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User Reviews of Lake Manyara National Park (293 Reviews)

Lake Manyara Safaris Lake Manyara National Park
Sort By: Date Most Helpful 101-107 of 107 Reviews

Average User Rating

3.9761 / 5 4 /5
3.8719 / 5 4.2270 / 5 3.9394 / 5 4.0931 / 5

Rating Breakdown

5 star 107 / 7 107
4 star 93 / 7 93
3 star 74 / 7 74
2 star 17 / 7 17
1 star 2 / 7 2
Write a User Review
Male avatar icon Ungsu Shin South Korea flag KR       Visited: December 2024 Reviewed: Jan 22, 2025

Email Ungsu Shin  |  35-50 years of age  |  Experience level: first safari

5 / 5 5 /5
3 / 5 3 / 5 3 / 5 3 / 5

There are not many wild animals and there is a boring feeling.

Female avatar icon Monika Heinrichs Germany flag DE       Visited: December 2024 Reviewed: Jan 29, 2025

Email Monika Heinrichs  |  65+ years of age  |  Experience level: 2-5 safaris

5 / 5 5 /5
5 / 5 5 / 5 5 / 5 5 / 5

all was wonderful

Female avatar icon Ana Portugal flag PT       Visited: January 2025 Reviewed: Feb 8, 2025

Email Ana  |  35-50 years of age  |  Experience level: first safari

5 / 5 5 /5
5 / 5 5 / 5 5 / 5 5 / 5

Lake Manyara has such a beautiful vegatation with huge trees - even without the animals, the park itself, the lake and the vegetation would be worthy!
This was also the park with less cars and people, and I felt less stress within the animals.

Male avatar icon Joel United States flag US       Visited: March 2025 Reviewed: Mar 1, 2025

Email Joel  |  20-35 years of age  |  Experience level: first safari

Heaven for elephants and baboons

5 / 5 5 /5
5 / 5 5 / 5 5 / 5 3 / 5
This place must be heaven for elephants, because we saw so many. They're so chill here and got incredibly close to our vehicle. I loved that it was a forested park, which was a nice change of scenery from the Serengeti. I also loved watching the huge troops of baboons - apparently this park has the highest concentration of baboons of any park in Africa. We also got lucky and saw 5 lions, including one up in a tree and one eating a baboon in a bush. Though I wouldn't count on this because our guide said many times he's been to Lake Manyara and not seen any lions.

Lake Manyara also gives you the opportunity to go on a walking safari. An armed park ranger took us on an hour and a half hike, which was an excellent experience getting to experience the bush on foot and learn about the plants and animal signs from the ranger. We got lucky and saw a mother and juvenile elephants drinking at a stream. Wow, what a thrill! It was actually pretty intense because the mother
Read more started walking in our direction and could have easily charged over the stream, but the park ranger handled it with aplomb and made some loud noises to turn the elephant around.

Lake Manyara was our last stop on our safari. To me I enjoyed it just as much as the heavy hitters like Serengeti and Ngorongoro Crater. Better than Tarangire (though I saw Tarangire in February and it's probably better in the dry season when the wildlife is more concentrated).
Female avatar icon Jan United Kingdom flag GB       Visited: January 2025 Reviewed: Mar 2, 2025

Email Jan  |  50-65 years of age  |  Experience level: first safari

5 / 5 5 /5
5 / 5 5 / 5 5 / 5 5 / 5

Beautiful ark, less busy than the others, very green with lots of trees

Male avatar icon Kevin United States flag US       Visited: July 2025 Reviewed: Jul 30, 2025

Email Kevin  |  50-65 years of age  |  Experience level: first safari

5 / 5 5 /5
4 / 5 4 / 5 5 / 5 5 / 5

Lake Manyara was a nice trip. We did not see as many animals as we did in the other parks. No tree climbing lions. We did see hippos, giraffes, buffalo, several birds including pelican and flamingo, and more.

Male avatar icon Gianluca de Caprio Italy flag IT       Visited: July 2025 Reviewed: Aug 11, 2025

Email Gianluca de Caprio  |  50-65 years of age  |  Experience level: 2-5 safaris

5 / 5 5 /5
5 / 5 5 / 5 5 / 5 0 / 5

Lake Manyara Park is a stunning place: it looks more like an asian jungle than an african forest. The trees are full of monkeys. Elephants emerge from the thick forest, breaking trees. Over the years, the lake has expanded, incorporating the dying trees from the banks, forming a spectacular petrified forest that emerges from the waters, a truly evocative sight.