Etosha National Park from Johannesburg is realistic two ways: a 2-day overland drive via the Trans-Kalahari Highway (~1,900 km) or a 2.5-hour flight to Windhoek + 5-hour drive north. Most travellers fly; serious overlanders drive. This guide covers both, including border-post timing, ZAR-equivalent costs, and what South African residents need to know about Namibian self-drive.
Option 1: Fly Joburg to Windhoek, then drive
The default for most South African Etosha trips. Direct flights from O.R. Tambo (JNB) to Hosea Kutako (WDH) take 2.5 hours; Airlink and South African Airways operate daily.
- JNB → WDH flight: ZAR 4,500–7,500 return economy, 2h 25m flight
- WDH airport → Etosha (Andersson Gate): 470 km, 5 hours drive on tarred B1/C38
- Total time door-to-park: 8–9 hours including airport time and customs
Most flights land mid-morning or early afternoon. Practical pattern: arrive WDH late morning, collect rental, overnight Windhoek, drive to Etosha next day. Tight schedules sometimes fly + drive same day, but you’ll arrive after dark.
Option 2: Drive Joburg to Etosha overland
Total: 1,900–2,000 km depending on route. 2 days minimum, comfortable in 3 days. Border crossings are the rate-limit; the driving itself is straightforward tar through SA and Botswana.
Trans-Kalahari Highway (the standard SA overland route)
- Day 1: Joburg → Lobatse (Botswana border via Pioneer Gate) → Gaborone → overnight Ghanzi (Kalahari Plains country) — ~1,000 km, 11 hours including border
- Day 2: Ghanzi → Mamuno border → Windhoek → overnight Windhoek — ~700 km, 8 hours
- Day 3: Windhoek → Etosha — 470 km, 5 hours
Border post timing
- Pioneer Gate (SA → BWA): opens 06:00–22:00. Aim for 09:00 to avoid commercial truck queues.
- Mamuno (BWA → NAM): opens 06:00–24:00 weekdays, similar weekends. Quieter than Pioneer.
- Documentation: passport (3+ months validity, 2+ blank pages), vehicle registration, valid SA driver’s licence (international permit not strictly required for SA citizens but useful), cross-border letter from rental company if hired car, third-party insurance certificate (CBP), and a yellow road-tax sticker for Botswana (BWP 90 at the border).
Cost in ZAR (NAD is pegged 1:1 to ZAR)
| Item | Fly + drive | Drive overland |
|---|---|---|
| JNB→WDH return flight | ZAR 5,500 | — |
| Vehicle (rental + fuel) | ZAR 6,500 (5 days, sedan) | ZAR 8,500 (8 days own car, fuel only) |
| Border + cross-border insurance | — | ZAR 700 |
| Etosha entry (couple, 4 days) | ZAR 2,250 | ZAR 2,250 |
| NWR accommodation (4 nights, mid-tier) | ZAR 8,500 | ZAR 8,500 |
| Food + extras | ZAR 3,000 | ZAR 4,500 |
| Total per couple | ZAR 25,750 | ZAR 24,450 |
Driving overland saves marginal cost but costs 4–5 days of holiday time. For most SA travellers, flying is the better trade-off unless the overland drive is part of the experience.
Specific notes for South African self-drivers
- NAD ↔ ZAR: Namibian dollars are pegged 1:1 to ZAR. Most Namibian businesses accept ZAR cash. Avoid the airport bureau de change fees.
- Cell coverage: Vodacom/MTN roaming works on MTC and Telecom Namibia networks; expect roaming charges. A local SIM (MTC NAD 30 prepaid) is cheaper for trips longer than 4 days.
- Speed limits: Namibia 120 km/h on highways, 60 in towns. Speed traps active around Windhoek and Otjiwarongo.
- Fuel cards: SA fuel cards (Discovery, FNB) don’t work in Namibia. Carry NAD/ZAR cash for fuel until you confirm card acceptance.
- Time zone: Namibia is on Central Africa Time (UTC+2) year-round — same as SA standard time. No DST shift to worry about.
Plan your Joburg to Etosha trip
Whether you’re flying or driving overland, we can coordinate the Namibian leg — vehicle hire from WDH, NWR camp bookings, lodge stays in Damaraland or Waterberg if you want to extend, and gate-timing logistics. ZAR pricing throughout. WhatsApp or send a written enquiry.