Where to Stay Near Marojejy: Lodges for the Trek 2026
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Essential Trekking Gear for Madagascar
Tsingy, Marojejy, Andringitra — Madagascar’s Hardest Treks Demand Proper Poles
The Tsingy needle-field requires scrambling over razor-sharp limestone. Marojejy’s Camp 3 gains 1,700 metres on muddy, root-tangled trail. Andringitra’s Pic Boby is a 4-hour vertical slog. Cascade Mountain Tech Carbon Fiber Poles are ultralight (under 500g per pair), quick-lock adjustable, sold directly by Amazon at a fraction of the cost of Black Diamond or Leki equivalents.
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The Lightest Safe Water System on the Market — Built for Madagascar’s Remote Trek Circuits
Carrying a Grayl GeoPress on a 7-day wilderness circuit adds nearly 500 grams to your pack — every gram matters at 1,700 metres of elevation. But streams in Madagascar’s national parks are not safe to drink untreated. The Sawyer SP129 Squeeze weighs just 85 grams and filters 100,000 gallons down to 0.1 microns — removing 99.99999% of bacteria and protozoa. Sold directly by Amazon.
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The Invisible Barrier That Keeps Malaria Mosquitoes Off Your Clothes
Your repellent only protects exposed skin — but in Madagascar’s humid evenings, mosquitoes bite through thin fabric. Sawyer Permethrin bonds to fabric fibres and kills mosquitoes on contact for up to 6 weeks and 6 washes. Treat your shirts, pants, socks, and tent before you fly — by the time you land in Antananarivo, the protection is already active.
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Madagascar’s Rainforest Trails Are Infested With Leeches — These Keep Them Out of Your Boots
Andasibe-Mantadia, Ranomafana, Marojejy — Madagascar’s rainforest trails are where leeches thrive. They drop from leaves, emerge from wet soil, and find the gap between your sock and boot in minutes. You don’t feel them until you look down and see blood. Pike Trail Adjustable Leg Gaiters seal that gap physically, blocking leeches, mud, and water. Lightweight, waterproof, 3,600+ Amazon reviews.
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Madagascar Goes Completely Dark After Sunset — Don’t Navigate It Blind
Outside of Antananarivo’s main streets, Madagascar has virtually no street lighting. Wildlife walks in Ankarana, night lemur spotting in Ranomafana, the path to your bungalow — all navigated in total darkness. The Black Diamond Spot 400-R delivers 400 lumens with a 100-metre beam, USB-C rechargeable, IPX8 waterproof, with red night-vision mode for wildlife observation without disturbing animals.
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No Grid, No Problem — Charge Your Devices From the Sun in Madagascar’s Remote Parks
Marojejy. Andringitra. Tsingy de Bemaraha. Madagascar’s most spectacular parks are its most isolated — no power outlets, no phone signal. A 3-day wilderness circuit means running on whatever charge you left camp with. The BLAVOR Solar Power Bank pairs 10,000mAh with a fold-out solar panel that recharges itself from sunlight as you trek.
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Your Hotel Room Door in Madagascar May Not Lock Properly — This Costs $16 and Fixes That
Budget guesthouses and mid-range hotels across Madagascar share one problem: flimsy door locks. Handles that wiggle, bolts that don’t catch. The Addalock slides over any standard door latch in seconds and makes your door physically impossible to open from outside — regardless of what key someone uses. No screws, no installation, 75 grams.
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Madagascar Budget Guesthouses Often Don’t Provide Towels — Pack One That Weighs Nothing
Across Madagascar’s affordable guesthouses — especially near national park entrances — towel provision is hit-or-miss. The Rainleaf Microfiber Travel Towel dries you faster than cotton, then air-dries in under an hour in Madagascar’s heat. It packs to the size of a water bottle, weighs 200 grams, and sand doesn’t stick to it — essential for Nosy Be and Île Sainte-Marie beaches.
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At a Glance
- Trek camps inside park: Mantella (813m), Marojejia (1,250m), Simpona (1,500m) — $10–15/night
- Best hotel near park: Hôtel Vatosoa, Andapa — $25–45/night, trek base town
- Gateway city: Sambava — fly from Antananarivo (~1 h 20 min)
- Park entry fee: 45,000 MGA/person/day (~$10 USD)
- Mandatory guide fee: 60,000–100,000 MGA/day depending on group
- Fly to Sambava: Check flight compensation rights on AirAdvisor if your flight was delayed
- Book hotels: Check Sambava and Andapa hotel availability on Agoda
- Travel insurance: SafetyWing from $1.82/day — essential for remote trek emergencies
Marojejy National Park in northeastern Madagascar is one of the most challenging and rewarding treks on the island — a UNESCO World Heritage rainforest rising from lowland jungle to montane cloud forest at 2,133m. The silky sifaka, one of the world’s rarest lemurs, lives only here. The trek requires serious physical preparation, a mandatory ANGAP guide, and porters. The nearest access town is Andapa (15km from the park gate), reached by 4WD from Sambava airport (95km west). This guide covers the in-park camps, Andapa hotels, and the Sambava fly-in option.
Trek Camps Inside Marojejy National Park
ANGAP manages three sleeping camps inside Marojejy, each at progressively higher elevation. Camp Mantella at 813m is the first camp, 2–3 hours on foot from the park entrance. Basic wooden huts sleep 4–6 people, with a communal cooking area and pit toilets. Cost is 10,000–15,000 MGA per person per night. Camp Marojejia at 1,250m is 3–4 hours above Mantella through increasingly dense cloud forest — this is where silky sifaka sightings most frequently occur. The huts are similar in standard, slightly colder.
