The Roof of Africa

Mountains & Trekking

Kilimanjaro · 5,895 m 3 trekking experiences 3 climbing safaris

Peak spotlight

Mount Kilimanjaro

Mount Kilimanjaro is a large dormant volcano in Tanzania. It is the highest mountain in Africa and the highest free-standing mountain above sea level in the world, at 5,895 m (19,341 ft) above sea level and 4,900 m (16,100 ft) above its plateau base. It is also the highest volcano in the Eastern Hemisphere and the fourth most prominent peak on Earth.

Source: Wikipedia (CC BY-SA)

Technical facts

  • Elevation: 5,895 m

Trekking Experiences

Gorilla Trekking — Bwindi Impenetrable Forest

Track mountain gorillas on foot through Bwindi, home to roughly half the world's remaining population.

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Photo: Balazs Simon / Pexels

Kilimanjaro Summit Trek

Stand atop Africa's highest peak at 5,895m — the world's highest free-standing mountain, via Lemosho or Marangu route.

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Chimpanzee Trekking — Mahale Mountains

Track wild chimpanzees on the remote, forested shores of Lake Tanganyika — one of Africa's most secluded wildlife experiences.

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Trekking & Climbing Safaris

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14 Days Photo: Elliot PARIS / Unsplash

14-Day Grand Tanzania (Safari + Kilimanjaro + Zanzibar)

The full Tanzania trilogy — safari, summit, and sea — in one trip, for travelers who want it all in…

From $5,000 pp

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8 Days Photo: Vishva Patel / Pexels

8-Day Mahale Chimpanzee Trekking + Katavi

Remote western Tanzania at its wildest — chimpanzee trekking with trained trackers in Mahale, paired with Katavi's untouched wilderness.

From $5,500 pp

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10 Days Photo: G N / Pexels

10-Day Tanzania Safari + Rwanda Gorilla Trekking

A Tanzania safari paired with mountain gorilla trekking in Rwanda's Volcanoes National Park — two of Africa's defining wildlife encounters…

From $7,000 pp

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More Peaks & Ranges

Mahale Mountains National Park

Mahale Mountains National Park combines chimpanzee trekking with the pristine shores of Lake Tanganyika in one of Africa's most remote and exclusive destinations. Accessible…

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Route matcher

How many days do you need?

Answer three things and we'll tell you the minimum you should book — and which routes actually meet it.

The seven ways up

Choosing your Kilimanjaro route

The route you pick matters more than your fitness. Every one of these reaches the same summit — what differs is how many nights your body gets to adapt on the way. Sorted by acclimatisation profile, best first.

Lemosho

7–8 days · West · Camping

Acclimatisation
Crowds

Widely regarded as the most scenic way up. Approaches through remote western rainforest, crosses the Shira Plateau, then joins the southern circuit — giving a long, gradual ascent with natural "climb high, sleep low" days.

Best for
Most first-time climbers who want the best balance of scenery and acclimatisation.
Trade-off
Its reputation has made it busy — it is now among the most-used routes on the mountain.

Sources consistently favour the 8-day version over the 7-day: the extra night is spent acclimatising, not walking.

Northern Circuit

8–9 days · West, then circles the north · Camping

Acclimatisation
Crowds

The longest route on the mountain, circling the quiet northern slopes before summiting. More nights at altitude than any other option, and by far the most solitude.

Best for
Anyone whose priority is reaching the top, and who can afford the extra days.
Trade-off
Costs more and demands more time. Longer walking days than Lemosho.

The newest of the seven routes — created in 2014 — which is why little long-run park data exists for it.

Machame the "Whiskey" route

6–7 days · South-west · Camping

Acclimatisation
Crowds

The most popular route on Kilimanjaro. Steeper and more physically demanding than Lemosho, but its profile threads Lava Tower and the Barranco Valley, building in strong "climb high, sleep low" acclimatisation when taken over 7 days.

Best for
Fit hikers who want dramatic terrain and good value.
Trade-off
Busy, and genuinely steep in places. The 6-day version compresses acclimatisation.

Take the 7-day itinerary. The 6-day version is where most of this route's difficulty reputation comes from.

Rongai

6–7 days · North (near the Kenyan border) · Camping

Acclimatisation
Crowds

The only route approaching from the north. A gentle, steady gradient through genuine wilderness, with far fewer people than the southern trails.

Best for
Climbing in the wet months, or anyone wanting solitude and an easier gradient underfoot.
Trade-off
Less scenic variety, and a long summit night — it reaches the crater rim well away from Uhuru Peak.

The north side sits in a rain shadow and stays markedly drier, which is why it is the standard recommendation during the rains.

Marangu the "Coca-Cola" route

5–6 days · South-east (ascends and descends the same way) · Huts (dormitory)

Acclimatisation
Crowds

The oldest and most established trail, and the only one with hut accommodation rather than tents. Comfortable underfoot — but short, which is exactly the problem.

