Zanzibar Destination | Nile Abenteuer Safaris
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Zanzibar

The Spice Island of the Indian Ocean

Turquoise water over white coral sand, carved wooden doors in medieval streets, clove-scented forest paths and sunsets that turn the entire Indian Ocean to gold. Zanzibar is not a destination — it is a feeling.

1,666
km² of Islands
1,000+
Years of Civilisation
UNESCO
World Heritage Stone Town
12
Spices Still Cultivated
28°C
Average Water Temp

Zanzibar — Where Africa Meets the Ocean

Zanzibar is an archipelago 35km off the Tanzanian coast — the main island of Unguja, the wilder Pemba Island, and dozens of smaller coral islands in between. It has been a crossroads of civilisations for over a millennium: Arab traders, Persian merchants, Indian spice dealers, Portuguese navigators and British colonists all left their mark in Stone Town's extraordinary architectural labyrinth. Today, Zanzibar is East Africa's most beloved beach and cultural destination — and the perfect finale to any Tanzania safari.

Stone Town Zanzibar UNESCO
UNESCO World Heritage · West Coast
Stone Town
East Africa's best-preserved Swahili trading city — a medieval labyrinth of coral-stone houses, carved brass-studded doors, mosques and the old slave market.
Zanzibar beach Indian Ocean
Beach Paradise · East & North Coast
The Beaches
Nungwi's reef-sheltered coves, Kendwa's perfect sunsets, Paje's kite-surfing winds, and Matemwe's quiet seclusion — each a world apart.
Zanzibar spice plantation
Cultural Heritage · Central Zanzibar
The Spice Farms
Cloves, cardamom, vanilla, nutmeg and black pepper — the ancient spice plantations that gave Zanzibar its famous name and global significance.
Zanzibar marine park snorkelling
Marine Park · Surrounding Waters
The Ocean
Whale sharks, hawksbill turtles, manta rays, dolphin pods and vivid coral gardens in the warm waters of the Indian Ocean marine park.
Stone Town carved doors Zanzibar
UNESCO World Heritage 2000
UNESCO World Heritage Site · Zanzibar City

Stone Town, Zanzibar City

A thousand years of civilisation in one medieval quarter

Stone Town is the historic core of Zanzibar City — a dense, labyrinthine settlement of coral-rag stone houses, mosques, Hindu temples, Portuguese churches and the old Arab Fort, all woven together by narrow winding lanes where donkeys still carry goods as they have for centuries. The town was the centre of the 19th-century Indian Ocean trade network under the Sultans of Oman — and at its peak handled 90% of the world's clove exports and was the hub of the East African slave trade.

Stone Town's architectural signature is its extraordinary carved wooden doors — over 500 individual doors survive, each a statement of wealth, status and religious identity. Indian-style doors feature elaborate brass bosses (protection against elephants in an older tradition); Arab-style doors are recessed with geometric Quranic inscriptions. The House of Wonders and the Palace Museum tell the full story of Zanzibar's Sultanate era, while the Anglican Cathedral — built on the site of the last open-air slave market — is one of the most moving buildings in East Africa.

  • UNESCO World Heritage Site — best-preserved Swahili urban settlement in East Africa
  • 500+ carved wooden doors — the finest collection in the world
  • Old Fort (Arab Fort / Ngome Kongwe) — built 1699, now a cultural centre
  • House of Wonders (Beit-el-Ajaib) — former Sultan's ceremonial palace
  • Anglican Cathedral and the Slave Market memorial — most important moral landmark
  • Freddie Mercury's birthplace — the Queen frontman was born at Stone Town in 1946
  • Darajani Market — the old market spilling with spices, fish and tropical fruit
  • Forodhani Gardens waterfront — night food market with Zanzibar pizza and fresh seafood
  • Hamamni Persian Baths — 19th-century hammam commissioned by Sultan Barghash
Best: Year-Round UNESCO Heritage Walking Tours History & Architecture Food & Culture
Zanzibar spice plantation cloves
Taste the Spice Island
Agro-Tourism · Central Zanzibar

Zanzibar's Spice Plantations

Where cloves once ruled the global economy

In the 19th century, Zanzibar produced 90% of the world's cloves — and the Sultan of Oman's wealth was built almost entirely on this single crop. The spice farms of central Zanzibar, centred around Kizimbani and Kindichi, remain in cultivation today — growing cloves, cardamom, cinnamon, black pepper, vanilla, nutmeg, lemongrass, turmeric and ylang-ylang in a lush patchwork of tropical garden-forest.

