Kenya vs South Africa: Which Country Should You Visit First in Africa?

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I grew up between Johannesburg and Mpumalanga  school in the city, holidays near Kruger. South Africa is home. Kenya I have covered in depth across 13 destinations for 54TravelVibes the Maasai Mara, Diani Beach, Nairobi, Amboseli, Lamu, Samburu, and more. I have spent enough time in both countries to have genuine opinions about them, and this is where I share those opinions without softening them.

South Africa and Kenya are the two most iconic safari destinations in sub-Saharan Africa. They are also the two countries that most first-time Africa travellers put side by side when planning their first trip. The question I get asked constantly is: which one should I do first? Or more specifically which one is right for me?

The honest answer is that South Africa and Kenya are genuinely different countries offering genuinely different travel experiences. They are not interchangeable versions of the same trip. The right choice depends on what matters most to you as a traveller  and I am going to tell you exactly which traveller each country is built for.

Both countries are at the heart of 54TravelVibes , 14 South Africa destinations and 13 Kenya destinations across our 54 iconic African guides.

Already know your travel style? Jump straight to the ‘Who should go where’ section for the direct verdict per traveller type.

South Africa vs Kenya: Side by Side Comparison

Category

South Africa 

Kenya

Safari style

Self-drive possible in Kruger — structured and accessible

Guided only — open unfenced plains, wilder feel

Wildlife highlight

Big Five + self-drive + malaria-free options

Great Migration + Maasai Mara + Amboseli elephants

Great Migration

No

Yes — Maasai Mara July to October

Malaria-free safari

Yes — Pilanesberg, Eastern Cape

No — all major safari areas require prophylaxis

Best city

Cape Town — world top 10

Nairobi — only capital with a national park

Beach

Atlantic and Indian Ocean — cold to warm

Indian Ocean — warm, coral reefs, world-class

Best beach

Camps Bay (scenic), Garden Route (variety)

Diani Beach — East Africa’s finest beach

Food scene

World-class — Cape Town rivals global cities

Good — Nairobi rooftops, coastal Swahili food

Wine

Yes — Stellenbosch Winelands

No

Cultural history

Apartheid history, Soweto, Zulu culture

Maasai culture, Lamu heritage, Swahili coast

Hiking

Drakensberg, Table Mountain, Otter Trail

Hell’s Gate, Kilimanjaro (via Tanzania)

Infrastructure

Excellent — best roads in sub-Saharan Africa

Good in tourist areas — variable in remote parks

Budget (daily avg)

$80–$200 mid-range

$100–$250 mid-range safari

Park entry fees

$25–$35/day (Kruger)

Up to $200/day (Maasai Mara peak season)

Self-drive safari

Yes — Kruger and Pilanesberg

Not recommended in national parks

Trip length needed

10–14 days for full experience

7–10 days covers key highlights

First-time Africa?

Best overall first destination

Excellent but higher park fees

What Each Country Actually Feels Like: The Most Important Difference

Before logistics and prices  the thing that matters most is how each country makes you feel. South Africa and Kenya are profoundly different in ways that no comparison table fully captures.

South Africa feels like this

South Africa is the most complex country in Africa. It is the continent’s most developed economy, its best infrastructure, its most visited destination  and also one of its most unequal. The inequality is visible on every road between a township and a suburb. You cannot engage with South Africa honestly without engaging with that. The Apartheid Museum in Johannesburg is not a tourist attraction in the conventional sense. It is a reckoning. And it makes everything else in the country  the wine estates, the game drives, the Cape Town sunsets  mean something more because of what it sits alongside.

What South Africa gives you is variety on a scale that no other African country can match in a single trip. I grew up here  school in Johannesburg, holidays near Kruger. I have driven the Garden Route, drunk wine in Stellenbosch, watched the sun set from Signal Hill, and stood at the top of the Drakensberg chain ladders. South Africa is not one experience. It is twelve experiences in one country, each one world-class.

The trade-off is that South Africa is comfortable in ways that can feel almost European. The roads are excellent. The coffee shops are excellent. English is everywhere. For some travellers that accessibility is exactly the point. For others, it is not foreign enough.

Kenya feels like this

Kenya feels different from the moment you land. Nairobi’s chaos is immediate and energising  the traffic, the noise, the Giraffe Centre seven kilometres from the city centre, the Sheldrick Elephant Trust where baby elephants are mud-bathed at 11am. Then you leave the city and the landscape opens into something that recalibrates your sense of scale. The Maasai Mara is not just a game reserve. It is an ecosystem so large that it creates its own weather, its own logic, its own version of time.

