​Expert Reviews – Nairobi NP

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Expert
Philip Briggs   –  
South Africa ZA
Visited: Multiple times

Philip is an acclaimed travel writer and author of many guidebooks, including the Bradt guides to Uganda, Tanzania, Kenya and South Africa.

4 people found this review helpful.

A Top Safari Experience Bordering The Capital
Overall rating
3/5

This remarkable and in many respects unique national park borders the southeastern suburbs of Nairobi, the bustling capital of Kenya. Though fenced on the city side, for obvious reasons, the park remains unfenced to the south, allowing wildlife from the bordering Athi Plains to move in and out freely, although growing human populations are increasingly blocking this route. Game viewing can be erratic, but it is often very good – on our most recent overnight stay at Nairobi Tented Camp, in 2024, we encountered good numbers of both black and white rhino, came across a young male lion up a tree, and also saw plenty of giraffe, buffalo, baboon, eland and various smaller antelope. The birdlife is exceptional too, with large ground dwellers such as ostrich, grey crowned crane and secretary bird found alongside the colourful likes of superb starling, yellow-throated spurfowl and purple grenadier, as well as the localised northern pied babbler. In our experience, the best time to be here is first thing in the morning or late in the afternoon, when animals are most active. A striking feature of the park is the distinctive skyline of the city centre, which can be seen from several vantage points. Indeed, Nairobi National Park as a whole pays heartening testament to the tenacity of large wildlife within roaring distance of one of Africa’s largest cities.

Expert
Emma Gregg   –  
United Kingdom UK
Visited: December

Emma is an award-winning travel writer for Rough Guides, National Geographic Traveller, Travel Africa magazine and The Independent.

3 people found this review helpful.

A host of wildlife, right on the capital’s doorstep
Overall rating
3/5

There’s something rather surreal about the sight of a small herd of wildebeest or buffalo, a pair of giraffes or even a cheetah and her cubs pacing across a grassy plain within sight of a city centre. These are not zoo animals – they’re wild – but I had to keep reminding myself of this whenever I lowered my binoculars from an animal sighting and once again caught a glimpse of Nairobi’s distant towerblocks through the heat haze.

I’d recommend Nairobi National Park if you’re on a brief visit to Nairobi, or are in transit, and have a few hours in the early morning or late afternoon to spare between appointments or flights – it’s quick and easy to get to from the city centre and the sense of being out in the wilds is surprisingly satisfying.

Expert
Kim Wildman   –  
Australia AU
Visited: Multiple times

Kim is a travel writer who authored and updated over 15 guidebooks, including Lonely Planet's South Africa and Bradt's Tanzania guides.

2 people found this review helpful.

Out of Nairobi
Overall rating
3/5

For anyone spending a few days in Nairobi, a tour of Nairobi National Park should be at the top of your must see list – unless you’re already gamed-out, that is. In the dry season, this wonderful wildlife sanctuary, which literally lies at the edge of the city, teems with game. It’s certainly one of the best places in Kenya for seeing rhino, lion and cheetah at very close range and also one of the best places to see servals for anyone with a cat fetish. On my last visit we easily spied zebras, Cape buffalo, rhino, hartebeest, elands, crocodile and a brand new baby giraffe. At the hippo pool there is an armed guide who’ll walk you along the river to several pools frequented by hippos. There are also plenty of opportunities for bird watching. On leaving the park, I’d suggest you loop back to Nairobi through the leafy outer suburb of Karen - once the home of Karen Blixen of Out of Africa fame – and visit the museum set up in her former home which looks out over the Ngong Hills, under which Blixen’s lover Denys Finch-Hatton is buried. And don’t miss nearby Giraffe Manor where you can eye-ball a giraffe and feed them straight from your hand.

Expert
Anthony Ham   –  
Australia AU
Visited: Multiple times

Anthony is a photographer and writer for travel magazines and Lonely Planet, including the guides to Kenya and Botswana & Namibia.

1 person found this review helpful.

Kenya’s Capital Park
Overall rating
3/5

It can feel pretty incongruous searching for wildlife within sight of city skyscrapers, but Nairobi National Park is no ordinary park. Founded as one of Africa’s first parks in 1946 ostensibly to keep wild animals out of the city’s streets, the park has since become an important refuge for the black rhino – with more than fifty in residence, it’s the most densely populated collection of black rhinos on earth; on a recent afternoon in the park, I saw ten black rhinos. Lion, leopard and cheetah are also present, along with hyena, buffalo, wildebeest and zebra, although sadly no elephants roam the park. The birdlife – more than 400 recorded species, almost as many as in the entire UK but within just 117 sq km of park – is extraordinary for a park of this size. Despite the park’s proliferation of wildlife, the proximity to Nairobi means that it’s always busy and I always feel a safari here is like an appetizer for the main event, a fine way to spend an afternoon while in Nairobi before heading out into the wilderness for a real safari.

