Seven days on the Whiskey Route — with an extra acclimatisation day that transforms your summit probability from good to excellent.
If the 6-day Machame is Kilimanjaro's most scenic route done efficiently, the 7-day Machame is Kilimanjaro's most scenic route done properly. The additional day is spent at Karanga Camp — between Barranco and Barafu — adding a crucial acclimatisation stage at approximately 4,035 metres that the 6-day version skips.
The difference this makes on summit night is real and measurable. Climbers on the 7-day Machame consistently report better energy on the summit push, less severe altitude effects, and higher completion rates than those who do the same route in six days. We know this because we track our summit data carefully, and because our guides tell us what they see at Stella Point at four in the morning.
1,800m: Machame Gate to Machame Camp Terrain: Rainforest
The forest entry. Thick, lush, alive. The first hours of Kilimanjaro are always through forest, and the forest always surprises people — you expected the mountain. You got a jungle. Both are correct. The camp tonight sits at the upper forest edge, and the evening is cold in a way that the afternoon was not. Your crew has dinner ready. You eat more than you expected. The mountain is above you, enormous and patient.
3,000m: Machame Camp to Shira Camp Terrain: Heathland and moorland — Shira Plateau
The trail emerges from the heathland onto the Shira Plateau — one of Kilimanjaro's most extraordinary landscapes. The Shira was a volcano before Kilimanjaro. It is 3,840 metres above sea level and it feels like the top of the world until you look east and see the mountain still rising enormously above you. The plateau is wide and cold and strange in the late afternoon light.
3,840m: Shira to Lava Tower then Barranco Terrain: Alpine desert — Lava Tower, Barranco Valley
The critical acclimatisation day: climb to the Lava Tower at 4,630 metres for lunch, then descend to Barranco at 3,976 metres to sleep. Your body gains the altitude exposure and recovers at a lower sleeping elevation. The Lava Tower is a geological spectacle — a 300-metre volcanic plug that has been here for 450,000 years. You eat lunch at its base and continue into the Barranco Valley, where the Great Wall awaits tomorrow.
3,976m: Barranco to Barranco Wall to Karanga — The Extra Day Terrain: Barranco Wall scramble then Karanga Valley
The Barranco Wall is the morning's centrepiece — the hands-and-feet scramble up 300 metres of volcanic rock that every Machame climber remembers. Then, instead of pushing all the way to Barafu, the 7-day itinerary stops at Karanga Camp. This is the extra day — and it is the reason this itinerary outperforms the 6-day version. Karanga at 4,035 metres gives your body another night at moderate altitude before the high camp push. Rest. Eat. Drink. Tomorrow is Barafu.
4,035m: Karanga to Barafu — The High Camp Terrain: Alpine desert — final approach to Barafu
A shorter, focused day: climb from Karanga to Barafu High Camp, arriving in the early afternoon. Barafu means 'ice' in Swahili, and the name is accurate — this close to the summit, ice and cold are the permanent condition. You rest, eat your most important pre-summit meal, and go to sleep before dark. Your body has had seven days to prepare for what begins at midnight.
4,673m: Summit Night — Barafu to Uhuru Peak Terrain: Arctic scree, summit plateau, ice fields
Midnight. The alarm. The cold. The darkness and the stars and your guide's steady voice. The summit push from Barafu is the longest, coldest, most demanding night of the climb — and the most extraordinary. You have had seven days on the mountain. Your body knows what it is doing. The altitude is still formidable, but you meet it with a physiology that has had time to adapt. Stella Point. The crater rim. The final forty minutes. Uhuru Peak. Everything after that is descent and celebration.
3,100m: Descent to Mweka Gate — The Mountain Returns You Terrain: Forest descent
A morning through the forest to Mweka Gate, your completion certificate, and the transfer to Arusha. Seven days on the mountain. One summit. The rest is the rest of your life.
| Start dates | Solo | 2 people | 3 people | 4 people | 5 people | 6 people | 7+ people |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 1, 2026 – May 31, 2026 | n/a | $2,275 | $2,010 | $1,820 | $1,820 | $1,820 | Get Quote |
| Jun 1, 2026 – Dec 31, 2026 | n/a | $2,400 | $2,140 | $1,950 | $1,950 | $1,950 | Get Quote |
Prices are per person sharing, in USD. Group discounts apply — contact us for custom or larger-group pricing.
Yes — every departure is private with your own guide and vehicle. The route, dates, and accommodation level can all be tailored to you.
Several tiers per night, from comfortable mid-range camps and lodges to premium and elite options. See the day-by-day list above.
Yes — all park entry fees, government taxes, and the meals listed in the itinerary are included.
The dry season generally offers the best game viewing, but we'll advise the ideal timing for your chosen route and dates.
Absolutely — our safaris are family friendly and we can tailor the pace for younger travellers.
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