We Believe Tiger Safaris Should Protect What They Profit From
Tourism that does not protect the ecosystem it trades on is not tourism. It is extraction with a camera.
India is home to 70% of the world’s wild tigers. That is not a statistic to feel proud of — it is a responsibility. Every safari vehicle that enters a reserve either adds to the pressure on that ecosystem or actively funds its protection. There is no neutral ground.
At Jungle Safari Travels, we have built every part of our operation around one principle: the forest comes first. Not the booking, not the sighting, not the photograph. The forest.
Below is what that looks like in practice.
Our Six Non-Negotiables
The forest comes first. Here is what that means, in practice.
01
We Stay in the Buffer. Always
India's tiger reserves are divided into core zones — where breeding tigers and vulnerable cubs depend on total silence — and buffer zones, which are designed for managed tourism. NTCA regulations cap tourist activity at 20% of reserve area, exclusively in buffer zones. We follow this without exception. No exceptions for 'better sightings.' No exceptions for premium clients. The core stays inviolate.
Why it matters: The tigers you photograph today are alive because someone refused to compromise this boundary yesterday.
02
No Honking. No Chasing. No Circus.
A single tiger sighting can attract six vehicles within minutes. At that moment, discipline separates responsible tourism from a roadside spectacle. Our drivers and naturalists are trained to maintain safe distances, operate in near-silence, and never pursue an animal to a better angle. Phones are put away — not because it is a rule, but because it is the right thing to do.
Tadoba now enforces phone bans at entry gates for exactly this reason. We introduced this as a practice long before it became a regulation.
03
Local People Are Not a Side Note
The communities living around tiger reserves are the most important conservation force in the country. They have always known the forest better than any tourist or policy document. We employ local guides, local drivers, and local naturalists — many of whom grew up in villages bordering the reserves they now protect.
When the forest is worth more alive than poached, poaching rates drop. It is that straightforward.
04
Your Safari Fee Funds Protection
A portion of every booking we process is directed towards anti-poaching support, habitat monitoring, and conservation organisations active in the reserves we operate across. We partner exclusively with lodges and operators who practise the same. This is not a donation box at checkout. It is built into the cost because it is part of the cost of doing this honestly.
India's tiger population reached 3,682 in 2022 — up from 1,411 in 2006. That recovery was funded, in part, by responsible tourism. Your trip is part of that story.
05
Low Footprint. Genuine, Not Performative
We work only with lodges that operate on regenerated land, use renewable energy where possible, and have eliminated single-use plastics. Water conservation, local sourcing, minimal construction footprint — these are criteria for our lodge selection, not extras. A lodge that sits in a cleared forest and hands out bottled water is not an eco-lodge.
We do not recommend or book those.
06
You Leave Knowing More Than You Arrived With
The most powerful conservation act we can perform is sending you home as an advocate. Our naturalists are trained educators, not just wildlife spotters. On every safari, you will understand what you are seeing — the behaviour, the ecology, the threats, and the recoveries. Guests who understand the barasingha's near-extinction and comeback at Kanha do not just tell people they saw a deer.
They tell people why it matters that India still has that deer.
What We Ask of You
Stay silent during wildlife sightings.
Sudden noise and movement disturb animals far more than our presence.
Keep your mobile phone away during safaris
check for sightings on the way in; be present on the way through.
Follow your naturalist's lead at all times,
including when to stop, stay, or move on.
Leave nothing in the forest
no wrappers, no bottles, no litter of any kind.
Do not request that your guide
or driver chase or pursue an animal for a photograph.
Respect the communities around the reserves.
They are partners in conservation, not a backdrop.
At Jungle Safari Travels, we craft bespoke tiger safari experiences across India’s finest reserves. Expert guides, exclusive access and a commitment to the wild that goes beyond the ordinary.