Kenya’s safari feels wilder than South Africa’s  not because the animals are different, but because the context is different. The parks are unfenced. The plains are open. Your guide reads the grass and the wind and the direction the zebras are looking. There is no tarmac road. There is no rest camp with a swimming pool two kilometres away. There is just bush, and animals, and the feeling that you are genuinely inside something rather than observing it from a vehicle.

Kenya also has the Indian Ocean coast  and it is extraordinary. Diani Beach, Watamu, Lamu Island, Mombasa’s old town. A week on the Kenyan coast after three nights in the Maasai Mara is one of the great Africa travel combinations. Read our complete Diani Beach guide for the full planning detail.

Safari: Kruger vs Maasai Mara  What Is Actually Different

This is the central comparison for most travellers and the one that matters most. Both countries deliver world-class safari. But the experience is fundamentally different.

Safari in South Africa  Kruger and the private reserves

Kruger National Park covers 20,000 square kilometres of Limpopo and Mpumalanga bushveld  Big Five, wild dog, cheetah, hyena, and over 500 bird species in a single contiguous ecosystem. What makes Kruger unique among all major African parks is the self-drive option. You hire a standard car at Johannesburg airport, buy a day permit at the gate, and drive yourself. No guide, no vehicle surcharge, no group. You make decisions. You read the bush. You are the one who spotted the leopard lying in the fork of a fever tree forty metres off the road.

This self-drive format changes the emotional quality of the safari. It is more active, more personal, and more genuinely involving than being a passenger in someone else’s vehicle. For many experienced travellers it is the most satisfying wildlife experience available in Africa. And the self-drive rest camps  from R800 per night with a basic chalet and communal braai facilities  make Kruger the most affordable Big Five safari destination on the continent.

South Africa also has malaria-free Big Five alternatives that Kenya cannot offer. Pilanesberg National Park two hours from Johannesburg, and the private reserves of the Eastern Cape  Shamwari, Kariega  are fully malaria-free, making them the only Big Five destinations accessible to families with young children or travellers who cannot take antimalarials. This is a significant practical advantage that most Safari comparison guides underemphasise.

What South Africa’s safari does not offer: the open unfenced plains that define the classic East African experience. Kruger has roads and rest camps and a sense of management. It is excellent. It is not wild in the way that Kenya is wild.

Safari in Kenya Maasai Mara and beyond

The Maasai Mara National Reserve covers 1,510 square kilometres of open savannah in southwestern Kenya  but the real ecosystem is the Mara-Serengeti, which together is the largest in Africa. The sense of scale is immediately different from Kruger. The grass goes to the horizon. The acacia trees are scattered rather than dense. You can see five kilometres in every direction from a game drive vehicle. When a lion kills, you can watch the entire sequence from beginning to end because there is nothing in the way.

Kenya’s safari parks are unfenced. Animals move freely across the entire ecosystem rather than being contained within park boundaries. This gives game drives a genuine sense of wilderness that managed parks  however excellent  cannot replicate. The guides are exceptional: many Maasai and Samburu guides have grown up in the landscape they work in, and their ability to read animal behaviour comes from a lifetime of observation rather than a guiding course.

And then there is the Great Migration. Between July and October, 1.5 million wildebeest and 250,000 zebra cross the Mara River from Tanzania’s Serengeti into Kenya  the most dramatic wildlife event on earth. The river crossings, when vast herds plunge into crocodile-filled water with predators waiting on both banks, are the defining images of African wildlife. This does not happen in South Africa. If the Migration is the reason you are considering Africa, the decision is made: go to Kenya. Read our Great Migration 2026 guide for the full timing and positioning detail.

First safari and not sure which to choose? South Africa’s Kruger self-drive is the most accessible and most affordable entry point to Big Five safari in Africa. But if you have time for only one iconic wildlife experience in your life  the Migration in the Maasai Mara is it.

Read our complete first safari planning guide →

Beyond Safari: What Else Each Country Offers

South Africa beyond the bush

South Africa is the more varied country for travellers who want more than wildlife  and the gap is significant.

