Kilimanjaro Climbing Guide: Routes, Costs & Difficulty
The complete 2026 guide to climbing Africa’s highest peak — all seven routes compared, $70/day park fees, the 8-day Lemosho vs 7-day Machame decision, success rates from 27% to 95%, and everything you need to know before booking the most-climbed peak in the Seven Summits.
summit
routes
success rate
range 2026
Kilimanjaro is the world’s tallest freestanding mountain, the highest peak in Africa, and the most-climbed of the Seven Summits — approximately 40,000 people attempt it each year. But for a mountain often dismissed as “just a walk,” Kilimanjaro’s reality is more complex: roughly 1 in 3 climbers fails to summit, primarily due to altitude sickness compounded by route choice. This anchor guide covers everything you need to plan a successful Kilimanjaro climb in 2026 — the seven routes, the cost structure, the success rate math, and the critical decisions that separate summit-day celebrations from helicopter evacuations.
Content reflects 2026 regulations from KINAPA (Kilimanjaro National Park Authority) and TANAPA (Tanzania National Parks), current operator pricing from KPAP-partnered companies, and Wilderness and Environmental Medicine research on Kilimanjaro altitude sickness and summit success determinants. Route statistics compiled from Altezza Travel, Climb Kilimanjaro Guide, Mount Kilimanjaro Climb, and independent operator data. Reviewed by Tanzanian KINAPA-licensed mountain guides. Fact-check date: April 19, 2026.
Kilimanjaro: What You’re Actually Climbing
Kilimanjaro is a dormant stratovolcano in northern Tanzania, standing 5,895 meters (19,341 feet) above sea level. It comprises three distinct volcanic cones — Kibo (the summit), Mawenzi, and Shira — though only Kibo is climbed via standard routes. The mountain rises approximately 4,900 m directly from the surrounding plains, making it the world’s tallest freestanding peak (peaks like Everest and Denali rise from already-elevated plateaus).
The Summit & Geography
- Uhuru Peak
- 5,895 m (19,341 ft) — the highest point in Africa
- Volcanic cones
- Kibo (climbed), Mawenzi (technical), Shira (collapsed)
- Location
- Tanzania · 3°S of the equator
- National park
- Kilimanjaro National Park — UNESCO World Heritage 1987
- Glaciers
- Shrinking — may be ice-free by 2040-2050
The Climbing Picture
- Annual climbers
- ~35,000-40,000 attempting per year
- Total all-time summits
- Estimated 380,000+ since first ascent
- First ascent
- Hans Meyer & Ludwig Purtscheller, 1889
- Seven Summits status
- Africa’s Seven Summit — one of seven continental highs
- Climbing style
- Trek (no technical climbing on standard routes)
The climb passes through five distinct ecosystems — a ecological traverse unmatched by most mountains in the world. Each zone presents different challenges, temperatures, and scenery:
Cultivation
Farmland, coffee & banana plantations, Chagga villages
Rainforest
Dense canopy, monkeys, waterfalls, heavy humidity
Heather/Moorland
Giant heather, lobelia, groundsels, sweeping views
Alpine Desert
Barren volcanic terrain, extreme UV, thin air
Arctic Summit
Glaciers, freezing temps, 50% oxygen, summit zone
Among the Seven Summits, Kilimanjaro stands alone as a genuine non-technical peak — no ropes, no crampons, no ice axes on the standard routes. This is why it’s the most popular of the seven. But its accessibility masks altitude challenges equivalent to any 5,000 m+ trek. The dropout rate from altitude sickness is comparable to much more technical peaks. Respect the altitude, choose the right route, and the summit is genuinely achievable for most reasonably fit adults.
The Seven Routes Up Kilimanjaro: Detailed Profiles
Kilimanjaro has seven established routes to the summit plus the Mweka trail used for descent only. Choosing the right route is the single most important decision in planning your climb — it determines success probability, cost, scenery, and physical demands more than any other factor.
Machame Route
Machame is Kilimanjaro’s most popular route — used by approximately one-third of all climbers. The nickname “Whiskey Route” reflects its reputation as tougher than Marangu’s “Coca-Cola Route.” Southern approach from Machame Gate, ascending through rainforest to Shira Plateau, then Lava Tower (4,630 m), Barranco Camp with its famous Barranco Wall (a non-technical scramble), Karanga Camp, Barafu summit base camp, and final push to Uhuru Peak.
