Angama Mara Review — Is This Kenya’s Finest Safari Lodge?

Angama Mara Review — Is This Kenya’s Finest Safari Lodge?

Angama Mara sits on the edge of the Great Rift Valley, 300 metres above the Masai Mara. The view from the main deck — an unbroken sweep of savannah stretching to the horizon, the Mara River threading through it — is one of the most famous in African hospitality. It is the view that launched a thousand Instagram posts and a fair number of marriage proposals.

But a view does not make a safari lodge. After two stays and dozens of clients sent there, I can tell you what Angama Mara actually delivers once the view has settled into the background.

The Location — Why It Matters

Angama Mara is located on the Oloololo Escarpment, on the western boundary of the Masai Mara National Reserve. This is significant for two reasons. First, the escarpment gives the lodge its defining characteristic — that elevated position, suspended between the sky and the plains below. Second, and more importantly for the safari experience, the western Mara is where many of the river crossings during the Great Migration take place. The Mara River runs directly below the lodge.

During Migration season (July to October), guests at Angama can be at the river within a 30-minute drive. During the rest of the year, the western Mara offers excellent resident game viewing — lion, leopard, cheetah, elephant and buffalo are all present year-round. The area is less visited than the central Mara Triangle, which means fewer vehicles at sightings.

The Tented Suites

There are 30 tented suites in two camps of 15, set into the hillside below the main area. Each tent has floor-to-ceiling glass on the valley-facing side — a design choice that would feel wrong anywhere else but here is justified entirely. You wake to the view. You fall asleep to it. The canvas and glass combination creates an experience that is both immersed in the bush and protected from it.

The tents are spacious (approximately 100 square metres), well-designed, and feel considerably more refined than most safari accommodation. The bathrooms are generous. The mini-bar is complimentary. The Wi-Fi works, though using it feels slightly like checking your phone during a cathedral service.

One detail worth noting: the walk from the main area to the tents is steep. Angama is built on a hillside, and the paths descend significantly. This is not a flat-ground camp. It is not prohibitive — the paths are well-maintained and there are vehicles available — but it is worth knowing if mobility is a consideration.

“Angama changed what I thought a safari camp could be. It is not roughing it in luxury. It is genuine refinement, suspended above the Mara.” — Manny, Adventure & Safari Specialist

The Guiding

Guiding at Angama is excellent. The guides are Maasai and Kenyan, experienced, and genuinely knowledgeable about both the ecology and the local culture. Game drives are in custom-built Land Cruisers with pop-up roofs. The maximum is 6 guests per vehicle, which is standard for luxury Kenya camps.

What sets Angama apart on the guiding front is the bush breakfasts and the flexibility. Guides will adjust the drive to what is happening in the reserve on any given morning — if there is a kill nearby, you go. If the river crossing is active, you go. The schedule serves the wildlife, not the other way around.

The Photographic Studio

Angama has an on-site photographic studio staffed by a professional photographer. This is one of the features that sets it apart from other Mara camps. Guests can borrow professional camera equipment (including long telephoto lenses), get in-field guidance during game drives, and have their images processed and printed at the studio. For keen photographers, this alone is a reason to choose Angama over comparable lodges.

Dining

Dining at Angama is varied, well-executed and served in constantly changing locations. Breakfast on the deck overlooking the valley. Lunch in the shamba (garden). Dinner under the stars, or in the boma (outdoor enclosure), or occasionally as a bush dinner out in the reserve itself. The food is a blend of Kenyan and international, with a strong emphasis on local ingredients — the shamba grows herbs and vegetables on site.

The quality is a clear step above what most safari camps deliver. It is not Soneva Fushi-level fine dining, but it is genuinely excellent and consistently surprising for a property in the middle of the Masai Mara.

Who It’s For — and Who It’s Not For

Angama is for: Couples. Honeymooners who want safari and romance in one place. Photographers. Repeat visitors to Kenya who want the finest camp in the western Mara. Travellers who value design and atmosphere as much as wildlife.

Angama is not for: Families with young children (minimum age is 5, and the steep terrain makes it impractical for toddlers). Travellers who want a flat, easy-access camp. Anyone who prioritises the Mara Conservancies’ off-road driving — Angama is in the National Reserve where vehicles must stay on established tracks.

The Verdict

HighStreet Holidays Specialist Verdict: 9.1 / 10

Outstanding. The finest lodge position in the Masai Mara. The photographic studio is a genuine differentiator. The guiding is excellent. The tented suites are beautifully designed. Not ideal for very young families or those needing flat terrain.


Angama Mara is, in my view, the finest property in the Masai Mara for a particular kind of traveller — one who values design, atmosphere and that extraordinary elevated position as much as the wildlife below. For that traveller, there is nowhere better.

MMannyAdventure and Safari Specialist

Manny specialises in matching clients to the right resort for their travel style, not just the best-photographed property.

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