Kruger National Park nears centenary, balancing conservation, community and climate pressures

South Africa’s Kruger National Park is approaching a historic milestone: a century since its formal establishment in 1926. The centenary is being framed as more than a birthday. It is a moment to recognize Kruger’s dual role as a biodiversity refuge and a critical pillar of the country’s tourism economy.
The park welcomes nearly two million visitors annually, maintaining its status as one of Africa’s premier safari destinations. What distinguishes Kruger is its strong domestic base, with approximately 80% of visitors coming from within South Africa. Interest from neighboring Southern African Development Community countries has also been growing, particularly among day visitors, underscoring the park’s regional pull.
Economically, Kruger is a major driver within South Africa’s tourism ecosystem. The park contributes hundreds of millions of rand to the economy, with tourism revenue exceeding R800 million and steady performance from accommodation services.
Those revenues support thousands of jobs and sustain a web of local businesses, from hospitality and tour operations to informal traders and transport providers—evidence that conservation and development can coexist. Ecologically, Kruger’s importance is unmatched.
It is home to 147 mammal species, including the Big Five, alongside a rich array of reptiles, amphibians and plant life. As part of the Great Limpopo Transfrontier Park, Kruger anchors a cross-border conservation landscape that links South Africa with Mozambique and Zimbabwe, enhancing ecological connectivity across the region.
Yet the park’s century-long story also reflects complexity. Kruger sits within a broader socio-economic context shaped by inequality and historical dispossession, and communities living adjacent to the reserve continue to seek greater economic participation and cultural recognition.
Those calls for inclusion have become a central theme of the centenary, with the milestone seen as an opportunity to strengthen ties among stakeholders and ensure benefits are more widely shared. Climate change is adding pressure. Shifting rainfall patterns, prolonged droughts and drying waterholes are altering habitats and straining wildlife, while more frequent severe weather across South Africa is now part of Kruger’s reality.
These stresses are sharpening the focus on resilience and adaptive management across the park. Looking ahead, the path to sustaining Kruger’s ecological and economic roles will demand innovative thinking and sustained investment.
Priorities outlined include expanding community-led tourism to broaden local economic inclusion, strengthening anti-poaching operations to protect endangered species and enhancing infrastructure and visitor experiences while safeguarding ecological integrity.
Park leaders and partners present the centenary as a chance to recommit to a model of conservation that supports both biodiversity and people—ensuring that Kruger’s next hundred years remain as vital as its first.