Excellent “climb high, sleep low” acclimatization profile makes the 7-day version highly successful. Trekkers pass all five ecosystem zones with dramatic scenery throughout. Camping only — no hut option. Can get crowded at peak times. The 7-day version is strongly preferred; 6-day Machame drops success to just 44-73%.
Lemosho Route
Lemosho is the preferred route for most serious climbers and has become the “gold standard” for Kilimanjaro ascents. Western approach starting at Londorossi Gate, traversing the stunning Shira Plateau from west to east, then joining the Machame route on Day 4 at Barranco Camp. Remote opening days offer some of the best scenery on any route, with fewer climbers until the Machame merger.
The 8-day version provides excellent acclimatization — extra day at high altitude before summit attempt dramatically improves success. This is the route recommended by most experienced operators. The 7-day variant still achieves 85% success. The 6-day compressed version is not recommended — too rushed for safe acclimatization despite costing less.
Northern Circuit
The Northern Circuit is Kilimanjaro’s newest and longest route, approved in 2010. It follows Lemosho for the first days, then breaks off to circle the mountain’s northern slopes — terrain no other route visits. At 9 days minimum, it provides the best acclimatization of any Kilimanjaro route with success rates above 95%.
Significantly less crowded than Machame or Lemosho’s shared sections. The extra days mean higher cost ($3,500-$6,500 typical) but also dramatically higher summit probability. Best choice for cautious climbers, older trekkers, or anyone prioritizing summit success over cost. Also ideal if you have 10+ days available in Tanzania and want a fully comprehensive experience.
Marangu Route
Marangu is Kilimanjaro’s oldest and only hut-based route — climbers sleep in dormitory huts (Mandara, Horombo, Kibo) rather than tents. Often marketed as the “easiest” route due to its shorter duration and hut comforts, but the 5-day version has only 27% summit success — by far the lowest of any option. Only Marangu uses the same trail for ascent and descent.
The 6-day version improves success to 50-60% but still trails other routes significantly. Avoid Marangu unless you specifically need hut accommodations for medical reasons or strongly dislike tents. The compressed schedule provides inadequate acclimatization. Cheaper than most routes (~$1,800-$3,500) but success rate reflects the cost compromise. Often chosen by price-first climbers who later regret not completing.
Rongai Route
Rongai is the only route approaching Kilimanjaro from the north, starting near the Kenyan border. Significantly less crowded than southern routes, with occasional wildlife sightings (elephants, buffalo) in the lower forest sections. Drier than southern routes — good choice during the short rainy season (November).
The main weakness is acclimatization profile — Rongai doesn’t offer the classic “climb high, sleep low” pattern of Machame/Lemosho. This makes the 7-day version strongly preferred over 6-day (85% vs 70% success). Descends via the southern Marangu route, so you see both sides of the mountain. Good option for returning climbers seeking quieter experience.
Umbwe Route
Umbwe is Kilimanjaro’s steepest and most challenging route — a direct southern approach that gains altitude rapidly through dense rainforest. Less than 2% of climbers choose Umbwe. The route’s speed and direct path mean poor acclimatization profile and correspondingly lower summit success.
Joins the Machame route at Barranco Camp. Recommended only for experienced mountain climbers with prior altitude exposure — ideally those with Mt. Meru (4,566 m) or similar acclimatization before Kilimanjaro. The solitude and challenge appeal to some climbers but the summit success drops to 50% on 6-day Umbwe, making it a poor choice for first-time Kilimanjaro climbers regardless of fitness.
Shira Route
The Shira route is essentially a Lemosho variant that drives climbers to Shira Gate at 3,600 m, skipping the rainforest walking days. The high starting altitude without prior acclimatization makes Shira risky — many climbers experience immediate altitude sickness on Day 1. Now rarely offered by reputable operators.
Most modern Shira-branded packages are actually Lemosho 7-day trips that start at Lemosho Glades. The true Shira drop-off approach should be avoided unless you have specific prior altitude acclimatization. If your operator offers “Shira Route,” clarify which version — legitimate Lemosho at lower start or risky 3,600 m drop-off.
Success Rates: The Math of Summit Success
Kilimanjaro summit success depends primarily on days spent above 3,000 m rather than fitness or operator quality. The data shows a remarkably linear relationship between duration and success:
Kilimanjaro Success Rate by Route & Duration (Industry Averages)
The pattern is unambiguous: each additional day above 3,000 m adds approximately 5-7 percentage points to summit probability. This is physiology, not fitness — your body needs time to produce additional red blood cells and adapt to reduced oxygen. See our Altitude Acclimatization Explained guide for the full physiological picture.
