A South African safari neednt cost a packet. Our money-saving tips include going out of season, looking for online deals and doing what the locals do
The words budget and safari are not often found in the same sentence. Safaris are a notoriously expensive holiday choice. But there are ways to enjoy a bush experience for under (sometimes well under) 150 per person per night, if you do as the locals do. Despite the fall in sterlings value, the rand/pound exchange rate means that South African safaris, paid for in the local currency, continue to offer the continents best value. While many African lodges in Botswana, Kenya and Tanzania, for example, quote only in US dollars, many excellent options in South Africa do not.
All prices correct at time of writing but approximate because of fluctuations in currency exchange rates
SANParks (South African National Parks, sanparks.org) is responsible for 20 parks across the country, and its properties are much cheaper than privately operated lodges, including those that have their own concessions in the national parks.
The most traditional South African family holiday is a self-drive trip from Johannesburg to the 19,500 sq km (approximately the size of Wales) Kruger national park. Entrance for foreign adult visitors, called the standard conservation fee, is 18 a day (child 9). Bookings should be made online in advance (fee 1.20).
Accommodation options in the national parks range from campsites, huts and chalets to cottages and guesthouses, all bookable through the parks central website. In Kruger, sociable types can self-cater in one of the rest camps. The largest of these, Skukuza, offers cottages of various sizes, shops, a decent steakhouse chain restaurant, as well as play areas and swimming pools for families. A cottage for four costs from 138 a night.
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/travel/2016/nov/05/how-to-safari-south-africa-on-a-budget-holiday-guide