Guided spice farm tours are one of Zanzibar's most rewarding half-day experiences — walking through the plantations with expert guides who reveal the extraordinary sensory identity of each plant, demonstrate how spices are harvested and processed, and prepare a fresh spice-garden lunch. Children (and adults) can engage with "natural body painting" using henna and spice-derived dyes. The tour rounds out with fresh coconut water and a Swahili lunch under the trees.

  • Cloves — Zanzibar's most famous export, harvested by hand from tall trees
  • Cardamom, cinnamon, vanilla, nutmeg and black pepper in active cultivation
  • Ylang-ylang — the rare flower used in Chanel No. 5 and grown only in Zanzibar and Comoros
  • Traditional Swahili lunch with fresh-squeezed spice juices
  • Natural henna and spice-dye body art demonstrations
  • Medicinal plants tour — traditional Zanzibari herbal remedies explained
Best: Year-Round Half-Day Tour Family-Friendly Lunch Included Cultural
Jozani Forest red colobus monkey Zanzibar
Zanzibar's Only National Park
National Park · Central-South Zanzibar

Jozani-Chwaka Bay National Park

The last forest of the Zanzibar red colobus

Jozani is Zanzibar's only national park and the last significant patch of indigenous ground-water forest on the island — covering 50 km² of dense tropical woodland, mangrove forest and saltwater lagoon. The park is the stronghold of the Zanzibar red colobus monkey — one of Africa's most critically endangered primates, found only on Unguja island and found nowhere else on Earth.

The colobus troops are semi-habituated, allowing close approach on guided forest walks — you will observe their distinctive black-and-white colouration, their extraordinary aerial leaping through the canopy, and the social interactions within family groups. The park also harbours suni antelope, Ader's duiker (another Zanzibar endemic), African civets and blue monkeys. The mangrove boardwalk trail at Chwaka Bay offers insight into the critically important mangrove ecosystem supporting Zanzibar's inshore fishery.

  • Zanzibar red colobus monkey — endemic primate, found only on Unguja island
  • Ader's duiker — another Zanzibar-endemic antelope, rarely seen
  • Mangrove boardwalk at Chwaka Bay — extraordinary tidal forest ecosystem
  • Guided nature walks through primary ground-water forest
  • Chameleon spotting — several species in the forest undergrowth
  • Butterfly and birding trails — 50+ bird species in the forest
Best: Year-Round Endemic Wildlife Walking Trails Mangroves Birding
Zanzibar marine snorkelling sea turtles
Marine Park & Whale Sharks
Marine Conservation · Indian Ocean

Zanzibar Marine Parks & Ocean Safaris

Whale sharks, sea turtles and pristine coral gardens

The Indian Ocean surrounding Zanzibar is one of East Africa's most productive marine environments — a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve where healthy coral reefs shelter extraordinary diversity. The Menai Bay Conservation Area protects over 400 fish species, Indo-Pacific bottlenose and spinner dolphins, humpback whale shark (seasonal), green and hawksbill sea turtles and extensive seagrass beds supporting dugong (the Indian Ocean's most elusive marine mammal).

The Mnemba Atoll Marine Park, off the northeast coast, is Zanzibar's most celebrated dive site — a protected coral atoll with gin-clear visibility, resident turtles, barracuda, reef sharks and schools of tropical reef fish. Whale sharks aggregate in the channel between Unguja and Pemba islands between October and February, allowing snorkelling encounters with these magnificent filter-feeders in their open-ocean environment.

  • Mnemba Atoll — East Africa's finest dive and snorkel site
  • Whale shark snorkelling (Oct–Feb) in the Zanzibar Channel
  • Dolphins at Kizimkazi — morning boat trips to swim with spinner and bottlenose dolphin
  • Sea turtle nesting beaches on Mnemba and Ras Nungwi
  • Deep-sea fishing off Pemba Island — world-class big game fishing
  • Seaweed farming village visits — sustainable coastal livelihoods
  • Night diving at Mnemba — hunting lionfish, octopus and cuttlefish
Best: Oct – Feb Whale Sharks Diving & Snorkelling Sea Turtles Dolphins

Zanzibar's Finest Beaches

Each of Zanzibar's beaches has a distinct character, shaped by tides, winds, reef systems and the communities nearby. We match you to the beach that fits your mood — not just your calendar.

