8 Days Mount Kilimanjaro Lemosho Route Climb

Mountain Climbing

8 Days Mount Kilimanjaro Lemosho Route Climb

8 days / 7 nights·From $2,890 pp·Challenging·Group · Solo

Overview

The Lemosho Route is the highest-success-rate path up Kilimanjaro (approximately 90% on the 8-day version) and the most scenic. It approaches from the remote western side of the mountain through pristine rainforest with frequent wildlife sightings, joins the Machame Route at Barranco Camp, and finishes via the Western Breach or Stella Point.

The 8-day version includes one additional acclimatization day on the Shira Plateau, dramatically improving summit-day stamina and reducing altitude-sickness incidents. Recommended for first-time high-altitude climbers and anyone for whom summit success matters more than the lower price of the 7-day version.

Full-service climb with certified guides, assistant guides, cook and porters; full-board mountain meals; quality 4-season tents; twice-daily pulse oximeter checks; portable oxygen and emergency first-aid; pre/post-climb hotel in Moshi included.

Highlights

  • 90% summit success rate (8-day version)
  • Most scenic and remote Kilimanjaro route
  • Extra acclimatization day on the Shira Plateau
  • Approach through pristine western rainforest
  • Certified guides + 3-4 porters per climber
  • Full-board mountain meals, 4-season tents
  • Twice-daily pulse oximeter health checks
  • Pre/post-climb hotel in Moshi included

Day-by-day itinerary

  1. 1

    Londorossi Gate → Mti Mkubwa (2,650m)

    Londorossi → Mti Mkubwa

    Pre-dawn breakfast at your Moshi hotel, then a four-hour transfer west to the Londorossi Gate (2,250m) on the remote western side of the mountain — fewer crowds, more wildlife, the most scenic and the highest-success-rate route. Park registration and briefing, then a 4WD transfer up to Lemosho Glades (2,385m) and a four-hour walk through pristine montane rainforest to Mti Mkubwa ("Big Tree") Camp at 2,650m. Look for blue and colobus monkeys, and (rarely) elephant tracks. Dinner in the mess tent and first night on the mountain.

    Meals: L, D · Stay: Mti Mkubwa Camp (2,650m, tented)

  2. 2

    Mti Mkubwa → Shira 1 (3,500m)

    Mti Mkubwa → Shira 1

    A full day climbing onto the Shira Plateau (3,500m). Pass through the last of the rainforest into heath and moorland — giant lobelia, senecio, ericas. Six hours of steady walking with a picnic lunch. Camp at Shira 1 with sweeping views back over the rainforest you have just climbed and forward to Kibo's distant summit cone.

    Meals: B, L, D · Stay: Shira 1 Camp (3,500m)

  3. 3

    Shira 1 → Shira 2 (3,850m)

    Shira 1 → Shira 2

    A short acclimatization day across the Shira Plateau to Shira 2 Camp (3,850m). The plateau is a vast volcanic shelf at altitude, with extraordinary views of Kibo, Mount Meru and the far Maasai Steppe. Light five-hour walk, afternoon at leisure with an acclimatization climb of an hour above camp.

    Meals: B, L, D · Stay: Shira 2 Camp (3,850m)

  4. 4

    Shira 2 → Lava Tower → Barranco (3,960m)

    Shira 2 → Barranco

    A long acclimatization day. Climb steadily to the Lava Tower (4,640m) for lunch, then descend to Barranco Camp (3,960m) — climb high, sleep low. Today is when most trekkers feel the first touch of altitude; your guide monitors with the pulse oximeter. The afternoon arrival at Barranco gives spectacular views of the Western Breach and the soaring Barranco Wall, your task for tomorrow morning.

    Meals: B, L, D · Stay: Barranco Camp (3,960m)

  5. 5

    Barranco Wall → Barafu Camp (4,640m)

    Barranco → Barafu

    Tackle the Barranco Wall after breakfast — a scrambly but non-technical climb that takes about two hours and rewards with the best views of the trip. Continue across the Karanga Valley, lunch at Karanga Camp (4,035m), then a steady afternoon climb to Barafu Camp (4,640m), the summit assault camp. Early dinner around 5pm and into bed by 7pm — you will be woken at 11pm for the summit push.

    Meals: B, L, D · Stay: Barafu Camp (4,640m)

  6. 6

    Summit Day → Mweka Camp (3,100m)

    Barafu → Uhuru Peak → Mweka

    The summit attempt. 11pm wake-up, hot tea and biscuits, then begin the climb at midnight under a sky thick with stars. The route ascends scree slopes for six hours to Stella Point (5,756m) on the crater rim, where the sun rises over Mawenzi to the east. A final 45 minutes along the rim brings you to Uhuru Peak (5,895m) — the rooftop of Africa, summit photos, hugs and tears. Begin the long descent: back to Barafu for breakfast and a few hours' sleep, then continue down to Mweka Camp (3,100m) for dinner and a hard-earned final night on the mountain.

    Meals: B, L, D · Stay: Mweka Camp (3,100m)

  7. 7

    Mweka Camp → Mweka Gate → Moshi

    Mweka → Moshi

    A final breakfast in camp, then the three-hour descent through the rainforest to Mweka Gate. Sign out at the park office, receive your summit certificate (gold for Uhuru Peak, green for Stella Point), tip the crew, and transfer back to your Moshi hotel for hot showers, beer and a victory dinner. Optional next-day spa treatment to ease the legs.

    Meals: B, L, D · Stay: Moshi hotel

  8. 8

    Moshi → JRO Departure

    Moshi → JRO

    A leisurely final breakfast in Moshi, late check-out, and transfer to Kilimanjaro International Airport (JRO) for your departing flight. Optional spa morning. End of climb. Summit certificate awarded.

    Meals: B · Stay: N/A (departure)

Included

  • Airport pickup and drop-off in Kilimanjaro International (JRO)
  • Two nights pre/post-climb hotel in Moshi or Arusha (B&B)
  • Park entry, camping/hut, rescue and conservation fees
  • Certified mountain guide(s), assistant guides, cook and porters
  • Full-board mountain meals (breakfast, lunch, dinner)
  • Quality 4-season mountain tents and sleeping mats
  • Boiled and filtered drinking water on the mountain
  • Pulse oximeter and twice-daily health checks
  • Portable oxygen and emergency first-aid kit
  • Summit certificate
  • Government VAT and Kilimanjaro Park taxes

Not included

  • International airfare to JRO
  • Tanzania entry visa (USD $50)
  • Travel insurance (must cover high-altitude trekking to 6,000m)
  • Beverages, soft drinks, alcoholic drinks
  • Tips for guides, cook and porters (recommended USD $350–450 per climber)
  • Personal climbing gear (rentals available)

What to bring

  • 4-season sleeping bag (rated to -10°C)
  • Insulated down jacket and waterproof shell
  • Thermal base layers (top and bottom)
  • Fleece mid-layer and softshell pants
  • Waterproof hiking boots (well broken in)
  • Gaiters and trekking poles
  • Warm hat, balaclava, sun hat, glove liners and waterproof gloves
  • Headlamp with spare batteries
  • 3-litre hydration bladder + insulated bottle
  • High-SPF sunscreen, lip balm, glacier sunglasses
  • Personal medication, blister kit, electrolyte tabs
  • Duffel bag (max 15kg, carried by porter) + 30L daypack

Frequently asked questions