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.
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.
How to verify an operator
Six checks, none of which takes long — and any one of which can save your deposit.
- 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
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
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
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
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
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.
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.