Nungwi Beach Zanzibar
Nungwi
North Coast · Year-Round Swimming
The north tip's reef protects the beach from tidal variations — meaning swimming is possible at all times of day, unlike most of Zanzibar's east coast. Lively village, dhow-building yard, turtle sanctuary and the best sunset cocktails on the island.
Kendwa Beach Zanzibar
Kendwa
North Coast · Best Sunsets
Just south of Nungwi, Kendwa is quieter, more refined and faces west — giving it the island's most spectacular sunset views. The famous monthly Full Moon beach party is held here.
Paje Beach Zanzibar kitesurfing
Paje
East Coast · Kite Surfing
The east coast's consistent south-east trade winds make Paje East Africa's kite-surfing capital. Beyond the kite schools, white sand stretches for kilometres with very few visitors outside the busy kite zone.
Matemwe Beach Zanzibar
Matemwe
Northeast Coast · Mnemba Views
The most secluded of Zanzibar's main beaches — a long, quiet stretch of sand directly opposite Mnemba Atoll, where the island's finest luxury lodges face the snorkelling site at dawn.

Zanzibar Experiences

Beyond the beach, Zanzibar offers a rich menu of cultural, culinary, marine and adventure experiences that transform a beach holiday into something genuinely memorable.

S
Historic Quarter
Stone Town Walking Tour

A specialist-guided labyrinth walk through Stone Town's medieval lanes — from the carved door collections and the Arab Fort to Freddie Mercury's birthplace and the moving Anglican Cathedral slave market memorial. Morning tours are essential before the heat of the day.

D
Underwater World
PADI Diving at Mnemba Atoll

Mnemba Atoll is among the Indian Ocean's finest dive sites — gin-clear water, wall dives dropping to 30m, resident reef sharks, green turtles and Napoleon wrasse. PADI Open Water courses are available for beginners; experienced divers can arrange live-aboard expeditions to Pemba Island's drop-offs.

C
Culinary Tradition
Swahili Cooking Class

Learn the Swahili art of pilau (spiced rice), urojo (Zanzibar mix soup) and coconut fish curry from local cooks in a traditional home kitchen. Begin with a morning market tour through Darajani to select fresh seafood, then cook and feast together.

K
Adventure Sport
Kite Surfing at Paje

Paje's consistent kite winds (15–25 knots, June–October and December–March) and shallow tidal lagoon make it the ideal learning environment. IKO-certified schools offer beginner to advanced lessons; more experienced kiters can explore downwind runs along the coastline.

D
Cultural Encounter
Dolphin Encounter, Kizimkazi

Kizimkazi, on Zanzibar's southern tip, is home to resident pods of both spinner and bottlenose dolphins — often numbering 200 or more individuals. Early-morning boat trips allow respectful snorkelling encounters in the open water, with expert local guides ensuring minimal disturbance to the pods.

S
Sunset Sailing
Traditional Dhow Sunset Cruise

Board a handcrafted wooden dhow — made in the same style as the vessels that crossed the Indian Ocean for a thousand years — for a sunset cruise from Stone Town's harbour. Fresh seafood, Swahili songs and the city's medieval skyline glowing in the evening light.

Heritage Landmarks

Stone Town rewards slow exploration. These are the landmarks that reveal the layered civilisations that built this extraordinary UNESCO World Heritage City.

01
Portuguese Fort · 1699
Arab Fort (Ngome Kongwe)

Built by Omani Arabs on the foundations of a Portuguese chapel between 1698 and 1701, the Arab Fort is Stone Town's oldest standing building. Its thick coral-rag walls once defended the harbour; today the courtyard hosts the annual Zanzibar International Film Festival and local cultural performances in the evenings.

02
Moral Landmark · 1872
Anglican Cathedral & Slave Market

Built by the UMCA missionary society on the site of the last open-air slave market in East Africa — closed under British pressure in 1873 — the Cathedral stands as Zanzibar's most powerful moral monument. The original slave pens remain underground, preserved as a memorial. A sculpture by Swedish artist Clara Sörnäs marks the suffering of the estimated 600,000 slaves traded through Zanzibar's docks.

03
Royal Palace · 19th Century
House of Wonders (Beit-el-Ajaib)

The Sultan of Zanzibar's ceremonial palace — the first building in East Africa to have electric lighting and an electric elevator, hence its name. The seven-storey white seafront facade with sweeping verandas and a great central clock tower is Stone Town's most recognisable landmark. Now houses the Museum of History and Culture of Zanzibar.

