Tanzania's private islands are genuinely isolated properties — limited room counts, no day visitors, and reefs that see almost no snorkel traffic. The trade-off is access: most require a charter flight to a regional airstrip plus a boat transfer, adding cost and complexity that a standard Zanzibar beach stay does not.
Pairing safari with a private island#
The most common structure is three to four nights on safari followed by two to five nights on the island. Bush-and-beach safaris from the Northern Circuit typically end at Mnemba or Bawe, both within reasonable flying distance of Zanzibar's beaches and Stone Town. Southern Circuit routes from Nyerere National Park pair well with Fanjove and Thanda — both sit off Tanzania's southeastern coast, cutting transit compared to flying north to Zanzibar.
Fly-in safaris that already use bush flights between camps make the island transfer a natural continuation. Ultra-luxury safaris at this tier typically include Thanda Island, booked as a whole property rather than by the room. Ruaha paired with Fanjove is a strong match: Ruaha National Park for predator density in the dry season, then Fanjove for snorkelling on rarely visited reef.
Chumbe Island is a marine conservation reserve with seven eco-bungalows — managed primarily as a protected area, with guests as the secondary use. If you want beaches and water sports, Mnemba or Bawe will serve you better. If you want the quietest reef in Tanzania and a genuine conservation context, Chumbe is the right choice.










