August is the month that the Serengeti’s reputation was built on. The dry season is at its peak. The migration herds are fully established in the north. The Mara River crossings happen with maximum frequency. The wildlife is concentrated, the predators are active, and the landscape has the dramatic quality that every safari traveler has seen in documentaries and wildlife photography. If you are visiting the Serengeti for the first time and want the most iconic possible experience, August is the month most operators recommend, and for compelling reasons. This guide tells you exactly what to expect.
August Migration: Full Northern Serengeti
By August, the full weight of the Great Migration has arrived in the northern Serengeti and the Masai Mara. The herds that total approximately 1.5 million wildebeest and 200,000 zebra are now concentrated in a relatively small geographic area straddling the Tanzania-Kenya border, creating animal densities that are among the highest of any terrestrial ecosystem on earth. The plains between the Mara River and the Kenyan border in the north are covered in wildebeest as far as the eye can see. From any slight elevation in this area, the herds stretch to every horizon and the sound of wildebeest movement, the constant low rumble of thousands of hooves on dry earth, is audible before you see them.
The Mara River crossings in August are at their most frequent. The river has multiple traditional crossing points, and the herds rotate through these locations with a rhythm that experienced guides learn to read. On the best days, three, four, or even five separate crossing events can be witnessed from a single position on the river bank. Each crossing has its own character: some are calm and orderly, with thousands of animals streaming through the water with minimal predator interaction. Others are explosive and chaotic, with multiple crocodiles engaging simultaneously, calves swept downstream, and the dense press of bodies creating a surging, heaving mass of animals that takes 20 to 30 minutes to complete.
Why August Is Particularly Special
The combination of factors that makes August so exceptional is not simply the volume of animals. It is the convergence of multiple wildlife systems operating simultaneously at peak intensity. The migration herds provide an almost limitless prey base that keeps every predator in the northern Serengeti at maximum activity. Lions follow the herds and take individuals at every opportunity. Leopards patrol the riverine woodland and pick off animals resting near the water. Cheetahs operate on the open plains adjacent to the main herds, taking zebra foals and weakened wildebeest. Spotted hyena clans trail the crossings and take animals injured or disoriented in the crossing chaos. Even the crocodiles, which can go weeks between large feeding opportunities during the dry season, are at maximum activity during the August crossing season.
Beyond predator-prey dynamics, August is when the Serengeti’s resident wildlife is most visible. The dry season grass has shortened to its annual minimum, giving visibility across the plains that the taller wet season grass makes impossible. Waterholes and rivers are the only water sources, drawing prey species in concentrated numbers that in turn attract predators. Every drive in August has a quality of wildlife density that dry-season visitors from other months can only match occasionally and peak-season competitors cannot surpass.
Positioning for August: Northern Serengeti is Essential
For August, there is really only one correct answer to the question of where to be: the northern Serengeti. The Kogatende area, accessible by charter flight to Kogatende Airstrip, is the epicenter of the Mara River crossing action. Camps positioned within 10 to 15 kilometres of the main crossing points on the Mara River are the best positioned for the crossing experience. The difference between a camp 5km from the river and one 40km away is the difference between spending your morning at the crossing and spending your morning driving to it.
Several outstanding camps operate in the northern Serengeti with precisely this positioning. Among them, Lamai Serengeti (Nomad Tanzania), Sayari Camp (Asilia Africa), and Lemala Kuria Hills offer the combination of close river access, excellent guiding, and the quality of accommodation that makes a premium August stay feel worthwhile.
Managing the Crowds in August
The vehicle density around Mara River crossing points in August is the most significant negative aspect of visiting this month. At a major crossing, the number of vehicles waiting on the bank can exceed 30 to 40. The experience of watching thousands of wildebeest plunge into a river is spectacular regardless of how many vehicles are present, but there is an aesthetic dimension to the crowding that genuinely detracts from the wilderness experience for some visitors.
The best strategies for managing this are: choosing a camp in a private conservancy rather than inside the national reserve where possible, asking your guide specifically to find smaller herds at quieter crossing points, timing your visits to the river for early morning before the main vehicle surge arrives, and accepting that the crossing itself transcends the crowd around it. When the crossing erupts, no amount of vehicle density makes the event itself anything less than extraordinary.
Weather in August
August is the driest month in the Serengeti. Days are clear, bright, and warm: daytime highs typically reach 26 to 29 degrees Celsius. The air is exceptionally clear, with visibility that allows you to see individual animals at distances that would be impossible in the haze of the wet season. Nights are cold, particularly in the northern zone: pre-dawn temperatures regularly drop to 10 to 12 degrees Celsius and occasionally lower. Warm clothing for early morning drives is essential. Rain in August is extremely unlikely: most years see no measurable rainfall at all during this month.
August Costs
August is expensive. Peak season rates across all accommodation categories in the Serengeti apply in August, and for the most sought-after camps in the northern zone, the premium over other months can be 30% to 50%. A luxury camp at the Mara River area in August may cost ,200 to ,000 USD per person per night. These rates reflect genuine demand: the best camps in the best positions for the best month genuinely are worth the premium for travelers who can afford it. For those who cannot, the same wildlife experience is available in July and September at marginally lower rates, or the calving season in February provides an equally spectacular but different experience at significantly lower prices.
August Verdict
August in the Serengeti is exactly what it claims to be: the most iconic, the most wildlife-dense, the most photographed, and the most expensive month of the year. For first-time visitors who have been dreaming of this experience for years and are prepared to plan and budget accordingly, August delivers everything it promises and occasionally more. The Mara River crossing is one of those relatively rare natural spectacles that consistently matches or exceeds the expectation built by photographs and films. Come in August, position yourself correctly, choose your camp wisely, and prepare to have your conception of what wildlife viewing can be permanently recalibrated.
August 2027: When to Book
August 2027 Serengeti bookings should be placed by December 2026 at the latest. The northern Serengeti’s half-dozen Mara River camp options — including Sayari Camp, Kogatende Tented Camp, Ubuntu Migration Camp — have limited capacity and August fills 9 to 12 months in advance for premium properties. Contact our team now to confirm availability for August 2027.