Travel to Kaa-Iya National Park
Bolivia's Largest National Park, in the Heart of the Gran Chaco
Kaa-Iya National Park
Bolivia's Largest National Park, in the Heart of the Gran Chaco
Ecovoyager Experiences
Kaa-Iya National Park Tours
Handcrafted expeditions into the remote corners of Kaa-Iya National Park — led by local experts, designed for the curious traveller.
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Things to Do in Kaa-Iya National Park
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Jaguar Tracking on the Pipeline Road
Slow 4x4 drives at dawn and dusk along the dirt corridor linking Tucavaca to the Izozog pump station, where camera-trap studies have recorded one of the largest jaguar populations documented in any protected area. Your guide reads fresh tracks and the alarm calls that give away a cat's position.
Searching for the Chacoan Peccary
The endemic tagua was known only from Pleistocene fossils until living bands were confirmed in 1975. In the alluvial Chaco around Cerro Cortado, your guide scans for characteristic wallows, cactus feeding signs, and groups of five to ten animals browsing quebracho thickets at first light.
Night Drives Through the Thorn Forest
After sunset, Tucavaca's spotlight drives crawl at walking pace through tunnels of quebracho and candelabra cactus. Beams reveal giant armadillos, Geoffroy's cat, crab-eating fox, night monkeys, and the occasional maned wolf crossing sandy tracks that held jaguar prints an hour earlier.
Waterhole Vigils at Peak Dry Season
As September advances, shrinking water sources concentrate wildlife into narrow windows of activity. From blinds and vehicles positioned at known lagoons, watch tapir, white-lipped peccary herds, giant anteater, and puma converge on the last drinking points before the rains return.
Guaraní-Isoseño Communities of the Parapetí
In the Isoso villages along the Río Parapetí, meet elders, parabiólogos trained as community field biologists, and the women's cooperatives producing algarrobo flour and native honey. Arranged through the co-management authority, these visits show the governance model that built the park.
Dark-Sky Nights at Tucavaca Camp
With no town or electric light for miles in any direction, Kaa-Iya delivers some of South America's darkest night skies. The Milky Way, the Magellanic Clouds, and the Southern Cross burn crisp above silhouetted quebracho trees while nightjars call from the thorn scrub.
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Stories from Kaa-Iya National Park
The Largest Park in Bolivia's Gran Chaco
Covering 34,411 square kilometers of southeastern Santa Cruz Department, Kaa-Iya del Gran Chaco is Bolivia’s largest national park and the single biggest protected area anywhere in the Gran Chaco ecoregion, which spans four South American countries. The terrain is almost entirely flat alluvial plain, ranging from around 100 meters above sea level up to about 839 meters at its highest point, Cerro San Miguel, and transitions through four distinct Chaco landscapes: riverine forest along the Río Parapetí, the dense thorn forest of the alluvial Chaco, a transitional zone of semi-humid woodland, and the Chaco-Chiquitano transition forest along the northern edge.
The park also encloses Ramsar-listed wetlands. The Bañados del Isoso, a seasonal marsh covering more than 615,000 hectares, is fed by the Río Parapetí, which sinks underground during the dry season before its waters migrate slowly north toward the Amazon basin. Palmar de las Islas and the Salinas de San José add gleaming salt flats to the landscape. Together with the neighboring Otuquis National Park, the Ñembi Guasu indigenous conservation area, and Paraguay’s Defensores del Chaco across the border, Kaa-Iya anchors one of the largest intact dry-forest corridors remaining in the tropics.
Best Time to Visit Kaa-Iya National Park
Dry season jaguar tracking in the Gran Chaco
Getting to Kaa-Iya National Park
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Drive from Santa Cruz to San José de Chiquitos
Transfer from San José de Chiquitos to Tucavaca Camp
Pipeline Road Wildlife Drives
Drive from Santa Cruz to San José de Chiquitos
Drive from Santa Cruz to San José de Chiquitos
The paved Ruta 4 highway runs 260 kilometers east from Santa Cruz de la Sierra to San José de Chiquitos, a Jesuit mission town founded in 1698 and the main gateway to the northern park entrance. Ecovoyager's private 4x4 transfers collect guests from Santa Cruz hotels or Viru Viru International Airport, breaking the drive for lunch and a short visit to the stone mission church.
Transfer from San José de Chiquitos to Tucavaca Camp
Transfer from San José de Chiquitos to Tucavaca Camp
From San José, 85 kilometers of unpaved road crosses the Serranía San José cattle country into the northern edge of the national park, where the Tucavaca ranger station serves as base camp for all park operations. The route is rough, sandy in places, and requires a dedicated 4x4 vehicle; Ecovoyager provides reinforced expedition transport with spare tires and satellite communication.
Pipeline Road Wildlife Drives
Pipeline Road Wildlife Drives
Once inside the park, all wildlife tracking happens along the dirt service road that runs parallel to the Bolivia-Brazil gas pipeline, linking Tucavaca to the Izozog pumping station 120 kilometers south. Ecovoyager's dedicated expedition 4x4 allows open-sided viewing, with daily drives scheduled before dawn and again in the late afternoon when jaguar and peccary activity peaks.
Travel with EcoVoyager
Ecovoyager coordinates the permits with SERNAP and the Guaraní-Isoseño co-management authority, and pairs every expedition with a certified Bolivian biologist guide, a driver, and a cook. Small groups base at the Tucavaca camp for dry-season tracking of jaguar, Chacoan peccary, and giant armadillo, with daily drives timed to dawn and dusk when the animals move.
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