Hotel in Lower Zambezi National Park, Zambia
Anabezi Camp
150ptsFloodplain-Integrated Canvas

About Anabezi Camp
Anabezi Camp occupies the western reaches of Zambia's Lower Zambezi National Park, where the river's floodplains draw some of Africa's densest elephant populations. The 2025 World Travel Awards named it Zambia's Leading Tented Safari Camp, a signal of where it sits within the country's premium safari tier. For travellers weighing the Lower Zambezi's lodge options, Anabezi represents a serious entry point into tented camp accommodation at this end of the park.
Where the Floodplain Dictates the Design
Tented safari accommodation in sub-Saharan Africa has split sharply over the past decade. At one end, large lodge complexes with fixed masonry, swimming pools cantilevered over rivers, and forty-plus keys have pushed closer to resort territory. At the other, a smaller cohort of camps has held to the canvas-and-timber logic that made safari lodging distinctive in the first place: structures light enough to respond to the landscape, positioned to dissolve the distance between sleeping and wilderness. Anabezi Camp, situated in the western sector of Zambia's Lower Zambezi National Park, belongs to the second cohort.
The Lower Zambezi corridor is one of southern Africa's more demanding environments for camp architecture. The Zambezi River sets the dominant axis, and the floodplain that fans out from its banks shifts seasonally, rewarding camps that orient their structures toward water views while keeping enough elevation to remain usable through the wet season. Anabezi's positioning within this geography follows that logic: the tented suites face the river corridor, and the camp's open-sided communal spaces are designed to keep the bush visible rather than screened. This is the practical outcome of building in a place where the landscape is the primary amenity.
In 2025, the World Travel Awards named Anabezi Camp Zambia's Leading Tented Safari Camp, a recognition that places it at the front of a competitive regional field that includes well-established properties across South Luangwa and Kafue. That distinction matters for context: the Lower Zambezi has fewer camps than South Luangwa, which means each property carries more weight as a representative of the park's overall standard. Anabezi's position within that small group is now formally acknowledged.
The Physical Logic of a Tented Camp
What distinguishes the best-designed tented camps from glorified glamping is structural intention: how canvas and timber are deployed not just for aesthetic effect but to create a specific relationship between the interior and the animal activity outside. In the Lower Zambezi, that relationship is defined by elephants above everything else. The park hosts some of the highest elephant densities in Zambia, and the floodplains between the escarpment and the river channel function as year-round elephant corridors. A camp's architecture either works with that reality or ignores it.
The tented suite format at camps in this category typically involves raised platforms to give sightlines over riverine vegetation, canvas walls that can be rolled to open the interior entirely, and a progression from private sleeping space through a veranda or deck to an unobstructed view. The design emphasis is on permeability: you should be able to hear the river and the bush from bed. Within the Lower Zambezi's peer set, which includes Royal Zambezi Lodge and Lolebezi at the park's eastern end, Anabezi operates on the western side, which typically offers a quieter approach to the park with fewer vehicles on the activity circuits.
For travellers comparing this camp to properties in other Zambian parks, the Lower Zambezi's physical character is genuinely distinct from South Luangwa's. South Luangwa is oxbow-lake country, built around lagoons that create contained animal theatre. The Lower Zambezi is a wider, more open system: the river itself is broader, the escarpment rises dramatically behind the camps, and the activities extend onto the water as well as into the bush. Camps like Lion Camp in Mfuwe and Puku Ridge in South Luangwa offer a reference point for the Luangwa Valley's different register. The Kafue National Park, where Anantara's Kafue River Tented Camp has recently entered the market, adds a third distinct environment to Zambia's premium safari geography.
Activities and the River as Infrastructure
The Lower Zambezi's defining activity advantage over landlocked parks is canoeing. Multi-day canoe safaris along the Zambezi, which pass through the national park with elephant, buffalo, and hippo at close quarters, are a specific format that the park's geography makes possible and that most of southern Africa cannot replicate. The camp's position on the river bank directly determines the quality of this access. Properties on the main channel rather than set back on flood channels have more consistent water access through the dry season months, which run roughly from May through October and represent the peak safari window in this part of Zambia.
