Botswana is a year-round destination, with each season offering unique wildlife opportunities and activities. However, one of the best times to visit Botswana is the dry season, from June to October, when the Okavango Delta is in full flood, and you can experience water-based activities like mokoro excursions. However, some lodges have a permanent water source at or near the lodge, offering water-based game viewing all year round.
Botswana has three distinct seasons: bone dry, sodden and somewhere in between. Each has their own attractions; each has their caveats; each one offers a slightly different Botswna safari experience.
- Green or Low Season: November to March
- Shoulder or Mid Season: April to May
- Dry or Peak Season: June to October
January to February – Green Season (Low Season)
Summer in Botswana means rain. A time of plenty when every living thing from beetle to baobab has a spring in its step. Hot, humid days yield spectacular thunderstorms from anvil-shaped clouds that pelt the ground and soak the very air. Ironically, despite this daily deluge, the Okavango Delta shrivels to a third its size and, with abundant surface water and grazing in every direction, the wildlife disappears into thick vegetation that blankets this ancient inland seabed.
Wildlife sightings may be unpredictable, but the green season is, however, the best time for birding with migrants and breeders turning the place upside down. And with many safari lodges in Botswana positioned alongside permanent water channels you can still enjoy the trademark Botswana water safari. Without the crowds, the pace is altogether gentler (if that even seems possible). So if you’re somewhat fatalistic about your game viewing and more interested in the experience, you’ll appreciate our excellent low season rates and specials for Botswana.
March – Green Season (Low)
Game viewing improves from March as the rains ease and wildlife returns to more accessible dry season areas. Vegetation is still thick and the days hot and humid, although not as bad as earlier in the year. Bridging the transition from low- to mid-season rates, March is an excellent time to nab that last-minute special.
April to May – Shoulder season (Mid)
Autumn ushers in the end of the rainy season. April and May are excellent months to visit Botswana when rates are lower and visitors fewer than peak season while the game viewing experience is good with a bit of hit-and-miss thrown in.
The floodwaters reach the panhandle of the Okavango Delta hitting full flow by the end of May. The days are warm, evenings are cool and the rain has all but disappeared. The bush is still green and dense but the watering holes start to dry up, sending wildlife towards more permanent sources such as Moremi, Okavango and Chobe. Green season specials are not available anymore, but rates are still lower than during high season from June to October.
June to August – High Season (Peak)
The Okavango River is in full flood by June and winter is in full swing. Expect warm, dry days and cold Kalahari nights. The animals won’t see another drop of rain for the next six months and the vegetation thins out till we’re in game-viewing prime time. Another bonus: it’s too cold for mosquitoes so you’ll hardly see any.
With water at a premium and the bush thinned out, your game viewing is at its best. Expect frequent sightings of elephant, buffalo and antelope crowding around what water sources remain and where competition is fierce. Land-only camps and those in Okavango Delta, Moremi and adjoining private reserves offer excellent game drives and many are located adjacent to some sort of permanent water source.
September to October – High Season
The best time to visit Botswana for a Big 5 safari is right at the end of the country’s parched winter. September and October are the hottest, driest months of the year and, at the end of a long, dry winter, food and water are dangerously scarce forcing wildlife into even greater concentrations around whatever feeding and watering places they can find. This is also the best time to visit Chobe, where you'll see massive elephant herds along the river. It's also the best time to go to the Linyanti, Kwando and Selinda reserves.
November – Start of Green Season (Low)
This is an unpredictable month that could be wet or dry, depending on the timing of the rain. However, it will still be exceptionally hot. November is dry, making it great for game viewing at the watering holes as the animals congregate. Game viewing is still good. However, there might be fewer animals gathered in one area. Green season specials start.
December – Green Season (Low)
Summertime and the rainy season officially arrives in spectacular fashion with crackling thunderstorms unleashing their pent up winter fury. Botswana's landscape turns from all shades of brown to all shades of green and its lambing season, so you’ll see baby versions of everything knocking about mommy’s legs. December is also the best month for bird watching. A joyous time of new beginnings and sylvan bounty, December may not offer the best game viewing, but you do get the lowest rates, fewer visitors and jelly-legged springboks learning the pronk.