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Serengeti vs Maasai Mara

They are, in a real sense, the same wilderness split by a border: the Maasai Mara in Kenya is the northern tip of the same ecosystem as Tanzania's Serengeti, and the Great Migration loops between them. The honest short answer is that the Serengeti is vast, remote and best for scale and a multi-week sense of wilderness, while the Maasai Mara is smaller, denser and easier to reach, with famously concentrated big cats. Which wins comes down to timing, budget and how much travel you'll tolerate.

One ecosystem, two names

This trips people up, so it's worth being clear. The Serengeti and the Mara are not rival destinations so much as two ends of a single landscape that the wildebeest herds move through year-round. The Serengeti National Park is the enormous Tanzanian portion; the Maasai Mara National Reserve is the much smaller Kenyan portion to its north. Cross the unmarked border and the grass, the animals and the herds carry straight on. So the real question isn't "which has the migration" — both do, at different times — but "which end, in which month, suits the trip you want."

Size and the feeling of the place

The Serengeti is roughly fifteen times the size of the Maasai Mara reserve, and you feel it. It's a place of genuine scale: endless plains running to a flat horizon, long drives between regions, and a sense of remoteness that the sheer size protects. You can spend a week moving through different parts of it and barely repeat yourself. That scale is the draw — and also the cost, in travel time and often in money.

The Maasai Mara is compact, rolling and green, cut by the Mara and Talek rivers and dotted with the lone acacias of a thousand postcards. Because it's small, sightings come quickly — you're rarely far from animals, and a half-day drive can deliver a lot. The trade-off is that the same compactness concentrates the vehicles, especially in peak season. Big in the Serengeti means wilderness; small in the Mara means efficiency.

The Great Migration: who has it, and when

This is the heart of the decision, because the migration is constantly moving and neither reserve "has" it all year. In very rough terms, the herds spend most of the year inside the greater Serengeti and only push into the Maasai Mara for a few months around the middle of the year. A simplified calendar:

So if your heart is set on the dramatic river crossings, you're looking at the Maasai Mara, roughly July to October (the northern Serengeti also delivers crossings in the same window, with fewer vehicles). If you'd rather see calving, newborn-chasing predators and quieter camps, that's the southern Serengeti in January–February. The exact timing shifts year to year with the rains, which is why pinning real dates with someone watching this season matters. Our guide to the best time to go on safari lays out how the seasons move both the wildlife and the price.

The river crossings, specifically

The crossings — herds plunging through crocodile-filled rivers — are the single most sought-after spectacle in African safari, and they're worth understanding honestly. They are not scheduled. A crossing happens when the herds decide to move, which can be a long, hot, patient wait at a river for something that may take hours to start or not happen that day at all. When it does, it's unforgettable; but going in expecting a guaranteed, on-demand show is the surest way to be let down. Build in several days during crossing season rather than betting everything on one afternoon, and treat the wait itself as part of it.

Crowds and exclusivity

Because the Mara is small and its crossing season is short and famous, popular sightings there can draw a cluster of vehicles in July–October — that's the honest downside. The Serengeti's size disperses people more, and its northern sector during crossing season is noticeably quieter than the Mara for the same spectacle. In both, the way to escape the crowds is the same: stay in or beside a private conservancy rather than only inside the main reserve. The conservancies cap vehicle numbers, allow off-road driving and night drives, and trade busy roadsides for space — at a higher price.

Cost and getting there

Kenya's Maasai Mara is usually the more accessible and often the slightly cheaper of the two to reach: it's a short hop from Nairobi by light aircraft or a long-but-doable road transfer, which keeps a Mara trip relatively compact. The Serengeti's scale tends to cost more to cover, frequently involving internal flights between regions and more nights to do it justice, so a Serengeti-led trip often runs longer and pricier. Park and conservation fees are significant in both and are a fixed part of any quote — we break down where the money actually goes in how much a safari really costs.

What pairs well with each

Each reserve slots naturally into a wider trip. The Serengeti pairs beautifully with the Ngorongoro Crater and, for a honeymoon, a Zanzibar beach finish on the Tanzanian coast — the classic "icons plus a beach" route. The Maasai Mara combines easily with the rest of Kenya's parks and its strong cultural offering, and the short flights make a varied multi-park trip painless. If you're choosing not just between the two reserves but between the countries around them, Tanzania, Kenya or Botswana compares them on wildlife, cost and vibe.

Quick decision guide

You can also do both in one trip, since they're one ecosystem — but for a single, well-paced visit, matching one reserve to your season and priorities beats splitting your days thin. When you're ready to put real dates against this, we map the where-and-when and check flights and stays for you when you plan your trip.

The honest takeaway: there's no wrong answer, because it's the same magnificent wilderness either way. Let two things decide it — when you can travel and what you most want to witness. Pick the Mara for the crossings and convenience, the Serengeti for scale and quieter drama, give yourself enough days for the migration to cooperate, and let a trusted local operator pin the exact camps to the month you're going.


Before you go

A few practical bits worth sorting before you travel.

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