Best for
Those who genuinely cannot camp, or are travelling in poor weather.
Trade-off
The shortest schedule on the mountain, so the least time to acclimatise. Same path up and down, so less varied.

Frequently mistaken for the "easy" route because of the huts. Underfoot it is easy; physiologically it is not.

Shira

7–8 days · West (vehicle drop-off at 3,500m) · Camping

Acclimatisation
Crowds

Effectively an older variant of Lemosho, but you are driven straight to roughly 3,500m and start walking from there.

Best for
Climbers already acclimatised to altitude — rarely the right call otherwise.
Trade-off
That vehicle drop-off is a large, sudden altitude gain before the body has adapted, and symptoms can begin on day one.

Largely superseded by Lemosho. Some operators market a "Lemosho with high-altitude drop-off" — in practice, that is this route.

Umbwe

6–7 days · South · Camping

Acclimatisation
Crowds

The steepest and most direct line to the summit. Quiet, wild and demanding.

Best for
Experienced, altitude-tested climbers only.
Trade-off
A very fast ascent leaves little room to acclimatise, and the sources agree this shows in outcomes.

Most reputable operators steer people away from this route, and we do too.

Why we don't publish a summit success rate

You will see confident numbers everywhere — 90%, 95%, 98%. We have chosen not to add ours to the pile, for three reasons.

  • The published figures don't reconcile. Kilimanjaro National Park's historical rate across all routes was around 45%. Individual operators routinely claim 90–98% on their own preferred routes. Both cannot describe the same mountain.
  • "Summit" isn't even one thing. Gilman's Point, Stella Point and Uhuru Peak all earn a park certificate — so an operator can count a climber who stopped well short of the true summit as a success.
  • Nobody audits any of it. Every rate you read is self-reported by the company selling you the climb. Ours would be too, which is precisely why it would be worthless to you.

What the sources do agree on is the mechanism, and it is not controversial: more nights on the mountain means better acclimatisation, and better acclimatisation means more people reach the top. That is why the comparison above ranks routes by acclimatisation rather than by a number we would be making up. If you want the best odds, take the longest route you can afford — that advice is free, and it is the same advice we would give a friend.

Kit

What to actually bring

The layers that decide your summit night

  • Insulated down jacket (summit night is routinely below freezing)
  • Waterproof, breathable shell — jacket and trousers
  • Fleece or softshell mid-layer
  • Thermal base layers, top and bottom (merino or synthetic — not cotton)
  • Insulated gloves plus thin liner gloves
  • Warm hat, plus a buff or balaclava for wind

Feet

  • Broken-in waterproof hiking boots — never new ones
  • Wool hiking socks, several pairs
  • Gaiters for scree and dust on the descent
  • Camp shoes for the evenings

The things people forget

  • Headtorch with spare batteries — summit night starts around midnight
  • Sunglasses (category 3–4): the glare at altitude is severe
  • High-SPF sunscreen and lip balm — UV rises sharply with elevation
  • Two 1-litre bottles or a bladder, plus an insulated cover so it doesn't freeze
  • Trekking poles — they save your knees on the long descent
  • Personal medication, blister plasters, rehydration salts

Most of the heavy kit can be hired in Moshi or Arusha — ask us before you spend money on a down jacket you will wear once.

Altitude & Fitness — What to Know

Kilimanjaro is a trek, not a technical climb — but altitude is the real challenge, not fitness. Most cases of Acute Mountain Sickness (AMS) are mild: headache, nausea, fatigue. Taken seriously and managed with a slow ascent, the vast majority of climbers reach the summit safely.

The Golden Rules

  • Walk slowly — "pole pole" (slowly slowly) is not a suggestion, it's the strategy.
  • Choose a longer route (7–8 days) for better acclimatization and higher summit success rates.
  • Stay hydrated and eat, even without appetite at altitude.
  • Report symptoms to your guide immediately — descent is always the correct response to worsening AMS.

Talk to us about which route fits your fitness level and timeline — we'll walk you through the honest trade-offs, not just sell you the most expensive option.

Don't Just Take Our Word For It

★★★★★

“Every detail was handled. Our guide knew exactly where the migration was before it happened.”

Laura M. — United Kingdom

★★★★★

“Transparent pricing, fast WhatsApp replies, and a trip that exceeded what we paid for.”

David & Priya K. — Singapore

★★★★★

“Felt like we had a local expert friend planning the whole thing, not a booking agency.”

Sofia R. — Brazil

★★★★★

“Second safari with them and still no surprises on the invoice — just the animals surprised us.”

Marcus T. — Germany

★★★★★

“Our guide rerouted the whole day around a sighting he'd heard about on the radio at 6am. That's the difference.”

Amina H. — United Arab Emirates

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