04
Cultural Icon · 1946 Birthplace
Freddie Mercury's Birthplace

Farrokh Bulsara was born at Mercury House, Stone Town, on 5 September 1946 — before his family moved to India and he eventually became Freddie Mercury of Queen. A brass plaque marks the house on Kenyatta Road; the Mercury Restaurant nearby celebrates his life and plays Queen throughout the day. The Zanzibar International Film Festival dedicated an annual tribute concert to his memory.

05
Historic Mosque · 1831
Malindi Mosque

One of Stone Town's oldest and most beautiful mosques, built in 1831 near the Old Harbour district. The minaret is the tallest in Stone Town, and the mosque's whitewashed interior features intricate plasterwork. The surrounding Malindi quarter is one of Stone Town's most authentic neighbourhoods — its residents still fish from the adjacent dhow jetty at dawn.

06
Living Market · Daily
Darajani Market & Forodhani Gardens

Darajani Market — Stone Town's main produce market — is a sensory immersion: pyramids of cardamom, dried fish hanging from hooks, bolts of printed kanga cloth, mango stacked to the ceiling, and fresh fish laid on ice directly from the morning boats. At sunset, Forodhani Gardens' waterfront food market ignites — a beloved institution where Zanzibaris and visitors alike eat Zanzibar pizza, octopus, sugar cane juice and grilled seafood under the sea stars.

Zanzibar's Outer Islands

The Zanzibar Archipelago extends far beyond the main island of Unguja. Each outlying island offers a distinct and extraordinary experience — from world-class diving to wild hippos and medieval ruins.

Pemba Island Zanzibar diving
Diving Mecca · 50km North
Pemba Island

The "Green Island" — a rugged, clove-covered island with dramatic underwater wall dives plunging to 40m and some of the most pristine coral reefs in the Indian Ocean. Virtually no tourists. Accessible by light aircraft from Zanzibar.

Mnemba Atoll Zanzibar snorkelling
Marine Reserve · 3km Offshore
Mnemba Atoll

A protected coral atoll 3km off Matemwe — Zanzibar's finest snorkelling and diving. Resident hawksbill and green turtles, barracuda, reef sharks and rays in a private marine reserve. The island's exclusive lodge is one of East Africa's finest.

Prison Island Zanzibar giant tortoises
Day Trip · 5km from Stone Town
Changuu (Prison Island)

A 30-minute boat trip from Stone Town, Changuu houses a colony of giant Aldabra tortoises — over 100-year-old individuals that can be hand-fed. The island also has snorkelling and the ruins of a quarantine hospital dating to 1893.

"Zanzibar is one of those places that reaches into you and rearranges something — not just the beauty, but the history, the smell of cloves in the morning air, and the feeling that the world is wider than you thought."
A Nile Abenteuer Guest, 2024

Zanzibar Essentials

Best Time to Visit
Oct – Feb / Jun – Aug

October–February for the dry northeast monsoon — clearest water, calmest seas, whale sharks present. June–August for cooling southeast trade winds. March–May and November are the rain seasons (lighter in Nov).

Getting There
Zanzibar Airport (ZNZ)

Direct flights from Nairobi (1hr), Dar es Salaam (20min), Entebbe and Kigali. Fast ferries connect Stone Town and Dar es Salaam in 1.5 hours. Many visitors combine with a Tanzania mainland safari via Kilimanjaro or Dar.

Entry Requirements
Visa on Arrival Available

Zanzibar uses Tanzania's visa framework. Visa on arrival available at Zanzibar Airport and Stone Town port. East African Tourist Visa covers Tanzania, Kenya and Uganda — ideal for multi-country itineraries. Yellow fever certificate required.

Health & Culture
Muslim-Majority Island

Zanzibar is predominantly Muslim. Dress modestly away from the beach (covered shoulders and knees in Stone Town). Ramadan timing affects nightlife and restaurant hours. All Nile Abenteuer guests travel with AMREF Flying Doctors emergency coverage.

Zanzibar & Safari —
The Perfect Pairing

Seven days on safari in the Serengeti or Kilimanjaro, followed by four nights in Zanzibar — this is the East Africa journey our guests return home changed by. We design every detail of the transition, from bush to beach, seamlessly.