KILIMANJARO GUIDE COST
Kilimanjaro climbs typically can cost between $2,000 and $6,000, with prices ranging from low-cost budget operators to major Western tourist agencies overcharging for outsourced excursions. Any trip operator has a number of unavoidable fixed costs, so if a climb looks too affordable, you need to consider why.
Consider cheap prices, and ask yourself, where is the operator cutting costs, and how will that affect your safety on the mountain. The usual area to skimp on costs is the payment of staff, by not paying a proper wage and providing little to no equipment. This doesn’t help the climber in the long run and could even be a fatal mistake.
Climbing Kilimanjaro is the experience of a lifetime that tops bucket lists of people from all over the world. So here you are: You are thinking of climbing Kilimanjaro and you wondering about the price tag of it all. Let’s break the ice and start off with the following: You can realize your dreams for about 5000 USD. Happy? Okay, let’s move on. 5000 USD equals 4400 EUR or about 4000 GBP. If you don’t think that is a lot of money, then you either make too much money or you know that climbing Kilimanjaro could be even a lot more expensive. Correct. If everyone would be paid a Western salary and there wouldn’t be as much competition, then Kilimanjaro is definitely the most affordable one.
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High park fees and logistical costs mean there is no such thing as a cheap Kilimanjaro climb. The best way to keep down costs is to form or join a group of four or more like-minded hikers, and to stick to the Marangu Route, which is more popular and busy than the other options, but also less logistically complicated.