When Is the Best Time to Visit Etosha National Park?
The best time to visit Etosha National Park depends entirely on what you want most from the trip. Wildlife density, photography conditions, crowd levels, and comfort all peak at different times. This guide gives you an honest month-by-month breakdown.
Which Month Is Best for Your Wildlife Priority?
| Your Priority | Best Months |
|---|---|
| Maximum wildlife sightings | July–October |
| Fewest crowds | January–April |
| Best value/rates | January–May |
| Flamingo on the pan | November–March |
| Photography (dramatic light) | November–January (storms) or June–August (golden hour) |
| Comfortable temperatures | May–August |
| School holiday travel | July or December |
Month-by-Month Breakdown
January
- Season: Green peak (wet)
- Wildlife: Dispersed; harder to find; calving season for zebra and wildebeest
- Pan: Often flooded — flamingo possible
- Temperature: 34°C highs; 19°C nights; humid
- Crowds: Low-moderate (school holidays effect)
- Verdict: Best for birders and photographers seeking green landscapes and dramatic storm skies
February
- Season: Green peak
- Wildlife: Calving season; predators follow herds; flamingo on pan
- Temperature: 34°C highs
- Crowds: Low
- Verdict: Quiet, green, good for specialists. Not ideal for first-timers wanting reliable sightings
March
- Season: Transitional (rains easing)
- Wildlife: Improving as water sources consolidate; birding still exceptional
- Temperature: 33°C highs; cooling slightly
- Crowds: Low
- Verdict: Good shoulder option; improving conditions at reasonable rates
April
- Season: Early dry
- Wildlife: Grass thinning; visibility improving; waterholes beginning to concentrate animals
- Temperature: 31°C highs; pleasant
- Crowds: Low
- Verdict: Underrated month — good sightings developing, few other visitors
May
- Season: Dry (early)
- Wildlife: Good and improving; waterholes active
- Temperature: 29°C highs; cool mornings (11°C)
- Crowds: Low-moderate
- Verdict: Excellent value; strong sightings; before peak-season prices
June
- Season: Dry (cool)
- Wildlife: Excellent — dry-season concentration begins
- Temperature: 26°C highs; cold mornings (7°C) — bring layers
- Crowds: Moderate (rising)
- Verdict: Great choice — superb game viewing, manageable crowds, cool comfortable weather
July
- Season: Dry (cool) — peak season
- Wildlife: Outstanding; large herds at waterholes daily
- Temperature: 26°C highs; 7°C mornings
- Crowds: High — book 4–6 months ahead
- Verdict: Classic Etosha at its best; busiest period but for good reason
August
- Season: Dry (warming)
- Wildlife: Outstanding; predator activity high
- Temperature: 29°C highs; 10°C mornings
- Crowds: High
- Verdict: Slightly warmer than July; still peak season; every bit as good for sightings
September
- Season: Dry (hot)
- Wildlife: Peak sightings — animals desperate for water; largest herds of year
- Temperature: 33°C highs; 14°C mornings
- Crowds: Moderate-high
- Verdict: Arguably the best month for sheer volume of sightings; heat is manageable with planning
October
- Season: Dry (very hot)
- Wildlife: Extreme — waterholes at maximum activity
- Temperature: 37°C+ highs; can reach 40°C
- Crowds: Moderate
- Verdict: Extraordinary wildlife but genuinely hot midday; plan all activity for early morning and late afternoon
November
- Season: Transitional (first storms)
- Wildlife: Excellent early month; animals alert and active before rains; flamingo arrive late November
- Temperature: 36°C highs but storms break the heat
- Crowds: Lower
- Verdict: Dynamic, beautiful, less crowded; excellent for photographers
December
- Season: Green (early wet)
- Wildlife: Mixed — holiday crowds but animals dispersing with rain
- Temperature: 34°C highs
- Crowds: Moderate-high (holiday season)
- Verdict: Christmas/New Year period busy; choose early December for better sightings before full wet season