Game drives into the park's interior complement the water-based activity program. The western sector of the Lower Zambezi typically sees lower vehicle numbers than areas closer to the Chiawa Game Management Area's eastern boundary, which is a relevant detail for travellers who prioritise quieter bush time. Sungani Lodge in Luangwa and Mukwa River Lodge in Livingstone offer different takes on Zambian wilderness access for travellers building multi-stop itineraries in the region.
Planning a Stay
The Lower Zambezi National Park is accessed by light aircraft, typically via Jeki airstrip or Royal airstrip, with scheduled charter connections from Lusaka. Drive access exists via the Chirundu border crossing but involves significant road time and is rarely used by international visitors booking premium camps. The camp operates on an all-inclusive or full-board model standard to this tier of safari accommodation in Zambia, where meals, game activities, and park fees are bundled into the nightly rate rather than priced separately. The dry season window from June through October represents the concentrated demand period, with July and August the hardest months to book. Enquiries and reservations for Anabezi should be directed through a specialist safari operator or the camp directly, as booking architecture at this level of the Zambian market rarely involves standard online reservation platforms.
For travellers building broader itineraries that combine Zambia with international luxury property stays, the contrast in format is worth holding in mind. Properties like Amangiri in Canyon Point or Castello di Reschio in Lisciano Niccone share with Anabezi an emphasis on landscape immersion and low-density accommodation, even across radically different geographies. The underlying design logic, that the physical environment should shape the built response rather than the other way around, connects premium wilderness camps to this wider category of place-specific luxury properties, whether that means Hotel Esencia in Tulum or Aman Venice. The Lower Zambezi's version of that argument is made in canvas and timber, against one of southern Africa's most active wildlife corridors.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Which room category should I book at Anabezi Camp?
- Anabezi operates within the premium tented camp tier, and the standard tented suite format at camps in this category is designed to deliver the core experience: river views, open-sided verandas, and direct proximity to wildlife activity. The camp's 2025 World Travel Awards recognition as Zambia's Leading Tented Safari Camp applies to the property as a whole, so the priority when booking is securing dates in the dry season window rather than a specific room upgrade. If the camp offers a larger suite or family configuration, that choice is relevant for group size rather than experience quality.
- What is the defining thing about Anabezi Camp?
- Its position in the western Lower Zambezi National Park, combined with the 2025 World Travel Awards designation as Zambia's Leading Tented Safari Camp, places it at the front of a park that hosts some of the most concentrated elephant movement in southern Africa. The Lower Zambezi's combination of land and water-based activities, particularly canoe safaris on the Zambezi itself, is the park's strongest differentiator within Zambia's safari geography, and Anabezi's riverside location gives direct access to that program.
- What is the leading way to book Anabezi Camp?
- Camps at this level of the Zambian safari market are most reliably booked through specialist African safari operators who have direct allocations and can advise on air charter connections from Lusaka. Standard online travel platforms rarely carry reliable availability for the Lower Zambezi's premium tier. Given the camp's award recognition and the park's concentrated dry-season demand, enquiring six to nine months ahead for July and August travel is a reasonable starting point.
- How does Anabezi Camp compare to other tented camps in Zambia for first-time visitors to the country?
- For travellers making a first visit to Zambia, the Lower Zambezi offers a distinct experience from South Luangwa and Kafue: the river is wider, the elephant populations are among the densest in the country, and the canoe safari format is available in a way it isn't inland. Anabezi, as the 2025 World Travel Awards' named leader in the Zambian tented camp category, is a credible anchor for a first Lower Zambezi itinerary, particularly when combined with a second park such as South Luangwa to give comparative depth across the country's different wilderness systems.
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