Comparison Guide

Okavango Delta vs Chobe

The Okavango Delta and Chobe National Park are Botswana's two flagship destinations, often combined in a single journey. The Okavango is unlike anywhere on earth — a vast inland delta of papyrus channels and floodplain islands explored by mokoro and boat, with excellent wildlife and a dreamlike atmosphere. Chobe is Africa's elephant capital, concentrated and dramatic on the Chobe River. Do both, in that order: two nights Okavango, two nights Chobe, Victoria Falls.

Side by side

At a Glance

## Okavango Delta vs Chobe: Botswana's Two Crowns Botswana's reputation as Africa's finest safari destination rests on two extraordinary ecosystems: the Okavango Delta in the northwest and Chobe National Park in the north. Both are within the same country, both warrant multiple nights, and both are genuinely unlike anything in East Africa. The question is not which to choose but how to combine them. ## The Okavango Delta: Africa's Eden The Okavango River flows inland from Angola and fans out across the Kalahari to form the world's largest inland delta — 15,000 sq km of channels, lagoons, papyrus islands, and floodplains that shift and reshape with each year's flood. It is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of Africa's Seven Natural Wonders. The Okavango is explored by mokoro (traditional dugout canoe), motorboat, game drive, and on foot — often all in a single day. The seasonal flood arrives June–August, transforming the landscape and drawing extraordinary concentrations of wildlife. Permanent camps on private concessions offer exclusive access to vast territories. The central Moremi Game Reserve is the park's most accessible sector. The wildlife is exceptional: African wild dogs are more reliably seen here than almost anywhere in Africa. Elephant, buffalo, hippo, and crocodile are abundant. The birdlife — 500+ species — is extraordinary. What the Okavango lacks is the sheer density of animals seen at Chobe. ## Chobe National Park: Elephant Country Chobe has the highest concentration of elephants in Africa — an estimated 130,000 individuals, gathering in herds of hundreds along the Chobe River during the dry season (May–October). The spectacle of a thousand elephants coming to the river at sunset is one of the great wildlife experiences on earth. Game viewing along the Chobe River is primarily by boat — floating silently past swimming elephants, bathing hippos, and birds of prey is profoundly peaceful. The Savuti marsh, in Chobe's south, offers exceptional lion and predator activity year-round. Kasane, the gateway town to Chobe, is 1.5 hours by road from Victoria Falls in Zimbabwe — making it a natural combination with the Falls. ## Best Time to Visit Okavango: June–September when the flood peaks and wildlife concentrates on islands. Chobe: May–October for peak elephant concentration and dry-season wildlife density. Both destinations: off-peak (November–March) are significantly cheaper with summer greenery and fewer visitors. ## Who Should Choose Which Both destinations reward a minimum of 2 nights each. The classic Botswana circuit — Okavango (2–3 nights), Chobe (2 nights), Victoria Falls (1–2 nights) — covers the best of southern Africa in 7–8 days and is one of the world's finest safari itineraries. ## Price Guide Okavango concession camps: $600–$2,500+ per person per night (fully inclusive). Chobe lodges: $400–$1,500 per person per night. Mobile camping safaris crossing both: $400–$800 per person per night (best value). ## Verdict The Okavango for atmosphere, variety, and wilderness depth; Chobe for sheer animal spectacle. Combine both.

Common questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I visit both the Okavango and Chobe in one trip?

Yes — and most visitors to Botswana do exactly this. The classic 7–8 day itinerary starts in Maun (Okavango gateway), spends 2–3 nights in an Okavango Delta camp accessible by light aircraft or boat, then flies or drives to Kasane for 2 nights at a Chobe river lodge, and exits via Victoria Falls. Internal flights between Maun and Kasane take about an hour.

What is the best way to experience the Okavango Delta?

The definitive Okavango experience combines a water camp (accessed by motorboat or light aircraft, on a permanent island or floodplain) with mokoro activities guided by local polers. The traditional mokoro — a dugout canoe propelled with a pole — moves silently through channels and shallow lagoons, bringing you eye-level with lilies, hippos, and birds. Walking safaris from Delta camps are equally extraordinary: the flat terrain and expert trackers make for exceptional encounters.

When is the Okavango Delta flooded?

The Okavango is a seasonal flood that originates from Angolan rains in December–February, travels 1,200km, and arrives in Botswana from April onwards. The flood peaks in the Delta between June and August, transforming dry land into a glittering maze of channels and islands. July and August are generally considered the best months — the flood is high, wildlife is concentrated, and the dry-season conditions keep vegetation open.

Are there rhino in the Okavango or Chobe?

Wild rhino were historically absent from Botswana, but reintroduction programmes have been underway since 2001. A small number of white and black rhino exist in the Okavango ecosystem (particularly in private concessions and Moremi), but sightings are not guaranteed. For reliable rhino viewing in southern Africa, Zimbabwe's Hwange and Mana Pools, or South Africa's reserves, are better options. Botswana's strength is its elephant, wild dog, lion, and water-based wildlife.

What is the difference between a mokoro and a motorboat safari?

A mokoro is a traditional dugout canoe, 4–5 metres long, poled by a standing guide through shallow channels and lagoons. It is silent, low to the water, and deeply atmospheric — the quintessential Okavango experience. Motorboats cover more ground and reach deeper water channels, offering better views of hippo pods, large crocodiles, and distant game. Most Okavango camps offer both, and most guests do both in the same day.

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