Camp Simpona at 1,500m is the highest camp and the launching point for the summit push to 2,133m on Day 3 or 4. Temperatures at night can drop below 10°C even in dry season — bring a sleeping bag rated to 5°C minimum. All camp fees are paid at the gate in Andapa in cash only; there are no card terminals inside the park. Porters are available at the gate for 15,000–20,000 MGA per day per porter and are strongly recommended — the trails above Mantella are steep and the pack weight becomes punishing on a full trek. Book Andapa hotels for your pre-trek and post-trek nights on Agoda.
Hotels in Andapa: The Trek Base Town
Hôtel Vatosoa in Andapa is the recommended base before and after the Marojejy trek. Clean rooms with private bathrooms cost $25–45 per night; the restaurant serves reliable Malagasy meals and the staff have extensive experience coordinating ANGAP guide bookings and porter arrangements. Andapa is a small highland town at about 600m elevation — cooler than the coast, with a covered market, a pharmacy, and a BOA bank with ATM. Withdraw sufficient cash here for all park fees, guide fees, porter costs, and in-camp meals before entering Marojejy.
Hôtel Beanana is the budget alternative in Andapa, with basic rooms at $12–18 per night and a simple restaurant. Functional but lacking the logistical support that Vatosoa’s staff provide for trek preparation. Both properties accommodate early morning check-outs — the trek entrance protocol requires arriving at the park gate by 7–8am to register with ANGAP and receive your guide assignment before noon. The 15km road from Andapa to the park gate is accessible by moto-taxi (5,000 MGA) or vehicle arranged through your hotel.
Sambava Hotels for the Fly-In Approach
Sambava is the regional hub of the SAVA vanilla region — the nearest airport to Marojejy, 95km east of Andapa by unpaved road. Most trekkers fly Tsaradia Antananarivo–Sambava ($60–120 USD one-way), spend one night in Sambava, then take a 4WD to Andapa the next morning. The Lodge des Orchidées Sauvages in Sambava is the best-value mid-range stay at $35–60 per night — clean rooms, air conditioning, and a proper restaurant serving both Malagasy and French dishes. It caters to vanilla industry travelers and adventure tourists alike.
The road from Sambava to Andapa is 95km on a mostly unpaved route that takes 2.5–3 hours by 4WD in dry season and can take considerably longer after rain. Vehicles can be hired in Sambava at 120,000–180,000 MGA per day with driver — arrange this through your Sambava hotel the evening before. A 4WD is non-negotiable for this road; standard vehicles regularly get stuck. Compare 4WD hire options for northeast Madagascar on Carla — self-drive is possible for confident off-road drivers.
Getting to Marojejy: Flights to Sambava and Logistics
Tsaradia flies Antananarivo (Ivato) to Sambava (SVB) three to four times per week. Flight time is approximately 1 hour 20 minutes and tickets typically cost 300,000–500,000 MGA ($65–115 USD) booked in advance. Flights fill quickly in the dry-season trekking months of May through October — book at least three to four weeks ahead. Sambava airport is small but functional with a single terminal, taxi rank, and basic snack stall.
If your Tsaradia flight to Sambava was delayed or cancelled, EU regulation EC 261/2004 may apply if you booked via a European connecting flight — check your compensation claim free on AirAdvisor. There is no realistic overland route from Antananarivo to Marojejy in under 3 days given road conditions; flying is essentially the only viable approach for most travelers. Budget a minimum of 5 nights for the trip: 1 in Sambava, 1 pre-trek in Andapa, 3 in the park, 1 post-trek. A full summit attempt requires 4–5 nights in the park.
Frequently Asked Questions
How difficult is the Marojejy trek?
Marojejy is one of Madagascar’s most demanding treks. The trails above Camp Mantella are steep, wet, and involve significant elevation gain. Fitness is required — it is not a casual hike. Allow 3–5 days minimum. A guide is mandatory and porters are strongly recommended. The summit push on Day 3 or 4 is extremely steep.
Do I need a guide for Marojejy National Park?
Yes, a licensed ANGAP guide is mandatory — you cannot enter the park without one. Guides are assigned at the gate in Andapa. The guide fee is separate from the park entry fee and varies by group size and trail type. Your hotel in Andapa can arrange the booking in advance.
What is the best time to trek Marojejy?
May through October is the dry season and the best trekking window. November through March brings heavy rain that makes the steep trails extremely slippery and dangerous. The silky sifaka is resident year-round but more visible in the drier months when cloud cover is less dense.
Marojejy is not a park you visit casually — it demands preparation, fitness, and respect for one of the last truly wild places in Madagascar. The silky sifaka encounter at Camp Marojejia is worth every uphill step. Before you travel, make absolutely sure you have insurance that covers emergency mountain rescue and medical evacuation. Get SafetyWing before departure — coverage starts from $1.82/day and includes emergency evacuation from remote areas including Marojejy’s highland camps.
Travel Insurance for Madagascar
Medical evacuation from Madagascar costs $30,000–$80,000. Don’t travel without cover.
- SafetyWing — Best for budget travelers and long stays. From $1.82/day.
- World Nomads — Best for adventure activities: trekking, diving, motorbikes.
Plan Your Trip to Madagascar
- Read the full Madagascar Travel Guide
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- Plan a 10-Day Madagascar Itinerary
Where to Stay
