Three ways to settle in
Stay in a room with its own name, dine at our open-air restaurant where the wild meets the plains, and let the evening find you at the bar.
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Here, the sun sets the pace, the wild breaks the silence, and there is room to breathe and be still.

Warujojo was built for adventurers who value the freedom to slow down. Hand-laid stone, thick thatch and forest timber frame unhurried days that begin on safari in Queen Elizabeth National Park and settle by the fire beneath a canopy of stars.
Stay in a room with its own name, dine at our open-air restaurant where the wild meets the plains, and let the evening find you at the bar.
Keep scrolling →

Morning coffee at the open-air restaurant laid with hand-printed linens, facing the plains with the space and warmth to seat a whole safari party when the group is big or the weather turns.
See dining & the bar
The bar, lounge and savanna-facing garden form the lodge’s sociable heart, with ochre walls, deep sofas, cold drinks and the day’s sightings retold as evening settles and the stars begin to brighten.
Evenings at the bar
Four cottages ·· Amina, Hannibal, Menelik and Kibalama and a family of bandas, each finished with its own character: engraved door plaques, four-poster beds under mosquito-net canopies, and bathrooms carved from river stone and terracotta.
Discover the rooms
Queen Elizabeth National Park starts at the lawn’s edge and rolls east without interruption, through savanna and acacia to the distant shimmer of the Kazinga Channel.
