Once the private home of Italian nobleman Count Ancilotto, Loisaba blends historic charm with refined rustic luxury. The tented camp offers twelve spacious tents featuring floor-to-ceiling doors and windows, polished wooden floors, and elegant Africana décor with subtle European influences.
Among its most unique experiences are the famous star beds—beautiful four-poster beds set on raised wooden platforms beneath thatched roofs. These can be rolled onto private decks, allowing guests to sleep under Kenya’s vast, star-filled skies. Each retreat is privately positioned in the wilderness and includes dedicated staff, open-air dining, a full bathroom, and sweeping views across 60,000 acres of wildlife-rich landscape.
Through its partnerships with The Nature Conservancy and Space for Giants, Loisaba also plays an important role in protecting elephants, lions, wild dogs, and many other iconic species.
Laikipia Plateau
24
12
En-suite bathrooms
Not allowed
Non-Smocking Rooms
Loisaba offers twelve spacious, elegantly designed tents, each equipped with modern en-suite bathrooms featuring double basins, a toilet, and a shower. Guests are welcome to enjoy the shared bar, dining areas, panoramic deck, and infinity pool, as well as the main lounge and outdoor fire area. These facilities are available for all guests to relax, dine, and socialize while enjoying the surrounding views.
With uninterrupted views stretching to Mount Kenya and across 60,000 acres of wildlife-rich conservancy, game drives offer excellent wildlife viewing opportunities. Guests may also enjoy a range of optional activities, including yoga, tennis, bocce, and croquet.
Additional experiences available at extra cost include camel or horseback riding, mountain biking, rafting, rock climbing, sand-dune excursions, heli-camping, and heli-fishing. The conservancy is also home to a dedicated anti-poaching unit with trained sniffer dogs, which guests may have the opportunity to visit.
Kifaru derives its name from the Kiswahili word for rhinoceros. Since its establishment in 1983, Lewa Conservancy and its team of 150 well-equipped rangers have diligently safeguarded Lewa’s thriving rhino population, now numbering 169—about 10% of Kenya’s total. The conservancy is also home to 69 other mammal species, including around 20% of the world’s Grevy’s zebras, the largest and most striking members of the equid family, making Lewa a true sanctuary for wildlife lovers. Enriching the experience further is the Craig family, whose generations of dedication founded the conservancy and shaped the warm, intimate, and authentic African character of Kifaru House.
Sirikoi heralds a new era of ultra-luxury, where true status is found in silence, space, and deep connection. Set within a 68,000-acre UNESCO World Heritage sanctuary, this is one of Africa’s most remote and prestigious addresses. Here, “restoration” is not just a word; it is the simple, private joy of watching ancient elephant families gather at your watering hole while you enjoy a quiet moment of reflection from your deck.
This is a realm of absolute exclusivity, where couples find profound intimacy and families forge unbreakable bonds amidst a landscape home to the world’s rarest species—from the black rhino to the majestic Grevy’s zebra. Sirikoi’s architectural elegance, featuring opulent tents and private luxury cottages, is matched only by a level of bespoke African hospitality that feels less like a hotel and more like a grand private estate. In this untamed corner of Lewa, luxury is measured by the stillness of the wild and the warmth of the people who call it home.
Solio Lodge is the only accommodation located within the historic 45,000-acre Solio Ranch and its private 19,000-acre Solio Reserve. The reserve enjoys impressive views of the Aberdare Range to the west and Mount Kenya to the east, creating a dramatic setting for wildlife viewing.
The lodge features just six spacious cottages, comfortably furnished and equipped with modern amenities, including complimentary Wi-Fi. Guests benefit from an exclusive safari experience with access to vast private wilderness. Game drives offer opportunities to see the Big Five—elephants, lions, leopards, buffalo, and rhinos—as well as many other protected species. The reserve is especially renowned for its large and carefully protected population of black rhinos, one of the most significant in Africa.