Aspiring to decarbonise tourism.

T1. Sossusvlei & Walvis Bay Lagoons – Ends in Swakopmund

Price: 640 EUR per person

Four‑day desert‑to‑coast journey from Windhoek to the famous Sossusvlei dunes and on to the bird‑rich Walvis Bay wetlands, ending in Swakopmund. Spend two nights camping near Sossusvlei, then one coastal night branded as “Walvis Bay Lagoons” and a final night in a Swakopmund guesthouse. The trip includes Sossusvlei, Deadvlei and Sesriem Canyon, guided visits to the Walvis Bay Lagoon, salt pans and Ramsar‑listed wetlands with flamingos and other waterbirds, plus a free rotating Swakopmund morning activity (desert or city focus). Breakfast and lunch are included daily, with two lodge/guesthouse dinners; optional Sandwich Harbour excursions can be booked with local operators at guests’ own cost, or run as a full‑group activity when everyone chooses to join.

A sturdy 4×4 vehicle parked on a dusty Namibian trail with vast desert landscapes in the background.
A sturdy 4×4 vehicle parked on a dusty Namibian trail with vast desert landscapes in the background.
A traveler setting up a camping tent beside a 4×4 under a wide, starry Namibian sky.
A traveler setting up a camping tent beside a 4×4 under a wide, starry Namibian sky.

T2. Sossusvlei, Walvis & Swakopmund – Return to Windhoek

Price: 670 EUR per person

This version follows the same 4‑night route and inclusions as T1 but adds a return transfer to Windhoek at the end of the tour. Guests travel from Windhoek to Sossusvlei for two camping nights, continue via Walvis Bay Lagoons and wetlands to Swakopmund for the final coastal night and free morning activity, then are driven back to Windhoek. Activities, meals and optional Sandwich Harbour arrangements are identical to T1, with the higher rate reflecting the added driving time and logistics for the return leg.

T3. Family Premium Lodge Circuit – Ends in Swakopmund

Price: 1,250 EUR per person (two people only; up to four for a family; small‑family convoy possible if the other family agrees)

A 4‑night private lodge‑based version of the desert‑to‑coast circuit, designed for two adults travelling together in comfort, with space to adapt for a family of up to four. Nights are spent in well‑located lodges and luxury guesthouse rooms rather than in tents, while keeping the same core experiences: Sossusvlei dunes and Deadvlei, Sesriem Canyon, scenic desert drives, Walvis Bay Lagoon and wetlands, and a final Swakopmund morning activity that alternates between desert and city. The 1,250 EUR per person rate includes private guiding, road transport from Windhoek to Swakopmund, breakfasts and lunches each day, and at least two lodge/guesthouse dinners. A small family can share the same guide and vehicle, and if two different families book the same dates they might travel in a short convoy to share guiding while keeping the group size low.

T4. Family Premium Lodge Circuit Add‑On – Game Drive or Elephant Tracking

Price: 1,340 EUR per person (two people only; up to four for a family; small‑family convoy possible)

We have recently discovered an interesting place, a whole huge park managed by an NGO as part of our August holiday 2025. Add an extra night (or even two) at TimBila Nature Reserve in glamping tents to any of the main trips. Guests stay in comfortable safari‑style tents with proper beds, solar powered electricity with full fridge and cosy kitchen, and enjoy dinner, breakfast, and a guided game drive with sunset included. Those who prefer can upgrade to an elephant‑tracking experience in place of the standard game drive, paying only the additional amount charged by TimBila for tracking on top of the 150 EUR base. This creates a stand‑alone TimBila extension with fixed pricing that can be easily combined with T1–T3. Even two? YES, we are not heavily after profit-per-day, we rather stay with you and whatever we make, we have enough to share with our social projects and community based conservation areas. That is why NGO-run reserves attract our routes. That is how we develop toward decarbonising tourism, hofully powering main vehicles with electricity and hydrogen by 2030.

woman wearing yellow long-sleeved dress under white clouds and blue sky during daytime