1,500 km over 12 days: about 125 km per day before detours.
South Africa to Botswana Kalahari route
South Africa to Botswana Kalahari-Okavango approach with border vehicle clearance, road levies, SANRAL toll planning, official camps, water, fuel and wildlife-road buffers.
Route line
Practical corridor decisions
6 corridor-specific notes checked against primary sources on Jun 16, 2026.
- DocumentsBuild the vehicle file before Botswana
This corridor is simple only when the driver, vehicle and temporary-import papers are ready before the border booth.
Do this: Before the Botswana border, prepare passports, licence and IDP or accepted foreign-driver proof, vehicle registration, insurance, rental or owner authority, BURS temporary-import evidence and cash or card backup for road levies.
- BorderThe border is its own stage
BURS temporary import and road levies make the border more than a fuel stop, especially for rental or foreign-registered motorhomes.
Do this: Treat Martins Drift, Groblersbrug or another South Africa-Botswana crossing as a border-stage day: leave daylight for BURS temporary import, levies, customs questions, insurance and the first legal Botswana night.
- TollsTwo road-cost layers
The cost stack changes at the border: South Africa has SANRAL toll exposure, while Botswana adds foreign-vehicle levies and remote-camp logistics.
Do this: Separate South African toll exposure, Botswana road-safety and transport levies, park entry, campsite bookings, recovery margin and long-distance fuel in the budget.
- OvernightWildlife nights need named camps
Botswana self-drive guidance makes designated campsites and wildlife safety core route requirements rather than optional camping etiquette.
Do this: Book designated campsites, park camps, lodges or confirmed private stops before wildlife areas; do not sleep on bridges, animal paths, riverbanks, reserve pull-outs or informal fuel-station edges.
- ServicesAutonomy before the sand
Botswana's self-drive advice treats water, petrol, food and spare parts as planning basics because many remote areas are four-wheel-drive only.
Do this: Reset water, fuel, food, tyre repair, spare parts, cash, mobile data, offline maps and recovery contacts before Kalahari, Chobe, Moremi, Okavango or long gravel and sand detours.
- SeasonalDry season still needs slack
August is a practical touring month, but remote wildlife routes still punish late starts, underestimated sand and optimistic recovery plans.
Do this: Prefer the cooler dry season and keep buffers for heat, dust, deep sand, rainy-season mud, wildlife on roads, park speed limits, early gates and slow recovery after mechanical issues.
Practical checks for this route
Country pages help check overnight stays, tolls, city zones, seasonal requirements and required equipment where the rules guide is already filled.
Plan water, dump, LPG and fuel with extra margin: service gaps matter on this scenario.
A winter scenario needs separate tyre, overnight temperature, wind and service-availability checks.
Route-specific planning signals
- Tolls / LEZTolls and city accessEstimate budget
The rules guide already covers 🇿🇦 South Africa and 🇧🇼 Botswana; use it to verify road charges, LEZ/city access and height/weight classes, then keep a budget reserve.
- Ferry / bridgesFerries, bridges and tunnelsCheck risks
The core scenario is not ferry-led, but private roads, tunnels and bridges can still price by motorhome length or height.
- Weather / roadsWeather and road seasonalityOpen risks
Main country signals: heat (medium: 🇿🇦 South Africa and 🇧🇼 Botswana); mountains (medium: 🇿🇦 South Africa). Open road risks to recalculate them by month, daily distance and road mode.
- Service stopsWater, dump, LPG and first nightOpen services
This corridor has a remote-road signal in 🇿🇦 South Africa and 🇧🇼 Botswana. Plan water, dump, LPG, fuel and communications before long legs; for this preset, a sensible autonomy interval is up to 5 days.