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Safarimondo
Avoiding scams

How to book a safari without getting scammed.

A safari is a high-value trip paid far in advance — which makes it a target. The good news: the scams follow a pattern, and a few minutes of checks defeat almost all of them.

Warning signs

Six red flags to walk away from

If a deal trips any of these, slow down and verify before a cent moves.

A price that undercuts everyone

Real safaris carry real fixed costs — park fees, conservancy levies, vehicles, trained guides. A quote far below comparable itineraries is the oldest hook there is.

Pressure to pay now

Manufactured urgency — “this rate expires today”, “last room left” — exists to stop you checking. A legitimate operator expects you to compare and ask questions.

Payment to a personal account

Requests for a bank wire, Western Union, gift card or crypto — especially to an individual’s name rather than a registered company — are a major red flag. There is no recourse once it’s sent.

No verifiable footprint

No registered company, no physical address, a social account created last month, or lodge photos that turn up elsewhere under a different name on a reverse image search.

They won’t get on a call

A genuine operator will happily do a video call, name the exact camps, and share references. Evasiveness about specifics is a warning sign.

An itinerary that doesn’t add up

Vague inclusions, no named lodges, or a plan that ignores travel times and seasons. Detail is the mark of a real planner; hand-waving is not.

Before you pay

How to verify an operator

Six checks, none of which takes long — and any one of which can save your deposit.

  1. 1

    Confirm the company is real

    Look for a registered business name, a physical office, and a track record longer than a few months.

  2. 2

    Check industry-body membership

    Reputable operators are often members of recognised bodies — for example ATTA, SATSA, or a national tourism board. Membership can usually be verified on the body’s own website.

  3. 3

    Read reviews across platforms

    Cross-check on more than one independent site, and be wary of a wall of five-star reviews all posted in the same week.

  4. 4

    Ask for the camps by name

    A real itinerary names specific lodges and camps — which you can often confirm directly with the property before you commit.

  5. 5

    Never pay an individual

    Pay a registered company, ideally with a method that offers some protection. Avoid wires or crypto to a personal account.

  6. 6

    Get everything in writing

    The day-by-day plan, what’s included and excluded, and the cancellation terms — all in writing before any money moves.

How Safarimondo lowers the risk

We list real, registered operators vetted against recognised industry bodies, show all-in pricing so you can compare like for like, and start from a clear brief — not a fast, pressure-discounted quote. The full picture is on our trust page.

How we protect you
Questions

Safari scams, answered

How common are safari booking scams?
Common enough that it’s the single biggest fear first-time travellers report. The high deposits and the distance make safaris a target — which is exactly why verification matters.
What’s the safest way to pay for a safari?
Pay a registered company, never an individual, and prefer a method with some recourse. Be very cautious of anyone insisting on a bank wire, Western Union, gift card or crypto to a personal account.
How do I know an operator is legitimate?
Check that they’re a registered business with a real footprint, look for membership of recognised industry bodies, cross-check reviews on independent platforms, and confirm the named camps directly with the properties.
How does Safarimondo reduce the risk?
Operators are checked against recognised industry bodies before they can appear, we explain all-in pricing in plain English, and we start you from a clear brief — not a fast, pressure-discounted quote.