230.000
Euro
8100 hectares
no buildings
Ngamiland
Botswana
Ngamiland, Botswana
8100 hectares – Unique Farm
The farm covers a continuous area measuring 9 by 9 kilometres, corresponding to 81 km² or 8,100 hectares.
A preliminary delineation of the land parcels has been carried out based on the information currently available from the Land Board. This delineation will be confirmed.
The new owner will receive a Memorandum of Lease Agreement valid for 50 years, with guaranteed security of extension. Since Botswana’s independence in 1966, to our knowledge, no properties of this status have ever been altered or withdrawn.
The principle for determining the boundaries of this farm is based on the distance to neighbouring plots. We clearly expect that, once the final demarcation is completed, the farm will comprise between 8,000 and 14,000 hectares. For now, 8100 hectares are stated, as this is the minimum size we can currently confirm with certainty.
The property is particularly well suited as an open game farm. Its vast, untouched landscapes provide ideal habitat for wildlife, which will increasingly move into the area once water points are established.
In addition, there is significant potential for developing a safari lodge, as well as establishing campsites as tourism offerings for visitors arriving by road via the nearby “Dobe Border Post” on the Namibian border.
Continuing from there into Namibia, one reaches one of the nearest larger towns, Grootfontein. Access to the farm is from the east of Nokaneng, slightly south of Gumare in Botswana.
Ngamiland, Botswana
The Ngamiland–Khaudum Wildlife Dispersal Area (WDA)
The Botswana side of the Ngamiland–Khaudum Wildlife Dispersal Area (WDA) covers more than 3 million hectares of untouched wilderness, stretching across NG1–NG5 and parts of NG7–NG9. This vast landscape forms a key ecological corridor within the planned KAZA Transfrontier Conservation Area, enabling the natural movement of elephants, predators, and other migratory species between Botswana and Namibia.
Despite its strategic importance, the WDA remains one of the least developed and least supported conservation landscapes in the region — yet its potential is exceptional. The area offers:
Outstanding wildlife habitats with minimal human disturbance
High‑value conservation opportunities for restoring migratory wildlife populations
Strong prospects for community‑based conservation and low‑impact tourism
A rare sense of remoteness, with landscapes that have changed little for generations
The combination of scale, ecological significance, and untapped conservation potential makes the WDA one of the most compelling frontier landscapes in southern Africa — ideal for anyone interested in wildlife, conservation impact, or sustainable land management.
Photos
Ngamiland in Northwestern Botswana One of the Last Wild, Unspoiled Areas in Southern Africa
The farm is situated close to the Namibian border. The easternmost part of Ngamiland, not far from the border with Namibia, offers a rare combination of pristine wilderness, cultural authenticity, and remarkable natural beauty. The area lies near both Qangwa and Namibia’s Khaudum National Park — one of the most untouched conservation areas in the region, a vast landscape where wildlife moves freely across borders.
The scenery is shaped by bushland/savanna, open plains, and the characteristic dry riverbeds known as Omiramba — wide, sand‑filled channels that carry water only after heavy rains and serve as natural travel routes through the dense bush for the rest of the year.
The greater Khaudum landscape is particularly known for its high concentration of elephants, as well as rare species such as sable antelope and African wild dogs, which thrive in the expansive, undisturbed wilderness.
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