  • Cape Town— Table Mountain, the V&A Waterfront, Chapman’s Peak Drive, Boulders Beach penguins, Robben Island, and a restaurant and food scene that rivals any city in Africa. Time Out’s 2026 survey ranked it among the world’s top ten most beautiful cities.
  • Stellenbosch Winelands— 150+ wine estates, Cape Dutch architecture, world-class restaurants. Africa’s answer to Tuscany. Nothing comparable exists in Kenya.
  • The Garden Route— 500 kilometres of coastline, indigenous forest, lakes, and adventure sports. One of the world’s great self-drive road trips.
  • The Drakensberg— UNESCO-listed mountain range with the Sentinel Peak chain ladders, Tugela Falls, San rock art, and hiking that rivals anywhere on the continent.
  • Johannesburg— the Apartheid Museum, Vilakazi Street in Soweto, Constitution Hill, and a creative food and arts scene that most visitors miss by not staying long enough.

Kenya beyond the bush

Kenya is more focused than South Africa  most visitors come primarily for wildlife  but what it offers beyond safari is genuinely extraordinary.

  • Diani Beach— 17 kilometres of Indian Ocean coastline with coral reef, sea turtles, colobus monkeys, and world-class kitesurfing. East Africa’s finest beach destination.
  • Lamu Island — a UNESCO World Heritage medieval Swahili town with no cars, carved wooden doors, and dhow sailing on the Indian Ocean. Kenya’s most atmospheric destination.
  • Nairobi — the only capital city in the world with a national park on its doorstep. The Giraffe Centre, the Sheldrick Elephant Trust orphanage, and a food scene that has transformed in the last decade.
  • Amboseli National Park— elephants in front of Kilimanjaro. Africa’s most photographed wildlife scene, made real.
  • Maasai cultural visits — spending time with Maasai communities in and around the safari parks adds a cultural dimension to the Kenya trip that no South Africa destination quite replicates.

Cities: Cape Town vs Nairobi

Cape Town

Cape Town is one of the world’s great cities. Table Mountain rising 1,086 metres directly above the city centre. Two oceans meeting at the southern tip of the Cape Peninsula. Chapman’s Peak Drive. The Bo-Kaap neighbourhood. Robben Island. A wine region 45 minutes away. A food scene that rivals any city in Africa. Cape Town is consistently ranked among the world’s most beautiful cities  not just African cities, global cities. For travellers who want an exceptional urban experience alongside their safari, South Africa has no competition in East Africa.

Read our complete Cape Town travel guide for the full breakdown of attractions, hotels, and day trips.

Nairobi

Nairobi is misunderstood by most visitors who treat it as a transit hub. It is the only capital city in the world with a national park within its boundaries — lions, rhino, giraffe, and buffalo visible against a city skyline is a genuinely surreal experience. The Giraffe Centre, the Sheldrick Elephant Trust baby elephant mud-baths, and the David Sheldrick Wildlife Trust are world-class wildlife conservation experiences accessible from the city centre. Nairobi’s food scene has transformed significantly  the rooftop restaurant culture of Westlands, the art and gallery scene of Upper Hill, and the Karen and Langata suburbs give the city genuine character beyond its transit reputation.

Nairobi will not replace Cape Town in any honest comparison. But it is significantly more interesting than most travel guides suggest, and giving it two proper days rather than one transit night changes the experience of a Kenya trip substantially. Read our 13 best Kenya destinations guide for the full Nairobi picture.

Beaches: Indian Ocean Kenya vs Atlantic and Indian Ocean South Africa

Both countries have coastline. The quality and character differ significantly.

Kenya’s beaches

Kenya has the finest Indian Ocean beach in East Africa. Diani Beach on the South Coast runs 17 kilometres of white sand with warm turquoise water, a healthy coral reef visible from shore, the Colobus Trust sanctuary on the beach road, and an accommodation range from backpacker hostels to five-star Indian Ocean resorts. The water is warm year-round (24 to 29°C). The reef is close enough to snorkel from the beach. The Wasini Island day trip  a dhow cruise to Kisite Marine Park for dolphin snorkelling followed by seafood lunch on a traditional island  is one of the best single days available in Kenya.

Watamu, further north on the Kenya coast, has a UNESCO marine park with sea turtles, whale sharks (seasonal), and reef health that rivals anything in the Indian Ocean. Lamu Island adds cultural depth to a Kenya coast trip that no beach destination in South Africa can match. Read our best African beach destinations guide for the full East Africa beach comparison.

