Have you been looking for Malindi tour packages? A Malindi tour company? There is something about Malindi that gets under your skin. Maybe it is the way the afternoon light hits the Indian Ocean and turns it fifty shades of blue. Maybe it is the smell of fresh fish grilling near the harbour, or the sound of Italian conversations mixing with Swahili along the main road. Whatever it is, travellers who come here once almost always find a reason to come back.
Kent Corporate Travels has been sending Kenyan tourists and international visitors to Malindi for years. We know this town the way a local does , the hidden beaches, the best time to visit the marine park, which hotels actually deliver on their promises.
When you book your Malindi tour through us, you are not getting a generic package off a shelf. You are getting a trip that has been thought through carefully, by people who genuinely love this place.
Honest answer? Malindi does not try to be anything it is not. It is not Diani with its glossy resorts and skydiving operations. It is not Mombasa with its urban energy and traffic. Malindi is older, quieter, and more layered than both.
The town has been a trading port since at least the 14th century. Vasco da Gama stopped here in 1498.
The Portuguese built a pillar on the beach that still stands today. Beneath the surface of what looks like a relaxed coastal town, there is centuries of history, cultural exchange, and stories that most visitors never get told unless they go looking.
That is exactly the kind of trip Kent Corporate Travels helps you have.
We keep our malindi tour packages flexible because no two travellers want exactly the same thing. Here is how our current options break down:
Yes, you will spend time on the beach. That is non-negotiable. But the places to visit in Malindi extend well beyond the shoreline, and the ones that tend to surprise people most are the ones furthest from the tourist trail.
Malindi Marine National Park sits right at the top of any serious list. Established in 1968 as Kenya’s first marine protected area, the marine park Malindi is home to an extraordinary underwater ecosystem, coral gardens, sea turtles, dolphins, and reef fish in colours that seem almost digitally enhanced. Glass-bottom boat rides skim the surface for those who prefer to stay dry, while snorkellers and divers can go deeper into one of East Africa’s most biodiverse marine environments. The park is best visited between October and March when visibility in the water peaks.
The Vasco da Gama Pillar is a small monument with an outsized significance. Erected by the Portuguese explorer on his historic voyage along the East African coast, it remains one of the oldest European structures in sub-Saharan Africa. Standing next to it and doing the mental arithmetic, over five centuries of history, on this beach, in this wind, is a quietly powerful experience.
Malindi Old Town rewards slow walking.
The narrow lanes, carved wooden doors, and crumbling coral stone walls tell stories of Arab traders, Indian merchants, and Swahili families who built this community over generations.
The town feels lived-in rather than preserved, which makes it feel more real than most heritage sites.
Arabuko-Sokoke Forest Reserve, a short drive from the town centre, is one of the largest remaining patches of coastal forest in East Africa.
For birdwatchers especially, this place is extraordinary, over 230 recorded species, including several found nowhere else on the planet.
Even for non-birders, walking under a genuine forest canopy this close to the coast is an experience that resets something in you.
The malindi beaches stretch across several distinct sections, each with its own character. Silversands Beach is calm, wide, and family-friendly. Casuarina Beach draws a more local crowd and has a relaxed, unpolished quality that many visitors prefer to the more manicured resort beaches. Further north, the beaches thin out and the coastline gets wilder, ideal for long walks and complete quiet.
Whatever pace you prefer, we will match you with the right stretch of sand.
Because we have done this enough times to know what actually matters. We know which hotels deliver consistently. We know the guides at the marine park who genuinely love what they do. We know that the best time to visit the Old Town is early morning before the heat builds. We know Malindi, not from brochures, but from experience.
When you travel with us, that knowledge is yours.
Get in touch today. Your Malindi tour starts with one conversation.
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