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Etosha Cost per Day Planner: What Good Value Looks Like

Understanding Etosha Daily Costs

Breaking an Etosha safari down to cost per person per day clarifies value and helps you identify where your money is going. Some daily costs are fixed; others are highly variable. This planner shows you what good value looks like at each budget tier.

Fixed Daily Costs (Per Person)

CostAmount (NAD)Notes
Park entry (international adult)NAD 180Non-negotiable; same for all visitors
Vehicle fee (shared)NAD 5NAD 10/vehicle/day ÷ 2 people
Total fixedNAD 185Per person per day

Variable Daily Costs

CategoryBudgetMid-RangeLuxury
Accommodation per personNAD 110 (camping ÷ 2)NAD 900–1,750NAD 4,500+
Food per personNAD 150 (self-cater)NAD 350–500Included
Vehicle + fuel per personNAD 500–800NAD 700–1,200Included or NAD 700
Activities per personNAD 0–200NAD 200–500Included

Total Daily Cost (Per Person)

TierDaily Cost Per Person3 Nights Total (2 pax)
Budget (camping + self-catering)NAD 950–1,200NAD 5,700–7,200
Mid-range (bungalow + restaurant)NAD 2,100–3,500NAD 12,600–21,000
Luxury (Onkoshi/Dolomite all-incl.)NAD 5,500–9,000NAD 33,000–54,000

Value Benchmarks

Budget Tier: NAD 1,000–1,500/person/day

This is genuinely good value for a national park with this calibre of wildlife. The Serengeti costs 3–4× more per day at entry fees alone. Etosha camping at this price point delivers world-class wildlife viewing.

Mid-Range Tier: NAD 2,000–3,500/person/day

Standard for quality Namibia safari accommodation. Your money buys comfort, a restaurant, and safari infrastructure. The wildlife itself (which is what you came for) costs the same as for a budget visitor.

Luxury Tier: NAD 5,000+/person/day

Justified when the accommodation experience itself is part of the goal — Onkoshi’s pan views, Dolomite’s exclusivity. The wildlife per Namibian Dollar is no better than budget, but the overall experience is transformative.

Where to Get the Best Value

  • Best wildlife value: Any inside-park NWR camp (identical access at all price points)
  • Best overall value tier: Mid-range NWR bungalow — good comfort + full wildlife access
  • Worst value: Outside luxury lodge at peak season — high cost + gate-time wildlife penalty
  • Hidden value: Night drive (NAD 350–500/person) — highest wildlife return per Rand of any activity

Next decision steps

Quick budget FAQ

Should I cut stops or comfort first when downgrading?

Usually reduce route complexity before removing core comfort needed for transfer resilience.

What should I upgrade first with extra budget?

Upgrade route logic and fatigue reduction before cosmetic luxury.

Can I request a no-obligation optimized route?

Yes. Review upgrade/downgrade trade-offs before booking.

Let us help you plan the perfect Etosha safari — self-drive or guided, any budget.

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