The Wedding Unicorn
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Group Travel to Zanzibar

✈️ 16 hours (via Addis Ababa/Dubai) from NYC🗓 Best: June–October, December–February🌍 Tanzania

Zanzibar is an outstanding group travel destination — offering the variety and scale to satisfy every member of your group while delivering shared experiences that become stories you tell for decades. Zanzibar is the Indian Ocean's spice island — a place where Swahili, Arab, Persian, Indian, and Portuguese cultures have blended for centuries into something utterly unique. Stone Town's UNESCO heritage meets some of Africa's finest beaches in a combination that is impossible to replicate.

The Wedding Unicorn specializes in group travel logistics that make the impossible feel easy. We negotiate room blocks at the right properties, coordinate group airport transfers, plan shared excursions and private group dining events, and manage the payment and communication complexity that comes with traveling with 10, 20, or 50+ people.

Stone Town, spice island, dhow sailing, Nungwi Beach, Indian Ocean reefs — all of it accessible to your group through coordinated planning that ensures nobody is left managing their own arrangements. Zanzibar's Stone Town is all carved wooden doors and labyrinthine alleys; its beaches are turquoise perfection — the Indian Ocean's best-kept secret.

Best time to travel to Zanzibar as a group: June–October, December–February. We recommend booking group travel at least 6–9 months in advance to secure the best room inventory and pricing.

What's Included
  • Best time to visit: June–October, December–February
  • 16 hours (via Addis Ababa/Dubai) from New York City
  • Language: Swahili / English
  • Visa: Visa on arrival ($50) or e-visa
  • Currency: Tanzanian Shilling / USD accepted
  • Room block negotiation and management
  • Group airport transfer coordination
  • Shared excursion planning
  • Private group dining reservations
  • Payment coordination across the group
  • Dedicated group contact throughout
Sample Itinerary

7 Nights in Zanzibar — Spice Island, Swahili Culture & Coral Reefs

Stone Town's labyrinthine alleyways, turquoise Indian Ocean water, and the birthplace of Freddie Mercury

7 nightsfrom $9,500/couple per couple

Zanzibar is one of the world's most romantically named destinations — and the reality exceeds the name. The archipelago off the Tanzanian coast is an extraordinary cultural intersection: Arab, Persian, Indian, Portuguese, British, and African influences have layered over 1,000 years to create Stone Town, a UNESCO World Heritage city of carved wooden doors, coral-stone alleyways, mosques, and spice markets. The surrounding Indian Ocean beaches — particularly on the north and east coasts — have sand of a whiteness and water of a clarity that rivals the Maldives at a fraction of the cost. For honeymooners, Zanzibar combines the cultural richness of Stone Town with extraordinary beach resorts on the north and east coasts — spending two nights in the historic city and five nights on the beach creates the ideal circuit. Freddie Mercury was born in Stone Town in 1946, and the Mercury's Bar and the old house on Kenyatta Road are pilgrimage sites for rock music fans. The spice tour, the sunset dhow cruise, and the dolphin snorkeling at Kizimkazi round out a week of extraordinary variety.

1Arrival — Stone Town & the Spice Markets

Zanzibar International Airport (ZNZ) is 6km from Stone Town. Walk immediately into the labyrinth — Stone Town's lanes are too narrow for cars and the correct way to arrive is on foot, getting lost in the alleyways, following the smell of spices and the sound of the Qu'ran from the mosques. The House of Wonders (Beit-el-Ajaib) was the first building in East Africa to have electricity and the first to have an elevator — now a museum of Swahili coastal culture. The Old Fort (Arab Fort) facing the seafront is the oldest surviving building in Stone Town, built by the Omani Arabs in 1699-1701 on the site of a Portuguese chapel. The Forodhani Gardens waterfront night market comes alive at sunset: street food vendors selling Zanzibari pizza (a local invention — a thin egg pancake stuffed with meat, cheese, and vegetables), octopus, and fresh sugar cane juice.

