Why we're building this

Most safaris are still sold through PDFs, Word documents, or generic booking portals. PDFs are static and hard to update, documents feel fragile and unbranded, and booking engines often flatten rich, story-driven itineraries into interchangeable listings. SafarItinerary is a response to that reality: a focused, opinionated tool that makes your proposals as professional as the experiences you deliver.

Who it's for

SafarItinerary is built for safari operators of all sizes — from solo guides to established destination management companies — as long as your trips are rooted in wildlife, wilderness, and natural landscapes.

  • Custom safari planners crafting multi-day itineraries.
  • Bespoke operators who care about narrative, conservation, and logistics.
  • Teams who want a reusable, structured way to present trips without feeling commoditized.

How we think about the product

SafarItinerary is deliberately opinionated. We believe modern itineraries should be structured, that days should flow logically, that accommodations should be reusable objects, and that exports should match what clients saw online. Early versions prioritize human clarity and predictable behavior over automation; smarter tooling and AI can layer on once the structure is sound.

Positioning without commoditizing

We are explicitly not building another price-first travel marketplace. Operators opt in to any public discovery surfaces, keep their branding, and receive inquiries directly. Our goal is to help travelers understand safaris — not just compare them at a glance.

Conservation commitment

SafarItinerary allocates 10% of net profits, calculated quarterly, to wildlife and conservation initiatives in countries represented on the platform. It is profit-based, curated, and not tied to individual bookings or marketing campaigns — designed to be structural, not performative.

As the platform grows, we intend to publish a simple, transparent record of where these funds go and why.