Visitor guide · Beyond the city
Day trips from Lilongwe
Lilongwe makes an excellent base. Within a couple of hours you can reach miombo forest, the shore of Lake Malawi, pottery and rock art, and wildlife reserves — some as day trips, others as easy overnights.
Why use Lilongwe as a base
What's within reach of the capital
One of the pleasures of Lilongwe is how quickly the city gives way to open country. As the hub of Malawi's central region and its road network, the capital puts a surprising variety of landscapes within a half-day's drive — hills of miombo woodland to the south-west, the great freshwater expanse of Lake Malawi to the east, craft villages and ancient rock art on the escarpment, and more than one wildlife reserve. Some of these are comfortable there-and-back day trips; others reward an overnight if you have the time. This page runs through the best options in roughly increasing distance, with rough drive times so you can plan a realistic day. Times are approximate and depend heavily on the season and road conditions, so build in a margin, and read the road-safety notes before setting off.
Forest and hills
Dzalanyama Forest Reserve
The closest true wilderness escape is Dzalanyama Forest Reserve, a range of miombo-woodland hills to the south-west of Lilongwe, roughly a 1.5- to 2-hour drive from the city. It is a favourite with residents for exactly the things that make a great day out: birding — Dzalanyama is renowned among birdwatchers for miombo specialists — plus mountain biking, hiking and walking along its forest tracks and streams, all in cool, quiet, scented woodland that feels a world away from town. It works well as a full day of gentle activity, and those who want to linger can stay over at the rustic forest lodge in the reserve. Bring water, sun protection, sturdy shoes and, if you are birding, binoculars. For more detail, see our dedicated page on Dzalanyama Forest Reserve.
The lake
Lake Malawi at Salima and Senga Bay
No visit to Malawi is complete without seeing the lake, and the nearest stretch of shore to Lilongwe is around Salima and Senga Bay, roughly 1.5 to 2 hours east by road. Lake Malawi is one of Africa's great lakes — vast, clear and fringed with beaches — and Senga Bay is its most accessible resort area from the capital, with lodges, boat trips, snorkelling among the lake's famous colourful cichlid fish, and simply time on the sand. It is an easy and hugely rewarding day trip, though many people find a night by the water hard to resist. Take local advice on where swimming is considered lower-risk for bilharzia, and pack for sun and water.
Near Salima, the community-run Kuti Wildlife Reserve offers low-key game viewing — zebra, antelope and other plains animals in an unfenced, walkable setting — making a natural pairing with a lake day or a gentle wildlife outing in its own right. Further up the lakeshore, Nkhotakota and its wildlife reserve lie within reach for a longer day or an overnight, adding one of Malawi's oldest protected areas to the mix.
| Destination | Direction & rough drive |
|---|---|
| Dzalanyama Forest Reserve | South-west, ≈1.5–2 hrs |
| Dedza (pottery & rock art) | South, ≈1–1.5 hrs |
| Salima / Senga Bay (Lake Malawi) | East, ≈1.5–2 hrs |
| Kuti Wildlife Reserve | East, near Salima |
| Ntchisi Forest Reserve | North-east, half-day drive |
| Nkhotakota | North-east lakeshore, longer day/overnight |
| Liwonde National Park | South, a longer trip/overnight |
Craft, culture and more forest
Dedza, Ntchisi and beyond
South of the capital, Dedza sits high on the escarpment about an hour to an hour and a half away and rewards a relaxed day. It is best known for Dedza Pottery, a much-loved stop where you can watch ceramics being made, browse the shop and pause for coffee and cake with hill views. The area is also the gateway to the Chongoni Rock Art Area, a UNESCO World Heritage Site whose granite hills shelter one of the richest concentrations of rock paintings in the region — a fascinating window onto the area's deep human history. Together, pottery and rock art make Dedza one of the most well-rounded day trips from Lilongwe.
For another dose of forest, Ntchisi Forest Reserve to the north-east protects a rare pocket of montane rainforest, with walking trails, big views and an old colonial-era forest lodge; it is a longer half-day drive but a peaceful, scenic reward. And if you have more than a day, Liwonde National Park to the south is Malawi's flagship safari destination — home to elephants, hippos, the Shire River and reintroduced big game. Liwonde is really a multi-day trip rather than a day out, but it is very much within reach of Lilongwe as the highlight of a wider itinerary. Our attractions section covers many of these places in more depth.
Planning your day
Making these trips work
A few practical notes tie it together. Sort your transport first: for most of these destinations a private car or an arranged driver-guide is the simplest way to go and come back in a day, and it lets you stop where you like — see getting around for the options. Timing matters: the dry season makes every one of these journeys easier, while the rains can turn forest and reserve tracks tricky. Carry cash in kwacha for entry fees, crafts and food, since card facilities are limited outside the city (see the money guide), and bring water, sun protection and a hat whatever the season. Start early, tell someone your plan, and you can pack a genuinely memorable day into the country around the capital — then be back in Lilongwe for the evening.
Keep planning
Related pages
Continue planning your trip with the rest of the Lilongwe visitor guide.