If you’re budgeting for a Kenyan safari in 2026, you’ve probably noticed something frustrating: every source seems to quote different park entry fees. That’s not sloppy research—it’s because Kenya’s park fees have been genuinely unsettled since late 2025, caught between a government overhaul, a court injunction, and a payment system that never rolled back to the old prices. Here’s what’s actually going on and what it means for your budget.
The Short Version
In October 2025, the Kenya Wildlife Service (KWS) rolled out its first full fee overhaul in nearly two decades—and the increases were steep, in some cases more than doubling entry costs. Kenya’s tourism industry immediately challenged the rollout in court, not over the price increases themselves, but over how abruptly they were introduced. A judge froze enforcement pending a hearing. Yet the online payment portal never reverted to the old prices, meaning many travelers have continued paying the higher, contested rates anyway, with the promise of a refund if the courts eventually side against KWS.
As of mid-2026, that legal question has dragged on longer than anyone expected, which is exactly the kind of moving target worth checking right before you book.
How We Got Here
Kenya’s park fees hadn’t seen a comprehensive revision since 2007. In September 2025, Parliament approved the Wildlife Conservation and Management (Access, Entry, and Conservation) Fees Regulations 2025, introducing a cleaner four-tier pricing system—separating East African citizens, Kenya residents, other African citizens, and non-resident international visitors—alongside simplified park categories like Premium, Wilderness, and Marine.
The trouble wasn’t the price increase itself. The Kenya Tourism Federation, representing tour operators, hoteliers, and travel agents, said it had no objection to higher fees in principle—its members had even participated in the public consultation. The problem was timing: KWS announced the new rates on September 29 and implemented them just two days later, on October 1, blindsiding operators who had already sold safari packages at the old prices months in advance, some to European clients protected by consumer laws that bar post-booking price changes.

The Court Steps In — Then Things Get Murky
The Kenya Tourism Federation went to the High Court, and Justice John Chigiti issued a conservatory order suspending the new fees just two days after they took effect, pending a full hearing. On paper, that should have meant a return to the old 2022/23 rates while the case proceeded.
In practice, it didn’t work that way. KWSPay — the eCitizen portal that handles all park payments, since gates no longer accept cash — kept displaying and charging the new, higher rates throughout the dispute. KWS’s own guidance to confused tour operators was to simply pay whatever the portal showed and apply for a refund later if the courts ultimately ruled against the new tariff. That created a strange limbo: legally suspended fees that travelers were, in effect, still paying.
The dispute deepened in November 2025 when the tourism federation raised a second complaint—an additional gateway charge (reported at both 5% and 8.5% depending on the source) tacked onto payments through the new portal, which operators said had no legal basis and was only revealed at checkout. The matter escalated to a Senate committee, which summoned KWS to explain both the fee hikes and the surprise levy.
What You’re Likely Paying Right Now
Because enforcement has stayed tangled in litigation while the payment portal kept the new pricing live, most sources tracking this into 2026 report that the higher 2025 rates are, practically speaking, the ones being charged. As a rough guide to what non-resident (international) visitors are seeing quoted for peak season (roughly July–December):
- Nairobi National Park: around $80
- Amboseli / Lake Nakuru (Premium parks): around $90
- Tsavo East & Tsavo West: roughly $60–$70 (still cheaper than the Mara)
- Maasai Mara: this reserve is managed separately by Narok County, not KWS, and has its own pricing—historically the most expensive at up to $200 in peak season
These figures should be treated as a planning estimate, not a guarantee—given the ongoing dispute, rates could still shift before or after your trip. The only reliable way to confirm exact current pricing is checking the KWSPay portal directly when you book, since that’s the system tour operators and independent travelers alike are required to pay through.
What This Means for Your Trip Planning
- Book through a reputable tour operator who tracks these changes daily — this is one area where using a local operator genuinely pays off over self-booking.
- Keep every digital receipt. If the courts eventually rule against KWS, refunds are processed by emailing KWS directly with your payment reference — but only for those who kept documentation.
- Budget for the higher end. Given the fees have stayed elevated in practice throughout the litigation, it’s safer to plan around current KWSPay pricing than to expect a rollback before your trip.
- Remember the Maasai Mara is priced separately from KWS-managed parks, since it falls under Narok County government rather than the Kenya Wildlife Service.
- Compare regionally if budget matters most. Even after the increases, Kenya’s parks remain in the same range as Tanzania’s Serengeti and pricier than Uganda’s, Zambia’s, or Namibia’s parks—worth factoring in if you’re comparing a broader East Africa itinerary.
We’re Tracking This
This is very much a live story rather than a settled policy, and as a Kenya-based newsroom we’re following the court proceedings and any KWSPay pricing changes as they happen. We’ll update this article the moment there’s a final ruling or a confirmed rate change—bookmark this page if you’re still months out from booking your safari.
READ MORE:
Is Kenya Safe For Tourists In 2026? A Local’s Honest Safety Guide