Expert
Dale R Morris   –  
South Africa ZA
Visited: Summer

Dale is a multi-award-winning writer and photographer with more than 500 published magazine articles featured in magazines such as National Geographic, BBC Wildlife, Travel Africa, and CNN Travel.

Genuine Wildlife a Stone’s Throw Away From the City
Overall rating
3/5

The photographs I had seen of wild animals against the backdrop of a big city had given me the impression that Nairobi National Park was nothing more than a simulacrum of Kenya’s wonderful wilderness. A fake zoo of sorts.

But after my first visit, my preconceptions were shattered – perhaps not into tiny little pieces – but shattered nonetheless.

You don’t actually see the high-rise buildings from within the majority of this fairly small (117km2/45mi2) reserve, and for the bulk of the two days I spent there, I often felt I was truly in the bush, a million miles away from the trappings of human civilization. Occasionally, a Boeing would fly low overhead, or the wind would change direction, and I would hear the sound of distant traffic, but otherwise, the ambience is one of genuine wilderness.

I also thought it would be fully fenced, but this also turned out to be a misconception on my behalf. There are river crossings and wildlife corridors to the south, leading to the much larger Kitengela Game Conservation Area, and as such, animals are free to roam in and out as they please.

It’s is a great place to stay (or visit) if you must be in or near Nairobi. And what’s more, it’s possible to get there within half an hour of leaving the airport.

You’ll likely see lions and cheetahs. Hippos and rhinos too. And with more than 500 bird species recorded, it really is a twitcher’s paradise.

Expert
Stephen Cunliffe   –  
South Africa ZA
Visited: Multiple times

Stephen is a travel writer and avid conservationist whose work appears in prestigious magazines such as Africa Geographic and Travel Africa.

City Safari
Overall rating
3/5

Nairobi National park is located within a stone’s throw of downtown Nairobi. The park’s wide-open grass plains and scattered acacias are juxtaposed against a backdrop of city skyscrapers and noisy highways, ensuring that this park scores lowest marks in terms of ‘wilderness vibe’. There is, however, something very unique and surreal about taking a game drive and seeing a surprising variety of wildlife right amidst the capital city.

Aside from the endangered black rhino and lion, you stand a chance of spotting the more reclusive leopard, cheetah and hyena, although my experience has been that healthy populations of buffalo, giraffe, general game and abundant birdlife are more reliably sighted.

Along with Lewa, Nairobi National Park is Kenya’s foremost black rhino sanctuary, but the reserve is probably most famous for the highly publicized burning of Kenya’s ivory stockpiles in front of the international media: an unequivocal statement from Kenya that the ivory trade should never resume.

Expert
Nana Luckham   –  
United Kingdom UK
Visited: July

Nana is a travel writer and author of multiple guidebooks, including the Lonely Planet guides to Africa, Zambia & Malawi and South Africa.

Giraffes and skyscrapers
Overall rating
3/5

Just a short drive from the big city, Nairobi National Park isn’t exactly a wilderness destination, but if you don’t have the time to visit one of the country’s better-known parks then this is a good option. Nairobi encroaches upon the park on several sides, making for unusual photo opportunities such as giraffe browsing peacefully amongst the thorn trees with the city skyline as a backdrop.

Lion, buffalo, rhino, leopard, giraffe, impala and zebra are well represented here and those keen on seeing cute baby elephants can visit the David Sheldrick Elephant Orphanage close to the main entrance of the park.

Expert
Lizzie Williams   –  
South Africa ZA
Visited: Multiple times

Lizzie is a reputed guidebook writer and author of the Footprint guides to South Africa, Namibia, Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda and Zimbabwe.

Game-viewing with a cityscape
Overall rating
3/5

Only a 20-minute drive from the city centre, the uniqueness of this park is its closeness to Nairobi – most visitors get to take that photograph of a zebra or giraffe browsing peacefully with the downtown skyscrapers rising beyond. I’ve always found my game viewing easy here, the gravel roads across the grassy savannah are suitable for normal cars (a taxi can take you), and the park staff usually know exactly where lion, cheetah or rhino can be located at any time. But its smallness and semi-urban location did give me the sense of it not being in the wild and it takes on the feel of a safari park when there are lots of other vehicles (try and avoid the weekends). I wouldn’t make a special effort to go to Nairobi just to visit it, but instead it acts as a wonderful precursor to a safari in Kenya’s larger parks – or afterwards if you’ve missed one of the Big Five such as black rhino or buffalo. All in all half a day here is enough to spot a fair variety of game, and it’s amazing that within one hour you can go from a hip coffee shop to photographing some of the animals and birds you are expecting to see in Kenya.

Average Expert Rating

  • 3.2/5
  • Wildlife
  • Scenery
  • Bush Vibe
  • Birding

Rating Breakdown

  • 5 star 1
  • 4 star 1
  • 3 star 8
  • 2 star 1
  • 1 star 0
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