Kilimanjaro trekking through moorland zone Tanzania
Training Guide

How to Train for Kilimanjaro: A 12-Week Fitness Programme

📅 2025-02-20 8 min read✍️ AMG Safaris Team
Kilimanjaro does not require technical climbing skills — but it does demand a significant level of aerobic fitness and mental resilience. The question our guides hear most often is: 'Am I fit enough?' This 12-week programme answers that question and gets you there.

What Level of Fitness Do You Need?

Kilimanjaro is a long, high-altitude trek — not a technical climb. You do not need to be a mountaineer. What you do need is the ability to walk 5–8 hours per day for 6–8 consecutive days at altitudes up to 5,895 metres. Previous high-altitude experience is helpful but not essential.

The summit attempt is particularly demanding — typically 7–9 hours of uphill walking at altitudes above 5,500 metres, starting at midnight, in sub-zero temperatures. Fitness helps enormously, but the correct acclimatisation pace (which your AMG guide will manage) is the most important factor.

12-Week Training Programme

Weeks 1–4: Build Your Base

Focus on building cardiovascular endurance through consistent, moderate-intensity activity.

  • 3 × 45-minute runs per week at a comfortable conversational pace
  • 1 × long hike on weekends (90 minutes, building to 3 hours by week 4)
  • Bodyweight strength training 2× per week (squats, lunges, step-ups, core work)
  • Start with flat terrain; introduce hills from week 3

Weeks 5–8: Increase Load

  • Run 4 × per week — include one interval session for VO2 max improvement
  • Long weekend hike now 4–5 hours with a 10 kg pack
  • Begin stair climbing (30-minute sessions) to simulate altitude trekking
  • Add single-leg strength exercises for ankle stability
Kilimanjaro high camp altitude training
High-altitude sections above 4,000m are where fitness really matters

Weeks 9–12: Simulate the Climb

  • Full-day hikes (6–8 hours) with 12–15 kg pack on consecutive days
  • One back-to-back weekend: hike Saturday AND Sunday
  • Focus on consistent pacing — not speed
  • Taper in week 12: reduce intensity, maintain movement, rest

The Most Important Factor: Pace

'Pole pole' — slowly, slowly — is the mantra of every Kilimanjaro guide. The single biggest predictor of summit success is pacing: walking slow enough to allow your body to acclimatise. Strong, fit trekkers fail when they push too hard on day one. Your AMG guide will set the pace.

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Altitude Simulation

If you have access to an altitude training mask or can access high-altitude terrain before your climb (3,000m+), use it in weeks 9–12. Even a weekend at altitude helps prime your body's acclimatisation response.

Essential Gear for Training

  • Quality broken-in hiking boots — most critical item
  • Trekking poles — practise using them on hills
  • Headlamp — train one night session to simulate the summit push
  • Moisture-wicking base layers
  • Your actual summit kit — field-test everything before Tanzania
Ready to Climb?

AMG Safaris offers all four main Kilimanjaro routes with KINAPA-licensed guides. View our routes and pricing — or contact us for a personalised recommendation.

Ready to Experience Tanzania?

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