Planning a first African safari tends to stall at the same place: a dozen near-identical websites, the same stock photo of a lion at golden hour, and no clear way to tell which operator will really be waiting at the Nairobi arrivals gate when the plane touches down. The distance between a polished site and a trip that runs on schedule is where most of the anxiety lives, and closing that gap is the first job any operator has to do before the pretty itineraries mean anything.

Africa Safaris, the directory name for a Nairobi tour company that trades as Summer Break Safaris, answers that with custom private itineraries built around the traveler instead of fixed group departures. The coverage is regional: Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, and Rwanda, with the site advertising 18 trips in Kenya, 8 in Tanzania, 6 in Uganda, a single Rwanda option, and 7 combined Kenya-Tanzania routes.

That spread signals a company that plans across borders inside one booking, which is the practical thing a honeymooner, a family, or a photographer chasing specific animals actually needs when a trip touches two or three countries in a fortnight.

Where these safaris take you

The catalogue is broad without feeling scattered, and every entry ties back to a real region and a stated day count. Africa Safaris lists named packages a traveler can point at and question: an 11-day Kenya-Tanzania combined safari, a 15-day "best of Kenya," a compact 4-day Masai Mara run, a 7-day Kilimanjaro trek, and a 4-day Nakuru-and-Masai-Mara loop.

Concrete itineraries like these beat the vague "tailor-made adventures" line a lot of operators hide behind. A day count and a fixed route are things a buyer can actually price, compare, and interrogate before paying, which is exactly what the four regional sections below do one at a time.

Kenya and the Masai Mara reserve

Kenya is clearly the home turf, with the deepest set of options and the Masai Mara as the anchor. The 4-day Masai Mara safari reads as the entry point, the sort of short, high-density game drive a family with limited leave can manage, while the 15-day "best of Kenya" sits at the other end as a proper expedition for someone with the time and budget to see the country widely.

Eighteen Kenya trips is a lot of shelf space for Africa Safaris, and it suggests the operator's strongest logistics live right here, on home ground, where guides, vehicles, and park relationships are easiest to control.

If a first-timer is unsure where to start, this is plainly the region the company is built to deliver best.

Gorilla trekking across Uganda and Rwanda

Gorilla trekking is the headline draw for a different kind of traveler, and Africa Safaris runs it through Uganda's six trips and the lone Rwanda option. This is expensive, permit-gated, physically demanding travel, and it is exactly the sort of experience where a competent ground operator justifies the cost by handling permits, timing, and the trek logistics that go wrong easily and cost a fortune when they do.

The single-trip Rwanda coverage hints that the real gorilla volume moves through Uganda, which is worth knowing early if a client had Rwanda specifically in mind, since the two countries differ sharply on permit prices and trail difficulty.

The Great Migration and Big Five game drives

For the classic bucket-list traveler, the wildlife safaris and Big Five game drives are the core product, and the Great Migration tours target the one calendar window most first-timers care about. Africa Safaris also folds in dedicated wildlife photography tours, which is a meaningful distinction if it holds up, since a photography-led trip means different vehicle positioning, earlier starts, longer waits at a single sighting, and a guide who understands light.

Whether that is a genuinely specialized product or a standard game drive with a new label is the sort of thing a serious photographer should pin down in the planning calls before booking.

Kilimanjaro climbs and Zanzibar beach time

Beyond the game parks, the range stretches into a 7-day Mount Kilimanjaro climb and a set of beach add-ons, including Zanzibar getaways and combined safari-and-beach holidays that pair a week of dust and lions with a few quiet days on the coast. Day trips, city tours, and cultural community visits round out the lighter end for travelers who want a slower pace or a break between long drives.

It is a wide menu for one company, and Africa Safaris leans on that breadth as the reason to book a whole multi-part trip in a single place instead of stitching three separate vendors together across three borders.

Whether the reviews back it up

A buyer should slow down at the review question. The homepage carries a "Trustindex verified badge" claiming a score above 4.5 from customer reviews, but that widget is embedded and hosted by the site itself, which is a long way from an independent rating anyone can audit. A search does not turn up a matching Google, Tripadvisor, Trustpilot, or Yelp page for Africa Safaris to confirm the figure.

Worse for the pitch, a separate business directory, Safariopedia, states plainly that there are no reviews yet for Africa Safaris, and its listing on the Kenya travel platform Afrikta shows no rating either. The confident on-site number and the outside record simply do not line up, and until they do, that badge should be read as a claim the company makes about itself, not an independent verdict.

Contact is the reassuring counterweight, and it does a lot to keep the credibility question from curdling into real doubt. Africa Safaris lists a Nairobi street address, a phone line, an email, and WhatsApp support advertised around the clock, all easy to find on the site. For a cross-border trip where deposits move long before you ever meet anyone in person, a fixed office address and a live messaging channel are exactly the details that let a traveler on another continent check the company is a real, reachable business.

The honest read is a business strong on substance and weak on outside proof. Africa Safaris gives concrete itineraries, real day counts, four countries of coverage, and contact details a nervous first-timer can verify, all of which count for a great deal when booking blind from thousands of miles away. What it cannot yet show is a single independent review to stand behind the friendly score on its own homepage.

Doing the diligence here means pressing hard questions on a WhatsApp call and paying by traceable means rather than wiring a deposit on faith in a badge the company controls. Until an outside review turns up somewhere Africa Safaris does not run itself, that gap is the one thing standing between a solid-looking itinerary and a fully verified one.


Business address
Summer Break Safaris
Mombasa road,
Nairobi,
Nairobi
0100
Kenya

Contact details
Phone: +254712570240