Story Themes
Article Map
Read this in a cleaner sequence.
Jump to the section that answers your biggest planning question first, then come back for the details.
Why this post needed an update
The old advice around Sheldrick was too simple for 2026. Visiting the Nairobi Nursery now involves two separate costs: the Sheldrick Wildlife Trust nursery donation and the Nairobi National Park gate fee required by Kenya Wildlife Service. If a blog post misses that distinction, clients arrive underprepared and the visit feels harder than it should.
Current booking rules and visiting time
According to the Sheldrick Wildlife Trust’s official Nairobi Nursery visiting page, the public visit runs daily from 11:00 a.m. to 12:00 noon, except on 25 December. Access is strictly by advance booking only, and same-day bookings are not accepted.
- Advance booking is mandatory
- Bookings are only accepted within the next three months
- Visitors should arrive early because the public visit does not start late for delayed arrivals
- The Nursery is inside Nairobi National Park, accessed via the KWS Mbagathi or Workshop Gate on Magadi Road
2026 SWT donation and separate KWS park fees
The official SWT page currently lists the following minimum entry donations for the 11:00 a.m. public visit:
- Adult aged 12 and above: USD 20, or Kenya shilling equivalent
- Kenya resident adult: KES 2,000 with proof of residency
- Child under 12: USD 5, or Kenya shilling equivalent
- Kenya resident child: KES 500 with proof of residency
These SWT donations are separate from the Nairobi National Park gate fees charged by KWS. KWS published revised conservation fees effective 1 October 2025, and the current Nairobi National Park rates are:
- East African citizen: KES 1,000 adult, KES 500 child or student
- Kenya resident: KES 1,350 adult, KES 675 child or student
- Non-resident: USD 80 adult, USD 40 child or student
- African citizen: USD 40 adult, USD 20 child or student
What clients should expect
This is still one of Nairobi’s strongest conservation experiences, but it should be sold as a booked, time-specific nursery visit rather than a casual walk-in attraction. During the one-hour public session, clients watch the orphan elephants at their mud bath and milk feed while keepers explain their stories and the Trust’s wider conservation work.
- Excellent fit for first-time Kenya visitors and families
- High conservation value and a clear funding story
- Short duration, which makes timing critical
- Better as a focused experience than as one stop among too many in the same morning
Practical planning notes for 2026
- Do not quote one all-in ticket price because the SWT donation and KWS fees are separate
- Push clients to confirm bookings early, especially in peak travel periods
- Use early arrival times so KWS gate formalities do not cut into the visit
- Consider a follow-on game drive through Nairobi National Park because the park fee is payable anyway
If you want to include the Nairobi Nursery in a Nairobi city day, we can sequence it correctly and help avoid the common timing and fee mistakes that make the visit harder than it needs to be.
Turn this guide into a safari route that actually fits your timing.
Share your dates, wildlife priorities, comfort level, and travel pace. We'll shape a safari plan around the decisions this article helps you make.