South Africa’s beaches

South Africa’s coastline is dramatic rather than tropical. The Atlantic Seaboard  Camps Bay, Clifton, Hout Bay  has the Twelve Apostles mountain range as its backdrop and some of the most photographed beach scenery in the world. The water is cold (14 to 18°C  this is the Atlantic Ocean), which makes swimming less appealing than photography. The Garden Route’s beaches  Wilderness, Knysna, Plettenberg Bay  offer more variety: some sheltered Indian Ocean bays that are genuinely swimmable, some dramatic cliffs and forest, some long empty stretches with almost no other visitors.

For warm-water swimming and reef experiences, Kenya wins decisively. For dramatic coastal scenery and road trip beaches, South Africa wins. For a honeymoon beach, Diani or Zanzibar versus Camps Bay  Diani wins on water temperature and reef access; Camps Bay wins on visual spectacle.

Budget: What South Africa vs Kenya Actually Costs

Expense

South Africa

Kenya

Budget safari accommodation

R800–R2,000 ($45–$110) Kruger rest camp

$100–$200 budget tented camp Maasai Mara

Mid-range safari lodge

R3,000–R8,000 ($165–$440) per person

$200–$400 per person sharing, full board

Luxury safari lodge

R10,000–R30,000+ ($550–$1,650)

$400–$800 luxury Mara camp, all-inclusive

Park entry fees

$25–$35 per day (Kruger)

Up to $200 per day (Maasai Mara peak season)

City accommodation

R1,500–R5,000 ($80–$275) Cape Town/Joburg

$60–$180 Nairobi mid-range hotel

Beach accommodation

R1,200–R4,000 ($65–$220) Garden Route

$80–$250 Diani Beach mid-range

Meals (budget to mid)

R80–R400 ($4–$22) per person

$5–$25 per person

Internal flights

$80–$150 Joburg to Cape Town

$80–$200 Nairobi to Diani or Lamu

Typical 10-day total (mid)

$1,200–$2,500 per person

$1,500–$3,000 per person

The honest budget conclusion: South Africa is meaningfully cheaper for most traveller types, primarily because Kruger’s self-drive rest camp option is far more affordable than Kenya’s guided safari camps, and Kruger’s park entry fee ($25 to $35 per day) is dramatically lower than the Maasai Mara’s peak season fee of up to $200 per day. A budget-conscious 10-day South Africa trip is achievable from $1,200 per person. An equivalent Kenya trip is difficult to do properly for under $1,500 per person. The gap widens significantly at the safari accommodation level  Kenya’s mid-range safari camps cost two to three times the equivalent South Africa rest camp.

Getting There: Flights and Accessibility

From the UK and Europe

Both countries are well-connected from European hubs. South Africa receives direct flights from London (British Airways, Virgin), Amsterdam (KLM), Frankfurt (Lufthansa), and Dubai (Emirates). Flight time from London is approximately 11 hours. Kenya Airways, British Airways, and KLM fly direct Nairobi in approximately 8 to 9 hours from London  making Kenya slightly closer in flight time. From a European perspective, both countries require a proper trip commitment rather than a long weekend. Compare flights to both countries here.

From the USA

South Africa has direct flights from New York (SAA and Delta) in approximately 15 to 17 hours. Kenya Airways flies direct from New York JFK to Nairobi in approximately 14 to 15 hours. Both require an overnight flight. American travellers making their first Africa trip often choose South Africa because the direct flight infrastructure is slightly more developed and the English-speaking, well-signposted environment feels more accessible on arrival.

From South Africa itself

If you are already in South Africa, Kenya is approximately 4 to 5 hours by direct flight from Johannesburg to Nairobi on Kenya Airways or South African Airways. The combination trip  South Africa for the first week, Kenya for the second — is one of the great two-country Africa itineraries.

Best Time to Visit: South Africa vs Kenya

Month

South Africa

Kenya

Best choice

Jan–Feb

Kruger quiet, Cape Town summer

Dry season — great predator sightings

Kenya safari or SA Cape Town

Mar–Apr

Kruger green, Cape Town cooling

Long rains start — some parks close

South Africa

May–Jun

Kruger dry season begins — excellent

Short dry window — good game viewing

Both good

Jul–Aug

Kruger peak season — cold nights

Great Migration river crossings — peak

Kenya for Migration, SA great too

Sep–Oct

Kruger excellent — spring blooms

Dry, excellent — second best window

Both excellent

Nov–Dec

Cape Town summer begins

Short rains — variable conditions

South Africa

Who Should Go Where: The Honest Verdict Per Traveller Type

Go to South Africa if you are…

A first-time Africa visitor: South Africa — Best infrastructure, self-drive safari option, malaria-free alternatives, Cape Town as a bonus.