Research published in Wilderness and Environmental Medicine confirms that 77% of unsuccessful climbs result from inadequate acclimatization rather than fitness failure. Fit climbers on compressed schedules fail; moderately fit climbers on 8-9 day routes succeed. The route choice matters more than training.
Kilimanjaro Costs in 2026: What You’ll Actually Pay
Kilimanjaro costs cluster into three distinct tiers based on operator quality and inclusions. Total trip costs range from $1,500 to $7,500 per person, with major variations in safety, porter welfare, and summit success.
Budget
- Local Tanzanian companies, minimal overhead
- Safety concerns: reduced guide training, limited oxygen
- Porter welfare issues — often not KPAP-certified
- Lower-quality gear and food
- Compressed itineraries (6-day routes common)
- Success rates 50-65%
- Not recommended for first climb
Mid-Range
- Reputable international + local operators
- KPAP-partnered — ethical porter treatment
- Experienced guides, good safety systems
- Quality meals, modern tents
- 7-8 day route options preferred
- Success rates 80-90%
- Best value for most climbers
Premium
- Top international operators
- IFMGA guides, medical certification
- Best equipment, private toilets, gourmet meals
- Pulse oximeter monitoring twice daily
- Helicopter evacuation access
- Success rates 92-97%
- Includes hotel nights, transfers, some gear
Park fees: the mandatory baseline
TANAPA/KINAPA park fees are identical across all operators — set by the Tanzanian government. For a standard 7-day Kilimanjaro climb (2026 rates):
| Fee Component | Rate | Calculation | Total |
|---|---|---|---|
| Conservation fee | $70/day | 7 days × $70 | $490 |
| Camping fee | $50/night | 6 nights × $50 | $300 |
| Rescue fee | $20 one-time | Per climber | $20 |
| Support team fees | Variable | Guides + porters (3-5 crew per climber) | ~$50 |
| Subtotal (pre-VAT) | — | Per climber | ~$860 |
| VAT (18%) | — | Added to all fees | ~$155 |
| Total park fees | — | Per climber, 7 days | ~$1,015 |
Park fees alone represent approximately 25-40% of your total climb cost. Operators below $2,000 total are either compressing the itinerary to reduce fees, cutting operator margins dangerously thin, or underpaying porters. See our Kilimanjaro Cost 2026 deep-dive for complete cost breakdown including hidden expenses and tipping protocols.
Kilimanjaro porters — typically 2-4 per climber — carry up to 15 kg of gear plus their personal items, often up to 6,000 m. Historically, porters were paid $3-5/day, many suffering exposure injuries in inadequate gear. KPAP (Kilimanjaro Porters Assistance Project) partner operators commit to ethical standards: proper pay ($10-20/day), provided shelter and food, weight limits enforced, appropriate gear. Budget operators frequently violate these standards. Choosing KPAP-partnered companies directly improves the lives of ~10,000 Tanzanians working on the mountain annually. Look for the KPAP logo when comparing operators.
How Hard Is Kilimanjaro? The Difficulty Framework
Kilimanjaro occupies a unique position in mountaineering difficulty — easier than most 5,000 m+ peaks technically, but altitude-equivalent to many that require more skill. Understanding the specific demands helps calibrate preparation.
The four difficulty factors
- 1. Altitude (the primary challenge): Uhuru at 5,895 m means ~50% oxygen of sea level. Approximately 77% of climbers experience some AMS symptoms. This is the dominant difficulty factor on all routes.
- 2. Physical endurance: 5-8 hours of hiking per day for 5-9 consecutive days, with summit day reaching 10-14 hours. Cumulative fatigue matters more than peak intensity.
- 3. Weather exposure: Temperature range from +30°C (rainforest) to -15°C (summit). Rain common on lower mountain, snow possible at altitude year-round. Proper layering essential.
- 4. Mental resilience: Summit day starts at midnight with 7-8 hours of uphill hiking in darkness and cold, at maximum altitude. Many climbers reach their psychological breaking point here.
