Kilimanjaro, Tanzania
Tanzania · Bucket List

Viaggi su misura a Kilimanjaro

Africa's rooftop — 5,895m, a glaciated volcano near the equator.

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Da 4,600/persona·Periodo migliore: January–March, June–October·★★★★★ 500+ viaggiatori abbinati
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Cos'è un viaggio su misura a Kilimanjaro?

Kilimanjaro is best approached via the Lemosho Route (8 days, best acclimatisation profile, most scenic) or the Machame Route (7 days, most popular, 70–80% summit rate). Book through a TANAPA-licensed operator at least 3 months ahead. Budget: USD 2,000–3,500 all-inclusive (guide, porters, park fees, accommodation). Best season: January–March and June–October.

Mount Kilimanjaro (5,895 m, Tanzania) is the highest peak in Africa and the world's highest free-standing mountain — a dormant stratovolcano that rises 5,200 metres above the Tanzanian plain in a single unbroken massif, creating its own weather system and five distinct vegetation zones from savanna to Arctic ice field. Kilimanjaro is the most climbed high-altitude peak in the world (50,000–60,000 summit attempts per year, approximately 65% summit success rate) because no technical climbing skill is required — the Uhuru Peak summit (5,895 m) is accessible via hiking on all six official routes. The primary limiting factor is altitude: at 5,895 m, the air contains 47% of the oxygen available at sea level.

The Lemosho Route (7–8 days, the longest and most scenic approach, starting from the Lemosho Glades in the west) is considered the optimal route for acclimatisation (the gradual altitude gain and the time at intermediate elevations reduces acute mountain sickness risk) and for scenery (the western approach passes through the Shira Plateau and the Southern Ice Fields views). The Marangu Route (5–6 days, the only route with hut accommodation, nicknamed the 'Coca-Cola Route' for its relative comfort) has the lowest summit success rate (45–50%) because the ascent profile is too fast for proper acclimatisation. The Machame Route (6–7 days, the most popular) has a good summit success rate (70–80%) and traverses the most visually varied terrain. All routes require a licensed TANAPA guide (mandatory), porter hire (strongly recommended, KPAP-registered porters who are treated ethically), and the national park fees (USD 70–80 per day).

The Stella Point (5,756 m) to Uhuru Peak (5,895 m) final section is a 139-metre altitude gain along the crater rim — the section that breaks many trekkers' resolve at 3–5 a.m. after a midnight summit push in -20°C. The crater rim provides the first view of the Southern Ice Fields: the remnant glaciers of Kilimanjaro that have retreated 82% since 1912 and are projected to disappear entirely by 2040. The Furtwängler Glacier, the largest remaining ice on the crater floor, is visible from Uhuru Peak as a shrinking white mass — a more immediate climate change indicator than abstract statistics.

Qual è il momento migliore per visitare Kilimanjaro?

I nostri mesi consigliati sono January–March, June–October. Ecco una panoramica mensile con note di pianificazione.

Jan
Consigliato
Bassa stagione — migliore disponibilità e valore.
Feb
Bassa stagione; tranquillo e spesso più economico.
Mar
Consigliato
Mezza stagione; il tempo migliora.
Apr
Mezza stagione; inizia il tempo ideale.
May
Alta mezza stagione; prenotate in anticipo.
Jun
Consigliato
Alta stagione; ottimo clima, prezzi più alti.
Jul
Alta stagione; affollato ma vivace.
Aug
Alta stagione; mese delle vacanze in Europa.
Sep
Alta mezza stagione; il nostro mese preferito.
Oct
Consigliato
Mezza stagione; bella luce, meno folla.
Nov
Bassa mezza stagione; tranquillo e suggestivo.
Dec
Bassa stagione tranne Natale e Capodanno.

Le migliori esperienze a Kilimanjaro

Momenti selezionati dai nostri operatori locali. Ogni viaggio include una selezione — o qualcosa di meglio se lo troviamo.