Travelling with young children: South Africa — Pilanesberg and Eastern Cape are fully malaria-free Big Five destinations. No equivalent in Kenya.

On a budget: South Africa — Kruger self-drive rest camps from $45 per night. Maasai Mara camps start at $100+. Park fees are 5x cheaper.

A wine lover: South Africa — Stellenbosch Winelands. Full stop. Kenya has no equivalent.

A fine dining traveller: South Africa — Cape Town’s restaurant scene is world-class. Nairobi is improving but not comparable yet.

A hiker: South Africa — Drakensberg chain ladders, Table Mountain Platteklip, the Otter Trail. Kenya’s hiking is mainly around Kilimanjaro.

Wanting a city + safari + beach: South Africa — Joburg → Kruger → Cape Town → Garden Route covers all three in one logical circuit.

A self-drive traveller: South Africa — Kruger self-drive is unique in Africa. Kenya does not permit self-drive in national parks.

Seeking dramatic scenery variety: South Africa — Desert, mountains, wine valleys, coastal cliffs, open bushveld — all within one country.

Go to Kenya if you are…

Chasing the Great Migration: Kenya — July to October. The Mara River crossings. Non-negotiable if this is your Africa dream.

Wanting the classic Out of Africa experience: Kenya — Open unfenced plains, traditional tented camps, Maasai guides. The original safari.

A serious wildlife photographer: Kenya — Open plains mean unobstructed shots. The Migration light. Amboseli’s Kilimanjaro backdrop.

Wanting safari + warm Indian Ocean beach: Kenya — Maasai Mara then Diani Beach is one of Africa’s great combinations. Read our

Seeking cultural immersion alongside wildlife: Kenya — Maasai community visits, Lamu Island heritage, Swahili coastal culture — Kenya’s cultural depth is exceptional.

Wanting the wildest safari feel: Kenya — Unfenced parks, open plains, no rest camp five minutes away. Kenya feels genuinely remote in a way Kruger does not.

Planning a honeymoon: Kenya — Diani Beach luxury resorts + a private Maasai Mara camp = one of Africa’s great honeymoon itineraries.

Visiting from Europe in August: Kenya — The Migration peak window aligns with European summer holidays. Perfect timing.

How to Combine South Africa and Kenya in One Trip

Two weeks covering both countries is ambitious but achievable and rewards the effort significantly. The most logical routing:

  1. Johannesburg(2 nights) — Apartheid Museum, Soweto, Giraffe Centre day trip, adjust to Africa time
  2. Kruger National Park(3 nights) — self-drive safari or guided lodge
  3. Fly Johannesburg to Nairobi (direct, 4 to 5 hours)
  4. Maasai Mara(3 nights) — guided safari, Migration if July to October
  5. Diani Beach or Lamu Island(3 nights) — Indian Ocean decompression
  6. Fly home from Mombasa or Nairobi

This circuit gives you the full spectrum  Johannesburg’s history, Kruger’s self-drive wildlife, Nairobi’s character, the Maasai Mara’s wildness, and East Africa’s Indian Ocean coast. Most travellers who do this trip describe it as the best two weeks of their lives.

Building this two-country circuit requires careful flight booking. The Johannesburg to Nairobi connection and the Nairobi to coast domestic hop both sell out in peak season. Use the 54TravelVibes AI Trip Planner to map the full logistics.

Try the free AI Trip Planner →

Frequently Asked Questions: South Africa vs Kenya

Which is better for a first Africa safari — South Africa or Kenya?

South Africa is the better first safari destination for most travellers. The self-drive option in Kruger is unique and genuinely accessible. The infrastructure removes logistical complexity. Malaria-free options exist for families. And the park entry fees are a fraction of Kenya’s peak season rates. That said — if seeing the Great Migration is the reason you are going to Africa, Kenya is the non-negotiable answer regardless of first-timer status.

Is Kenya or South Africa more expensive?