Fitness requirements
Baseline fitness for Kilimanjaro:
- Minimum: Ability to hike 6-8 hours with a daypack on consecutive days without injury
- Recommended: Multiple training hikes of 8+ miles with 1,000 m+ elevation gain in preceding months
- Optimal: Prior experience at altitude (3,000 m+ even briefly) and running/cycling base of 30-40 km/week
See our 12-Week Kilimanjaro Training Plan for a structured program that prepares you specifically for the demands of Kilimanjaro.
Among the Seven Summits, Kilimanjaro ranks #6 in difficulty — easier only than Kosciuszko (walk-up). It’s significantly easier than Elbrus (5,642 m glaciated, requires crampons), Aconcagua (6,961 m, altitude extreme), Denali (6,190 m, technical + extreme cold), Carstensz Pyramid (4,884 m, D+ technical climbing), Vinson (4,892 m, Antarctica logistics), and Everest (8,849 m, death zone). But don’t misread this: Kilimanjaro still has a ~35% failure rate. It’s the accessible Seven Summit, not a trivial one.
When to Climb: Best Seasons Overview
Kilimanjaro sits 3° south of the equator — temperature is less seasonal than rainfall. The two dry seasons are the primary climbing windows.
- Primary dry season (January–mid March): Warmer, clearer summit nights, best photography. Growing crowds toward March.
- Main climbing season (June–October): Peak crowds but most reliable weather. Cold but clear summits. August is busiest.
- Avoid long rains (mid-March to late May): Heavy rainfall on lower mountain, muddy trails, obscured views.
- Short rains (November–December): Less intense, often climbable, less crowded.
See our Best Time to Climb Kilimanjaro month-by-month guide for detailed seasonal analysis including weather patterns, crowd levels, moon phases, and optimal booking strategies.
Kilimanjaro Climbing FAQ: Your Common Questions Answered
How much does it cost to climb Kilimanjaro in 2026?
Climbing Kilimanjaro in 2026 typically costs between $1,500 and $7,500 per person, varying significantly by operator tier and route length. Cost breakdown: (1) Budget operators: $1,500-$2,500 — typically local Tanzanian companies with minimal overhead. Safety and porter welfare concerns at this tier. (2) Mid-range operators: $2,500-$4,500 — reputable international and local companies with KPAP partnership for porter welfare, experienced guides, good equipment. (3) Premium operators: $4,500-$7,500 — full-service international companies with comprehensive safety systems, top-tier guides, quality gear, and excellent logistics. TANAPA park fees alone are approximately $820 plus 18% VAT (~$955-$1,000 total) for a standard 7-day climb, set by the Tanzanian government and identical across all operators. Park fees include $70/day conservation, $50/night camping, $20 rescue fee. Additional costs not always included: flights ($1,200-$2,200 from North America), tips ($250-$400 for guides and porters), travel insurance ($100-$300), gear rental or purchase ($150-$800), visa and hotel nights before/after climb ($150-$400). Total trip budget: $3,500-$10,000+ from North America. Never climb with operators offering under $1,500 — corners will be cut on safety or porter welfare.
What is the best route to climb Kilimanjaro?
The best route to climb Kilimanjaro depends on your priorities, but the 8-day Lemosho route is widely considered the optimal choice for most climbers. Why Lemosho 8-day is the best: (1) 90-95% summit success rate — among the highest of all routes. (2) Excellent “climb high, sleep low” acclimatization profile. (3) Beautiful scenery through five distinct ecosystems. (4) Less crowded than Machame (Lemosho joins Machame on Day 4). (5) Western approach provides fresh perspective. Alternative best choices: (a) 9-day Northern Circuit — highest success rate (95%+) and most comprehensive acclimatization, ideal for cautious climbers with extra time. (b) 7-day Machame — 85% success rate, most popular route (~35% of climbers), good balance of time, cost, and scenery. (c) 7-day Rongai — 85% success rate, northern approach, fewer crowds, better in rainy season. Routes to avoid: (1) 5-day Marangu — only 27% summit success, too rushed for acclimatization. (2) 6-day Umbwe — 50% success, steepest route on the mountain. (3) 6-day variants of any route — too compressed for safe acclimatization. Choose 7+ days minimum; 8+ days strongly preferred for summit success.
How difficult is climbing Kilimanjaro?