  • Stone Town UNESCO — getting lost in the spice-scented alleyways
  • House of Wonders — Swahili coastal culture museum
  • Old Arab Fort dating to 1699
  • Forodhani Gardens night market — Zanzibari pizza and fresh octopus
🏨 Stay: Zanzibar Serena Hotel — a beautifully converted 19th-century colonial building directly on the Stone Town waterfront, or The Emerson on Hurumzi for rooftop tea ceremony dining in a 19th-century merchant mansion
2Spice Tour, Freddie Mercury & Stone Town Culture

A spice plantation tour in the island's interior is one of Zanzibar's essential experiences. Zanzibar was the world's largest clove producer for most of the 19th and 20th centuries; the plantation tours visit groves of cloves, nutmeg, cinnamon, vanilla, lemongrass, and turmeric, with guides who blindfold you and ask you to identify each spice by smell alone. Lunch at the plantation — a multi-dish Zanzibari feast cooked on wood fires in a banana-leaf serving style. In the afternoon, visit the Freddie Mercury Museum on Kenyatta Road — a small but genuinely moving tribute to Farrokh Bulsara, who was born here in 1946 and whose family home and school are nearby. Mercury's Bar in Stone Town is the most atmospheric bar in East Africa. Evening: the sunset dhow cruise from Stone Town's dhow harbor — a traditional carved wooden boat sailing through the sunset.

  • Spice plantation tour — cloves, nutmeg, cinnamon at the source
  • Banana-leaf spice plantation lunch
  • Freddie Mercury Museum — a Stone Town native and Queen founder
  • Sunset dhow cruise from the Stone Town harbor
🏨 Stay: Zanzibar Serena Hotel or The Emerson on Hurumzi
3North Coast Beaches — Nungwi & Kendwa

Transfer north (45 minutes from Stone Town) to Nungwi — the village at the northern tip of the island, known as the dhow-building center of the Indian Ocean and surrounded by the best beaches on the island. Nungwi itself has a beach facing west (sunset facing) and the turquoise lagoon of Mnarani Natural Aquarium — a tidal pool where green turtles are kept for research and feeding. Kendwa Beach, just south of Nungwi, is considered the finest beach on the island's north coast — a wide crescent of white sand facing open ocean with excellent swimming at all tidal stages (unlike the east coast, which has a significant tidal variation). The water is shallow, warm (27-29°C), and crystal clear. Sunset from the Kendwa Rocks beach bar — the most famous sunset spot in Zanzibar. Check into your beach resort and order fresh grilled lobster for dinner.

  • Nungwi dhow-building village — traditional Ocean dhow construction
  • Mnarani Aquarium — green turtle feeding pool
  • Kendwa Beach — the finest beach on the north coast
  • Sunset and lobster dinner at Kendwa Rocks
🏨 Stay: Riu Palace Zanzibar at Nungwi or Zuri Zanzibar for boutique north coast luxury
4Kizimkazi Dolphin Snorkeling & the South

Drive south along the west coast to Kizimkazi — a fishing village at the island's southern tip and the most reliable place in East Africa to swim with wild spinner and bottlenose dolphins. The dolphin pods that inhabit the Kizimkazi channel have been swimming with tourists for decades and are habituated but not domesticated; the experience of slipping into warm turquoise water and finding yourself surrounded by a pod of 20 spinner dolphins is genuinely extraordinary. The Kizimkazi Dimbani mosque, built in the 12th century, is the oldest mosque in East Africa — its inscription (1107 AD) is the oldest dated Islamic inscription in sub-Saharan Africa. Jozani Forest, 15km north of Kizimkazi, is the only national park in Zanzibar and home to the endemic and endangered Kirk's red colobus monkey — 300 individuals survive in the forest and approach visitors within meters.