Lemosho 8-day route with guides — Kilimanjaro
Esperienza 1
Lemosho 8-day route with guides
Stand at the Barranco Wall base at 6 a.m. and look up 300 metres at the near-vertical rock face that every Machame Route climber must ascend — then spend the next 2 hours with your hands on the rock, placing your feet in the guide's footsteps, not looking down, reaching the top to see the entire Southern Ice Field and the Tanzania plain 4,000 metres below in the same glance.
Uhuru Peak summit at dawn — Kilimanjaro
Esperienza 2
Uhuru Peak summit at dawn
Wake at 11:30 p.m. at Barafu Camp (4,673 m) in complete darkness and -10°C to put on every layer you own and start walking uphill into the dark — the headlamp picking up scree slope 2 metres ahead, the guide's footsteps 3 metres above, and 5,895 metres the only destination.
Shira Plateau camps — Kilimanjaro
Esperienza 3
Shira Plateau camps
Reach Stella Point at 5,756 m at 5:30 a.m. as the sky turns pink behind Mawenzi Peak and the crater rim appears ahead — the exhaustion replaced for a moment by the recognition that the summit is 1 hour away and the suffering was worth it, in the thin air where every breath delivers less than half the oxygen of sea level.
Barranco Wall scramble — Kilimanjaro
Esperienza 4
Barranco Wall scramble
Stand at the Uhuru Peak summit sign at 7 a.m. as the sun clears the horizon and the Southern Ice Field catches the first light — the remnant glaciers of the highest mountain in Africa that will be gone by 2040, the crater rim circling below you, and the entire continent laid out in the morning haze 5,895 metres below.
Mweka descent — Kilimanjaro
Esperienza 5
Mweka descent
Walk the Kilimanjaro rainforest on Day 2 of the Machame Route as a colobus monkey crosses the trail 15 metres ahead — the black-and-white animal perfectly visible in the morning light, moving from one strangler fig to the next with the absolute assurance of an animal that has never considered the altitude above as anything but irrelevant.
Zanzibar or Serengeti post-climb — Kilimanjaro
Esperienza 6
Zanzibar or Serengeti post-climb
Sit at Barafu Camp at noon on the summit day, knowing the midnight push is 11 hours away, watching the cloud cap form on the summit cone as it does every afternoon — the mountain's daily weather system operating on its own schedule, indifferent to the 50,000 people who attempt to interrupt it every year.

Itinerari di esempio

Due punti di partenza — il tuo vero itinerario è su misura. Costruiamo da qui.

7 giorni classico

  1. 1
    Giorno 1: Arrival Kilimanjaro — Machame Gate
    Fly into Kilimanjaro International Airport (JRO, 45 km from Arusha — well-served from Amsterdam/Nairobi/Addis Ababa/Doha). Check into Moshi or Arusha for the pre-climb gear check and briefing with your licensed operator. The KPAP (Kilimanjaro Porters Assistance Project) certification on your operator confirms porters receive fair wages, appropriate equipment, and safe loads (max 20 kg per porter). Equipment review: layering system for -20°C summit, gaiters (mud on lower slopes), headlamp (midnight summit push), trekking poles (critical for descent). Machame Gate (1,830 m, 35 km from Moshi, 1.5-hour drive).
  2. 2
    Giorno 2: Machame Gate to Machame Camp — Rainforest
    Machame Gate (1,830 m) to Machame Camp (3,010 m): 11 km, 5–7 hours, 1,180 m elevation gain. The first day is through montane rainforest — the tree canopy closes overhead, colobus monkeys call from above, and the trail is slippery mud in wet season. The forest zone extends from 1,800 m to 2,800 m; above this it transitions to moorland. Arrive at Machame Camp for the first night at 3,010 m. The guide will conduct the 'pole pole' (slowly slowly) pace discipline — the most common mistake is walking too fast on Day 1 due to fitness and excitement. The rate of ascent, not physical fitness, determines summit success.
  3. 3
    Giorno 3: Machame Camp to Shira Camp — Moorland
    Machame Camp (3,010 m) to Shira Camp (3,840 m): 5 km, 4–6 hours, 830 m gain. The rainforest gives way to moorland — Helichrysum (everlasting flower), giant groundsel (Senecio kilimanjari, the giant succulent that grows only on Kilimanjaro above 3,500 m), and the first views of the Kibo summit cone with its ice cap. The porters typically arrive at camp before the trekkers to have tea and lunch waiting — the porter system is what makes Kilimanjaro accessible (porters carry all sleeping equipment, food, and cooking gear). First altitude testing: headache, appetite loss, and difficulty sleeping are early AMS signs — report to the guide immediately.
  4. 4
    Giorno 4: Shira to Barranco — Lava Tower Acclimatisation
    Shira Camp (3,840 m) to Barranco Camp (3,960 m): 10 km, 6–8 hours, with the Lava Tower acclimatisation detour. The route climbs to the Lava Tower (4,630 m) for the acclimatisation 'climb high, sleep low' protocol — ascending to 4,630 m then descending to 3,960 m. This single acclimatisation detour significantly increases summit success rates. The Lava Tower (a free-standing rock column of 300 m height) is at the base of the Western Breach — the most dangerous route to the summit (not recommended). The route passes the Southern Ice Field views for the first time at this altitude.
  5. 5
    Giorno 5: Barranco Wall Scramble & Karanga Camp
    Barranco Camp (3,960 m) to Karanga Camp (4,035 m): 5 km, 4–5 hours, including the Barranco Wall. The Barranco Wall is the most technical section of the Machame Route — a 300-metre scramble up a near-vertical rock face (assisted by the guide and the rock's natural handholds, not ropes, but genuinely scrambling with hands). The wall takes 1–2 hours; the view from the top is the most dramatic of the entire route — the summit cone directly above, the ice cliffs of the Southern Glaciers visible, and the Tanzania plain 4,000 m below. Karanga Camp is the last water source before the summit camp.
  6. 6
    Giorno 6: Barafu Camp — Summit Preparation
    Karanga Camp to Barafu Camp (4,673 m): 4 km, 3–4 hours. Barafu ('ice' in Swahili) is the summit camp — a barren ridge at 4,673 m with views of the summit cone and the Rebmann and Ratzel glaciers. Arrive by noon for the maximum rest before the midnight summit push. Dinner at 5 p.m., attempt to sleep 6–11 p.m. (altitude makes sleep difficult — the guide will wake you at 11:30 p.m.). Summit push departs at midnight: full winter gear, headlamps, trekking poles. The summit push takes 6–8 hours (midnight to 6–8 a.m.). Altitude sickness risk is highest above 5,000 m — know the evacuation protocol.
  7. 7
    Giorno 7: Summit Uhuru Peak & Descent
    The midnight push: Barafu (4,673 m) to Stella Point (5,756 m) is 4–5 hours of steep scree in darkness. Stella Point is at the crater rim — the first of the two summit points. From Stella Point to Uhuru Peak (5,895 m): 1 hour along the crater rim. The summit: the Uhuru Peak sign, the Southern Ice Fields visible in the dawn light, and the 5,200-metre vertical fall to the Tanzanian plain below. Summit time at Uhuru: 15–20 minutes (cold, altitude, weather). Descent from Barafu to Mweka Camp (3,100 m): 5–6 hours down the Mweka Route — the knees take the primary impact. Arrive Mweka Gate (1,640 m) next morning. Certificate collection at gate.