Kenya is more expensive for safari, primarily because of higher park entry fees (up to $200 per day in the Maasai Mara versus $25 to $35 in Kruger) and the absence of a self-drive option that would allow budget accommodation. South Africa’s Kruger rest camps are the most affordable Big Five safari accommodation in Africa. A mid-range 10-day South Africa trip costs approximately $1,200 to $2,500 per person. A comparable Kenya trip runs $1,500 to $3,000.

Does Kenya have better wildlife than South Africa?

Both countries have world-class wildlife. Kenya has higher raw numbers of wildlife in the Maasai Mara and the Great Migration is a spectacle South Africa cannot offer. South Africa has more consistent Big Five sightings in private reserves like Sabi Sands, better leopard and wild dog viewing, and a wider variety of habitats. Read our Kruger vs Serengeti comparison guide for the detailed safari breakdown.

Which country has better beaches  South Africa or Kenya?

Kenya wins for warm-water Indian Ocean swimming and reef quality. Diani Beach is the finest beach destination in East Africa  warm turquoise water, healthy coral reef, and excellent infrastructure. South Africa’s Atlantic coast (Camps Bay, Clifton) is dramatically beautiful but cold. The Garden Route has some excellent Indian Ocean bays but the warmest water is still cooler than Kenya’s coast. For beach holiday prioritising swimming and snorkelling  Kenya. For dramatic coastal scenery and road trip beaches  South Africa.

Can I do both South Africa and Kenya in one trip?

Yes  the direct Johannesburg to Nairobi flight takes 4 to 5 hours and makes a two-country trip logistically straightforward. Allow 14 to 16 days minimum to do both countries justice. The most popular routing is Johannesburg → Kruger → fly to Nairobi → Maasai Mara → Diani Beach → fly home. This covers the full safari-to-coast spectrum across both countries.

Which country is better for families?

South Africa has a significant advantage for families with young children due to malaria-free safari options. Pilanesberg National Park (Big Five, two hours from Johannesburg) and several Eastern Cape private reserves operate with no malaria risk, making them accessible without antimalarial medication for children. All major Kenya safari destinations require malaria prophylaxis. South Africa also has better child-friendly tourism infrastructure overall  from family rooms in Kruger rest camps to the Garden Route activities.

What is the best time to visit Kenya vs South Africa?

For Kruger safari: May to September (dry season). For Cape Town: November to March (summer). For Maasai Mara Great Migration: July to October. For Diani Beach: July to October and December to February. The best window for a combined South Africa and Kenya trip is July to September  this covers Kruger’s dry season peak, the Migration’s peak window in the Mara, and good Diani Beach conditions simultaneously.

Book Your Trip  South Africa and Kenya

Flights to Johannesburg and Cape Town: Compare cheap flights to South Africa →

Flights to Nairobi: Compare cheap flights to Kenya →

South Africa hotels and safari lodges: Search accommodation across all South Africa destinations  on Expedia→

Kenya hotels and safari camps: Search accommodation across all Kenya destinations on Expedia →

Guided safaris and activities: Book Kruger safaris, Maasai Mara experiences and more on GetYourGuide →

Travel insurance: Get an Ekta Traveling quote — covers safari, malaria regions, and adventure activities →

Africa eSIM: Data from landing in both countries — no roaming fees with Airalo

The Final Answer: South Africa or Kenya?

South Africa for breadth, accessibility, budget flexibility, and the most varied single-country Africa experience available. Kenya for the wildest safari feel, the Great Migration, the best Indian Ocean beach in East Africa, and the deepest connection to the classic Africa that most people imagined when they first started dreaming about the continent.

If you can only choose one: South Africa is the more complete travel country. It gives you safari, city, wine country, beach, mountains, and one of the world’s great historical narratives in a single destination. Kenya gives you a more focused, more wild, more emotionally intense version of what Africa’s wildlife and landscape can be.

But here is what I genuinely believe after covering both countries in depth: the best Africa trip combines both. Not because you need to tick both boxes  but because they are different enough that each one makes you understand the continent better, and together they give you a version of Africa that no single country alone can deliver.

More reading: 14 Best Destinations in South Africa | 13 Best Destinations in Kenya | Complete Diani Beach Guide | Complete Cape Town Guide | 54 Best African Destinations

Written by Tina  . I founded 54TravelVibes to build the Africa travel guides I always wished existed.

54TravelVibes covers 54 iconic African destinations across South Africa, Kenya, Tanzania, and Morocco. Explore all destinations →