  • Kizimkazi dolphin snorkeling — wild spinner dolphins in warm turquoise water
  • Kizimkazi Dimbani mosque — 12th century, oldest in East Africa
  • Jozani Forest Kirk's red colobus monkey
  • Swim with dolphins in the Kizimkazi channel
🏨 Stay: Riu Palace Zanzibar or Zuri Zanzibar
5East Coast — Paje, Bwejuu & Kitesurfing

The east coast of Zanzibar is the Indian Ocean coast — a long, continuous beach of extraordinary white sand backed by coconut palms and casuarina trees, with the coral reef 300 meters offshore creating a shallow turquoise lagoon that is the island's finest for water sports. Paje has become the kitesurfing capital of the Indian Ocean — the consistent southeast trade winds from June to September create ideal conditions, and the steady onshore breeze without the chop of open ocean makes it one of the most accessible kitesurfing destinations in the world. The reef's edge at low tide, when the water in the lagoon retreats to leave pools of extraordinary clarity, is one of the most beautiful coastal formations in East Africa. Bwejuu, 5km north of Paje, is quieter and has excellent simple Zanzibari restaurants directly on the beach serving fresh tuna and barracuda.

  • East coast Indian Ocean beach — white sand, palm trees, coral reef lagoon
  • Paje kitesurfing — the best in the Indian Ocean
  • Reef edge at low tide — extraordinary clarity and shallow pools
  • Bwejuu beach restaurant fresh tuna dinner
🏨 Stay: Baraza Resort & Spa, Bwejuu — one of the finest east coast resorts
6Snorkeling at Mnemba Atoll — the Best Reef in Zanzibar

Mnemba Atoll, a small sandy island and coral atoll 3km off the northeast coast of Zanzibar, is the finest snorkeling and diving location in the archipelago and one of the best in the western Indian Ocean. The atoll's private beach (Mnemba Island Lodge, the most exclusive resort in Tanzania, is here) is accessible to day visitors for snorkeling. The coral garden around the atoll has exceptional diversity — over 600 species of fish, 40 species of coral, hawksbill turtles, barracuda, and in season (October-March) whale sharks. A full-day snorkeling excursion from the east coast takes 45 minutes by speedboat to reach Mnemba and includes three snorkeling sessions in different parts of the reef. Return via the sandbank of Nakupenda ("I Love You" in Swahili) — a temporary sandbank that appears and disappears with the tides, used for champagne beach lunches.

  • Mnemba Atoll snorkeling — 600 fish species, turtles, whale sharks
  • Nakupenda sandbank beach lunch — appears with the tide
  • Underwater photography in exceptional Indian Ocean clarity
  • Return speedboat through the turquoise east coast lagoon
🏨 Stay: Baraza Resort & Spa, Bwejuu
7Final Morning & Departure

Zanzibar Airport (ZNZ) connects to Dar es Salaam (20 minutes, many daily flights) for international connections, and some carriers now fly direct to Middle East and European hubs. A final morning on the east coast beach, watching the Indian Ocean change color as the light strengthens through the morning, is the correct farewell to Zanzibar. Take home whole cloves (the freshest available anywhere), Zanzibari carved wooden boxes, Swahili glass bead jewelry, and a bottle of local Konyagi spirit for the memory of those sunsets. Zanzibar has been called the Spice Island for 1,000 years and the name still applies — the smell of the island, a mixture of cloves, the ocean, and frangipani flowers, stays with you long after you leave.

  • Final Indian Ocean morning swim
  • Cloves and Swahili carved wood to take home
  • Transfer to Zanzibar Airport ZNZ for Dar es Salaam connection
🏨 Stay: Departure day

Where to Stay

ultraMnemba Atoll — private island
Mnemba Island Lodge

The most exclusive resort in Tanzania — 12 bandas on a private coral island atoll surrounded by the finest snorkeling in the western Indian Ocean, accessible only by boat and with a guest list limited by the island's tiny size.

luxuryBwejuu — east coast
Baraza Resort & Spa

The finest east coast resort — a Moorish-style luxury property directly on the best stretch of east coast beach, with a spa of extraordinary quality, an excellent restaurant, and the most beautiful pool in Zanzibar.

luxuryStone Town waterfront
Zanzibar Serena Hotel

A beautifully converted 19th-century colonial building on the Stone Town seafront, with Arab-influenced design, a pool overlooking the dhow harbor, and the most historically atmospheric accommodation in Stone Town.

This is a sample — your actual itinerary is fully custom.

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