14 giorni approfondimento

  1. 1
    Giorno 1: Arrival Moshi & Gear Check
    JRO airport, KPAP-certified operator briefing, equipment review (-20°C layering system, trekking poles, gaiters), Moshi hotel.
  2. 2
    Giorno 2: Lemosho Route — Day 1: Lemosho Glades
    Lemosho Glades start (2,100 m), Western Breach forest approach (9 km, 5 hours), first montane forest camp at 3,500 m.
  3. 3
    Giorno 3: Lemosho Route — Day 2: Shira Ridge
    3,500 m to Shira Camp (3,840 m) via Shira Ridge: the most expansive views of the Shira Plateau, the largest volcanic caldera on Kilimanjaro.
  4. 4
    Giorno 4: Lemosho Route — Day 3: Moir Camp
    Northern circuit approach via Moir Hut (4,200 m): the least-trafficked section of Kilimanjaro, the northern route's scenery includes views of Mawenzi Peak (5,149 m, the second summit) and the Amboseli plain.
  5. 5
    Giorno 5: Lemosho Route — Day 4: School Hut
    Northern approach continues to School Hut (4,750 m): acclimatisation walk to 5,000 m and return, the highest acclimatisation point before the summit camp.
  6. 6
    Giorno 6: Lemosho Route — Day 5: Kibo Hut & Barafu
    Confluence with the Marangu Route at Kibo Hut (4,750 m) then deviation to Barafu (4,673 m) — the Lemosho route's summit camp on the Machame approach.
  7. 7
    Giorno 7: Summit Push — Midnight Start
    11:30 p.m. departure, scree ascent Barafu to Stella Point (5,756 m) 4–5 hours, crater rim to Uhuru Peak (5,895 m) 1 hour, 15–20 minutes at summit, descent to Mweka Camp.
  8. 8
    Giorno 8: Descent & Moshi Recovery
    Mweka Camp (3,100 m) to Mweka Gate (1,640 m), certificate collection, transfer to Moshi, summit recovery meal and sleep.
  9. 9
    Giorno 9: Kilimanjaro National Park — Lower Forest Walk
    A non-summit day walk in the Kilimanjaro lower forest zone (Marangu Gate area, 1,860 m): colobus monkey observation, giant fig trees, and the river system that the mountain creates for the surrounding farmland.
  10. 10
    Giorno 10: Arusha Day — Gateway City
    Arusha National Park day trip: the Ngurdoto Crater (the 'miniature Ngorongoro'), the alkaline Momela Lakes (flamingos), and the best close-up view of Kilimanjaro from the northern slope.
  11. 11
    Giorno 11: Serengeti — Kilimanjaro Circuit Add-On
    2-hour drive from Arusha to the Serengeti Gate: the great wildebeest migration (1.5 million animals, specific timing varies — check the annual migration calendar before booking).
  12. 12
    Giorno 12: Serengeti Game Drive
    Big Five in the southern Serengeti (Seronera), Grumeti River crocodiles, cheetah on the plains.
  13. 13
    Giorno 13: Ngorongoro Crater
    UNESCO World Heritage: the world's largest intact volcanic caldera (260 km² floor), the most reliable black rhino viewing in Tanzania (15 remaining in the crater), the highest concentration of predators in Africa.
  14. 14
    Giorno 14: Moshi Final Day & Departure
    Chagga coffee farm tour (the Chagga people of Kilimanjaro are the original Arabica coffee farmers of Tanzania — farm visit with traditional coffee processing), JRO airport departure.