Kilimanjaro is rated as moderately difficult — the easiest of the Seven Summits but significantly harder than typical hiking due to altitude. Difficulty factors: (1) No technical climbing required — it’s a trek, not a climb. No ropes, crampons, or ice axes needed on standard routes. (2) Altitude is the primary challenge — Uhuru Peak at 5,895 m means 50% less oxygen than sea level. Approximately 77% of climbers experience some altitude sickness symptoms. (3) Distance and elevation gain — 50-70 km total with 4,000 m elevation gain over 5-9 days depending on route. (4) Physical demand — 5-8 hours hiking per day with a daypack (porters carry main gear). Summit day is 10-14 hours with pre-dawn start. (5) Weather — temperatures range from +30°C in rainforest to -15°C at summit. Fitness requirement: Ability to hike 6-8 hours per day with a daypack for 7+ consecutive days. Training: 3-6 months of cardio (hiking, running, cycling) plus strength work builds appropriate fitness. Success rate across all routes averages 65% — primarily determined by route length rather than fitness level. Longer routes (8+ days) dramatically improve summit odds.
How many days do you need to climb Kilimanjaro?
Most climbers need 7-9 days to climb Kilimanjaro safely and successfully. Day requirements by route: (1) Marangu — 5 or 6 days (5-day option has only 27% summit success and is strongly discouraged). (2) Machame — 6 or 7 days (7-day much better with 85% success vs 44% for 6-day). (3) Rongai — 6 or 7 days (7-day recommended). (4) Lemosho — 7 or 8 days (8-day has 90-95% success). (5) Northern Circuit — 9 days only (95%+ success). (6) Umbwe — 6 or 7 days (steep, lower success rates overall). Why duration matters so much: Each additional day above 3,000 m adds approximately 5-7 percentage points to summit success. The difference between 6-day and 9-day climbs is primarily physiological — your body needs time to produce additional red blood cells and adapt to reduced oxygen. Industry average success: 5-day routes 27%, 6-day 44%, 7-day 64-85%, 8-day 85-95%, 9-day 95%+. Budget minimum 7 days on the mountain; prefer 8-9 days if budget and time allow. The extra days pay for themselves in dramatically higher summit probability and much more enjoyable experience with less altitude suffering.
Can you climb Kilimanjaro without a guide?
No, you cannot legally climb Kilimanjaro without a guide. Tanzanian law requires all climbers to book through licensed tour operators and be accompanied by registered guides. Key regulations: (1) Only KINAPA-licensed (Kilimanjaro National Park Authority) operators can obtain climbing permits. (2) All climbers must be accompanied by registered Tanzanian mountain guides. (3) Independent or solo trekking is strictly prohibited — violations result in deportation, fines, or imprisonment. (4) Every climber requires a support team of at least 3-5 staff including guide, assistant guide, cook, and porters. (5) Rangers check permits and guide credentials at park entrances and along trails. Why the rule exists: safety (altitude rescue, navigation), environmental protection (pack-out requirements), and economic support for local Tanzanian communities. Porter-to-climber ratios typically range from 3:1 to 5:1 by regulation. Groups must include certified first aid personnel and maintain guide-to-climber ratios of 1:3 or better for safety. All operator packages include guides, permits, and crew as standard — there is no legal way to attempt Kilimanjaro independently. Budget appropriately for this regulatory structure which adds significant cost but ensures safety and fair employment for ~10,000 Tanzanians who work annually as mountain crew.
What is the success rate on Kilimanjaro?
The overall Kilimanjaro summit success rate is approximately 65% across all routes and durations — meaning roughly 1 in 3 climbers does not reach Uhuru Peak. However, success varies dramatically by route length and quality: (1) By days on mountain: 5-day routes 27%, 6-day 44%, 7-day 64-85%, 8-day 85-95%, 9-day 95%+. (2) By specific route (industry average): Northern Circuit 9-day 92%+, Lemosho 8-day 90%, Lemosho 7-day 85%, Machame 7-day 85%, Rongai 7-day 85%, Machame 6-day 73%, Lemosho 6-day 75%, Rongai 6-day 70%, Marangu 6-day 50-60%, Marangu 5-day 27%, Umbwe 6-day 50%. (3) Top-quality operators report 90-97% success rates on their 8-day Lemosho and 9-day Northern Circuit programs, vs industry averages 80-92%. Main failure cause: 77% of unsuccessful climbs result from inadequate acclimatization rather than fitness. Other failure causes: severe altitude sickness (AMS/HAPE/HACE), injury, illness, mental fatigue, weather. Maximize your success: (1) Choose 8+ day route. (2) Select quality operator with experienced guides. (3) Arrive 2-3 days before climb to start acclimatization. (4) Train specifically for multi-day hiking. (5) Hydrate aggressively (4-5 L/day on mountain). (6) Consider Diamox on doctor’s recommendation. (7) Walk slowly — ‘pole pole’ in Swahili is the summit motto.
