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Mulika Lodge is a tiny bush airstrip with no ATMs or forex desks, so sort your cash before you fly. Withdraw shillings in Nairobi or Meru/Nanyuki, carry some USD for tips, and avoid exchanging at lodges where rates are weaker.
Small and safari-simple, Mulika Lodge doesn’t have formal duty‑free, but a tiny kiosk covers last‑minute snacks, souvenirs, and travel basics during daylight flight times. For perfume, spirits, and big‑brand deals, plan to shop at Nairobi’s international terminal instead.
Small bush‑strip vibes: expect a modest kiosk for hot chai, cold drinks, and light bites, while proper meals come from your safari lodge. Prices are fair but a touch higher than in Meru town, so bring a snack or ask for a packed breakfast before you roll up.
Mulika Lodge’s tiny airstrip can arrange basic first aid by the terminal with help from ground staff, rangers, or your lodge, while full pharmacies and clinics are in nearby Meru and Isiolo. Plan ahead for prescriptions and COVID testing; simple assistance is usually free, but medicines, tests, and transfers are paid.
Mulika Lodge is a tiny bush airstrip with no lockers or left‑luggage counter. Arrange storage with your safari lodge or in Nairobi—hotels often hold bags for free, while independent options typically run about KES 500–1,000 per bag per day—then fly in light with a soft 15 kg duffel.
A tiny, no‑frills bush airstrip with one small indoor waiting room and a shaded veranda—calm, scenic, and easy to navigate. There are no lounges or showers, no Wi‑Fi, and outlets are limited; bring a snack and a charged phone and simply enjoy the quiet before you fly.
Mulika Lodge Airport (IATA: JJM), established as a small safari airstrip in the 1970s, is a single-terminal regional strip serving Meru National Park and nearby Meru town; its compact size makes it an important gateway for wildlife travelers and lodge transfers. Accessibility is mainly by short road transfer or charter flights from Nairobi (typically Wilson Airport) and other Kenyan regional hubs, with limited public transport options, so most visitors arrive via safari carriers. The airstrip is popular with operators like Safarilink and AirKenya rather than major airlines. Because travel here relies on charter services, transfers can be pricier than scheduled airports, though on-site fees are modest.
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