
Photo: Diego Delso · CC BY-SA 4.0
Namibia
Red dunes, ghostly pans, and a desert that's somehow alive.
Getting there
Namibia
Suggested length
7–10 nights for a proper loop
From
USD 200
Ideal for
Landscape and astro photographers
Namibia is the quiet showstopper of Southern Africa: vast, empty and graphically beautiful. At Sossusvlei, rust-red dunes rise hundreds of metres over the white clay pan of Deadvlei and its blackened camel-thorn trees — the most photographed landscape on the continent, for good reason.
Up north, Etosha National Park rings a blinding salt pan with floodlit waterholes where elephant, lion, rhino and giraffe gather in the dry season — game-viewing made almost effortless. Between them lie the Skeleton Coast, desert-adapted elephant and lion, the German-flavoured town of Swakopmund, and night skies dark enough to read by starlight.
It is wonderful by guided fly-in and genuinely one of Africa's great self-drive countries. As a SADC neighbour, it pairs naturally with a Botswana safari.
Highlights
- Sossusvlei and Deadvlei at sunrise
- Etosha's floodlit waterholes
- The Skeleton Coast and desert-adapted wildlife
- Swakopmund and the Namib dunes
- World-class stargazing in NamibRand
When to go
Dry season
May – OctBest game-viewing as animals crowd Etosha's waterholes; cool, clear and comfortable.
Green season
Nov – AprDramatic skies, baby animals and migrant birds; hot, with occasional rain and the lushest desert.
Getting there
Fly via Johannesburg to Windhoek (WDH), then self-drive or fly-in between lodges. We plan the route, the vehicle and the airstrips, and the cross-border link from Botswana.
Good to know
More in Across Africa
Let's plan something honest and unforgettable.
Tell us who's travelling and what you dream about. We'll come back with a considered, transparently priced plan — no pressure, no jargon.


