara is celebrated above all for its big cats. It supports a dense and famous lion population, and its prides have featured in numerous wildlife documentaries that have made individual Mara lions known to audiences around the world. The open, rolling plains are ideal terrain for cheetahs, which need clear lines of sight to run down their prey, and the Mara is one of the better places in Africa to watch these elegant sprinters hunt. Leopards, more secretive, haunt the riverine forests and rocky areas, often glimpsed resting in trees.
Beyond the cats, the reserve offers superb general game viewing. Herds of African elephants and Cape buffalo move across the grasslands, and the reserve is home to giraffes, hippos that wallow in the Mara River, topi, impala, eland, warthogs, jackals and large clans of spotted hyenas. Together with the lion and leopard, the elephant and buffalo make the Mara a strong destination for spotting the Big Five, with rhino present in smaller, protected numbers. The Mara is also rich in birdlife, with hundreds of species recorded, from ostriches and secretary birds on the plains to raptors and vultures overhead and dazzling rollers, bee-eaters and starlings throughout the bush.
The Maasai People & Conservancies
The land of the Mara is inseparable from the Maasai people, semi-nomadic pastoralists renowned for their distinctive red dress, their cattle-herding traditions and their deep cultural connection to this landscape. The reserve and the lands around it have been Maasai territory for generations, and many visitors take the opportunity to visit a Maasai village or to be guided by Maasai trackers and rangers whose knowledge of the bush is unrivalled.
Surrounding the national reserve is a growing ring of community conservancies. These are areas of Maasai-owned land set aside for wildlife under agreements that pay local landowners for conserving habitat rather than converting it to farming or fencing. The conservancies expand the protected range available to migrating and resident animals, ease pressure on the core reserve, and channel tourism income directly to the Maasai communities. They typically limit the number of vehicles and camps, allowing for quieter, more exclusive game viewing and activities not always permitted inside the reserve itself, such as night drives and guided walks. This conservancy model has become an influential example of how tourism, local livelihoods and wildlife protection can reinforce one another.
Best Time to Visit
The Maasai Mara rewards visitors all year round, but the timing of a trip shapes the experience. The dry season, from roughly July to October, is the peak period, coinciding with the arrival of the migration and the famous river crossings; this is the busiest and most sought-after time. Game viewing in general is excellent during the dry months, when vegetation is sparse and animals gather near water.
The wetter months bring their own appeal. The landscape turns green and lush, resident wildlife remains abundant, newborn animals appear, and there are fewer vehicles, often at lower prices. The long rains generally fall around March to May, with shorter rains toward the end of the year, and while some tracks can become muddy, the Mara's resident game means a safari is rewarding in any season. As everywhere on safari, the early morning and late afternoon offer the best light and the most active animals, so game drives are usually timed around the cooler ends of the day.
How to Get There
The Maasai Mara is reached from Kenya's capital, Nairobi, in one of two main ways. The overland route takes roughly five to six hours by road, descending into the Great Rift Valley and crossing rolling farmland and Maasai country before reaching the reserve; this is the more economical option and offers scenery along the way, though the final stretches can be rough.
Alternatively, scheduled light-aircraft flights connect Nairobi's Wilson Airport with several airstrips serving the reserve and the surrounding conservancies, with a flight time of around forty-five minutes to an hour. Fly-in safaris save considerable time, avoid the long drive, and make it easy to reach the more remote camps deep in the conservancies. Many camps and lodges arrange transfers from the nearest airstrip, and some itineraries combine the Mara by air with other Kenyan parks or with onward travel to the coast.
Conservation
The Maasai Mara is managed as a national reserve rather than a national park, which means it falls under the authority of local county government working with the Maasai community, supported by conservation partners. This arrangement places the surrounding Maasai landowners at the centre of decisions about how the land and its wildlife are managed, and the surrounding conservancies have become a vital part of the broader conservation picture.
The reserve faces real pressures, including the spread of farming and settlement at its edges, competition between livestock and wildlife for grazing, the threat of poaching, and the challenge of managing large numbers of tourist vehicles at peak times around the river crossings. Maintaining the wildlife corridors that link the Mara with the Serengeti across the border is essential, because the Great Migration depends on animals being able to move freely between the two countries. The growth of community conservancies, careful management of tourism, anti-poaching efforts and partnerships between government, landowners and conservation organisations all aim to keep this remarkable ecosystem intact, so that the herds, the big cats and the Maasai way of life can continue to share these endless plains.
Frequently Asked Questions
Where is the Maasai Mara?
The Maasai Mara National Reserve is in southwestern Kenya, near the Tanzanian border. It covers roughly 1,510 square kilometres and forms the northern continuation of the Serengeti-Mara ecosystem, joining directly with Tanzania's Serengeti National Park to the south.
What is the Maasai Mara famous for?
It is famous for its dramatic Mara River crossings during the Great Migration, when great herds of wildebeest and zebra brave crocodile-filled waters, usually between July and October. The reserve is also renowned for its exceptional big cats, including lions, cheetahs and leopards.
When can you see the river crossings in the Maasai Mara?
The crossings generally take place in the dry season, broadly from July to October, when the herds move north from the Serengeti into the Mara. The timing varies each year with the rains, so a crossing can never be guaranteed on a particular day.
How is the Maasai Mara related to the Serengeti?
The Mara is the Kenyan, northern part of the same ecosystem that contains Tanzania's Serengeti National Park. Wildlife, including the migrating wildebeest, moves freely across the border, so the region is often described as a single Serengeti-Mara ecosystem.
How do you get to the Maasai Mara?
Most visitors travel from Nairobi, either by road in around five to six hours or by a short scheduled flight to one of the airstrips serving the reserve and its conservancies. Fly-in safaris are popular for saving time and reaching remote camps.
Last updated: June 2026.