What should I pack for Kilimanjaro?
Packing for Kilimanjaro requires gear for 5 distinct climate zones from tropical rainforest to arctic summit. Essential gear categories: (1) Boots and footwear — Waterproof hiking boots (broken in), camp shoes/sandals, gaiters for wet sections. (2) Layering system — Base layers (wool/synthetic, 3 sets), insulating mid-layers (fleece + down puffy jacket), hardshell jacket and pants (waterproof/windproof). (3) Summit layers — Heavy down jacket (-15°C rated), warm hat, balaclava, insulated mittens + liner gloves. (4) Sleeping — Sleeping bag rated to -10°C or warmer, inflatable sleeping pad (if camping route). (5) Head and eyes — Sun hat, headlamp + spare batteries, quality sunglasses (UV 400, glacier protection). (6) Hydration — 3 L water capacity (Nalgene + hydration bladder), water purification tablets as backup. (7) Small daypack — 25-35 L for daily items (main gear carried by porters up to 15 kg limit per porter). (8) Trekking poles (essential for descents), first aid kit including Diamox prescription, blister treatment, personal medications. (9) Snacks and electrolyte supplements. (10) Duffel bag for porter gear (most operators provide). Gear rental is widely available in Moshi and Arusha — budget $150-$300 for full kit rental. Operators typically provide detailed packing lists; follow them carefully as weather conditions vary dramatically across the climb.
When is the best time to climb Kilimanjaro?
The best time to climb Kilimanjaro is during the two dry seasons: January through mid-March and mid-June through October. Detailed monthly breakdown: (1) January-mid March: Dry season, warmer, clearer skies on summit nights, ideal for photography. Increasing crowds toward February-March peak. Snow on summit more common. (2) Mid-March to late May: Long rainy season. Heavy rainfall on lower mountain, trails muddy, cloud cover obscures views. Not recommended for most climbers. (3) June: Rain easing, cooler temperatures, preparing for peak season. Good shoulder month. (4) July-October: Main dry season and peak climbing season. Busy trails, best weather, cold but clear. July-August see highest volumes. (5) November-December: Short rainy season, less intense than spring rains but still challenging. December becomes drier toward month-end. (6) Late December: Christmas and New Year’s climbs popular despite occasional rain. Best months for summit weather: January (warmer, clearer), August-September (reliable dry conditions), late December-early January (peak conditions). Full moon considerations: Summit nights near full moon provide natural light on final summit push (04:00-06:00 ascent to watch sunrise from Uhuru). Book 4-6 months ahead for peak season; 2-3 months for shoulder seasons.
Authoritative Sources & Further Reading
Content reflects current 2026 regulations and peer-reviewed mountaineering research:
- KINAPA (Kilimanjaro National Park Authority) — tanzaniaparks.go.tz — Official park authority and regulations
- TANAPA (Tanzania National Parks) — tanzaniaparks.go.tz — National park fee structure and climbing permits
- KPAP (Kilimanjaro Porters Assistance Project) — kiliporters.org — Porter welfare standards and certified operators
- Wilderness and Environmental Medicine journal — “Determinants of Summiting Success and Acute Mountain Sickness on Mt. Kilimanjaro (5895m)”
- International Porter Protection Group (IPPG) — ippg.net — Porter safety guidelines
- UIAA (International Climbing and Mountaineering Federation) — altitude acclimatization research
- Operator websites: Altezza Travel, Climbing Kilimanjaro, Mount Kilimanjaro Climb, African Scenic Safaris, Tranquil Kilimanjaro, Eco-Africa Climbing, Mountain Madness, Alpine Ascents International, REI Adventures
- Reference texts: Kilimanjaro and Mount Kenya: A Climbing and Trekking Guide (Cameron Burns), Kilimanjaro: The Trekking Guide (Henry Stedman), Mountaineering in Kilimanjaro National Park (TANAPA publications)
Related Guides Across the Hub
Companion guides for Kilimanjaro-specific planning and broader Seven Summits context.
Back to the Master Hub
This guide is one of 71 across 12 thematic clusters on Global Summit Guide. The master hub organizes every guide by experience tier, specific peak, skill area, and region.