Informazioni pratiche

Visto
e-Visa (US$50) for most travelers
Valuta
Tanzanian shilling (TZS); USD
Lingua
Swahili, English
Fuso orario
EAT (UTC+3)

Domande frequenti

Which Kilimanjaro route should I choose?+

For first-time climbers: the Lemosho Route (7–8 days) has the best acclimatisation profile and the most varied scenery, but it is more expensive (more park nights). The Machame Route (6–7 days) is the most popular with a good 70–80% summit success rate. The Marangu Route (5–6 days, the 'Coca-Cola Route' with hut accommodation) has the lowest summit success rate (45–50%) because it is the fastest and acclimatisation is inadequate. The Rongai Route (6–7 days) approaches from the north — drier conditions (rain shadow side) and a completely different forest zone. Choosing a longer route (7–8 days) rather than a shorter one is the single most important factor in summit success, regardless of route.

What is altitude sickness and how do I prevent it on Kilimanjaro?+

Altitude sickness (Acute Mountain Sickness, AMS) on Kilimanjaro is caused by ascending too fast for the body to produce additional red blood cells. Symptoms: headache, nausea, loss of appetite, dizziness, and insomnia. The Kilimanjaro risk is specific: the mountain ascends faster in altitude gain per km than most trekking destinations (from 1,800 m gate to 5,895 m summit in 5–8 days). Prevention: choose a longer route (more days above 3,000 m), walk 'pole pole' (the Swahili mantra — slow), hydrate consistently (3–4 litres/day), and don't over-exert on early days. Diamox (acetazolamide, 125–250 mg twice daily) assists acclimatisation — consult a doctor before the climb. Golden Rule: if symptoms worsen, descend immediately. The guide is authorised to order evacuation.

How much does it cost to climb Kilimanjaro?+

The all-inclusive operator package for a standard Machame 7-day climb (guide, porters, meals, tents, national park fees) ranges from USD 1,800 to USD 3,500 per person depending on group size and operator standard. The national park fees alone are USD 70–80 per person per day (plus conservation fee, rescue fee, and camping fees), totalling approximately USD 700–850 for a 7-day climb — paid to the Tanzania National Parks Authority (TANAPA) through your operator. Tips for guides and porters are additional and culturally expected: USD 200–250 per trekker for the team is the KPAP guideline for a 7-day climb. Solo treks are not possible; all climbers require a licensed guide (mandatory regulation).

What is the KPAP and should I choose a KPAP-registered operator?+

KPAP (Kilimanjaro Porters Assistance Project) is an NGO that monitors porter welfare on Kilimanjaro and certifies operators who comply with fair treatment standards: porters receive minimum wage (USD 10+/day), appropriate sleeping and clothing equipment for the altitude, weight limits (max 20 kg personal + 5 kg food), and are not abandoned when sick. Porter exploitation was (and in some operators, remains) serious — porters have died from altitude sickness and exposure when operators did not provide adequate gear. Choosing a KPAP-certified operator is ethically important. The KPAP website (kiliporters.org) lists certified operators and provides a portal for reporting mistreatment.

What can I see from the Uhuru Peak summit?+

Uhuru Peak (5,895 m) on a clear day offers: the entire East African Rift Valley to the east, the flat Tanzanian plain 5,200 m below, the Southern Ice Fields (the remnant Kilimanjaro glaciers that have retreated 82% since 1912), the Furtwängler Glacier on the crater floor, the Mawenzi Peak (5,149 m) to the northeast, and — on exceptional days — Mount Kenya (5,199 m, 340 km to the north) and Meru (4,566 m, 70 km west). The summit visibility is frequently limited by cloud (the mountain creates its own lenticular cloud cap); the window with the clearest views is typically 6–8 a.m. before the thermal cloud builds. The summit photograph is taken at the Uhuru Peak sign; most trekkers spend 10–20 minutes before the cold and altitude demand descent.

Le persone chiedono anche

  • What is the best route up Kilimanjaro?
  • How hard is it to climb Kilimanjaro?
  • What is the summit success rate on Kilimanjaro?
  • How long does it take to climb Kilimanjaro?
  • Do I need technical climbing skills for Kilimanjaro?
  • What is altitude sickness like on Kilimanjaro?
  • How much do Kilimanjaro porters earn?
  • What are the glaciers on Kilimanjaro?

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