Chobe National Park
Africa's greatest elephant concentration — 50,000 elephants, river-crossing spectacles, and the legendary Savuti lions.
About Chobe National Park
Chobe National Park covers 11,700 square kilometres in northeastern Botswana and is renowned above all for its staggering elephant population — the largest concentration in Africa, with an estimated 50,000 individuals within the park and up to 130,000 in the greater Chobe-Linyanti ecosystem. The park's four distinct ecosystems — the Chobe Riverfront, the Savuti Marsh, the Linyanti swamps, and the hot, dry hinterland — each offer dramatically different safari experiences. The Chobe Riverfront, stretching along the Chobe River for approximately 60 kilometres near the town of Kasane, is the park's most accessible and popular section. Here, afternoon boat safaris reveal a breathtaking spectacle: hundreds of elephants swimming and wading across the river, buffalo herds stretching along the floodplain, hippo pods in the deeper channels, and fish eagles perched in waterside trees. The riverfront's combination of boat and vehicle safaris provides a diversity of perspectives unmatched in most African parks. The Savuti Marsh, 160 kilometres south of Kasane, is a remote and ruggedly beautiful area famous for its resident lion prides that have been documented hunting young elephants — a rare and extraordinary behaviour captured in several acclaimed wildlife documentaries. The marsh, fed by the enigmatic Savuti Channel (which has dried up and refilled multiple times over the past century in patterns that have baffled hydrologists), attracts seasonal concentrations of zebra, wildebeest, and predators during the dry months. Chobe offers the rare combination of water-based and land-based safari experiences, incredible elephant encounters, and genuine wilderness in the Savuti and Linyanti sections.
When to Go
June to October for dry season game viewing and the highest elephant concentrations along the Chobe River. September and October are the best months for elephant river crossings. The green season (November to March) brings spectacular birding.
What You'll See
50,000+ elephants within the park, Africa's largest concentration. Lion, leopard, cheetah, African wild dog, buffalo (herds of 1,000+), hippo, Nile crocodile, sable antelope, roan antelope, puku, 450+ bird species.
Your Journey Begins
Direct flights from Johannesburg to Kasane Airport (2 hours). 90-minute road transfer from Victoria Falls (Zimbabwe). Light aircraft from Maun to Savuti and Linyanti airstrips. Kasane town is 15 minutes from the park entrance.
Within Chobe National Park
Chobe Riverfront
Thousands of elephants crossing the river at sunset — Africa's greatest boat safari spectacle.
The Chobe Riverfront is the most accessible and iconic section of Chobe National Park, stretching along the southern bank of the Chobe River near the town of Kasane. During the dry season (June-October), this narrow strip of riverine forest and floodplain becomes one of Africa's greatest wildlife stages as thousands of elephants converge to drink, bathe, and cross the river to reach grazing on the Namibian floodplain opposite. The afternoon boat safari is the Chobe Riverfront's signature experience. Flat-bottomed boats cruise along the river channel at eye level with hippo, crocodile, and drinking elephants, while fish eagles call overhead and carmine bee-eaters hawk insects from the bank. The golden light of the Chobe sunset, reflecting off the water as elephants wade through the shallows, produces some of Africa's most memorable photographs. Morning game drives along the riverbank complement the afternoon boat safaris, with regular sightings of lion, leopard, buffalo herds, giraffe, and large troops of chacma baboon. The Kasane area also serves as a base for day trips to Victoria Falls in Zimbabwe, just 90 minutes away by road.
Savuti
Legendary elephant-hunting lions, an enigmatic vanishing river, and 4,000-year-old San rock art.
The Savuti Marsh area, also known as the Savute, occupies the western section of Chobe National Park and is one of Africa's most dramatic and unpredictable wildlife arenas. The Savuti Channel, which connects the Linyanti River to the Savuti Marsh, has mysteriously dried up and refilled several times over the past century — most recently flowing again in 2009 after being dry for nearly 30 years — creating a landscape that shifts between lush marsh and arid grassland over geological timescales. Savuti is legendary for its lions. The area's resident prides have been extensively studied and filmed, with the "Savuti Marsh Pride" gaining fame for their extraordinary behaviour of hunting young elephants at night — a strategy adopted when the channel was dry and elephants congregated at the remaining artificial waterholes. The San rock paintings at Savuti Hills, some dating back 4,000 years, provide evidence of the area's long human connection. During the dry season, the marsh attracts large herds of zebra and wildebeest along with their attendant predators, creating excellent game viewing in a wild, remote setting accessible only by 4x4 or light aircraft.
Tours in Chobe National Park
More Destinations in Botswana
Okavango Delta
The world's largest inland delta — mokoro safaris, fly-in camps, and 22,000 km² of pristine Kalahari wetland.
ExploreChobe National Park
50,000 elephants along the Chobe River — Africa's greatest concentration of the world's largest land animal.
ExploreMakgadikgadi Pans & Central Kalahari
The world's largest salt pans and second-largest game reserve — meerkats, flamingos, and Kalahari black-maned lions.
ExploreMakgadikgadi Pans
12,000 km² of ancient salt flats — zebra migrations, starlit sleep-outs, meerkats, and San Bushmen culture.
ExplorePlan Your Safari
Let our experts craft a bespoke Chobe National Park itinerary tailored to your dreams.