Sri Lankan leopard standing in lush green vegetation, Yala Block 5

Yala Block 5 & 6 Safari

Block 5 and 6. The quieter, less crowded side of Yala. Deeper forest, fewer vehicles, and real leopard and sloth bear territory with honest expectations.

About the park

Two different experiences. One quieter side of Yala.

Most people who visit Yala go to Block 1. They come back with leopard photos taken from a crush of jeeps. Block 5 and 6 are genuinely different. Less developed, more remote, and far fewer vehicles.

Block 6 is more spacious and relaxed. Good elephant chances, open landscape, crocodiles, water buffalo, spotted deer, sambar deer, wild boar, jackals, peacocks, and beautiful birdlife around the lagoons. Leopards are almost impossible here and never something we promise.

Block 5 is where leopard and sloth bear potential becomes real, but expectations need to be honest. Leopard chances are lower than Block 1, elephants are much less common, and safaris here require patience. Slow driving, alarm calls, waiting near rocky areas. Sometimes nature rewards it. Sometimes it stays quiet.

Honest note: We don’t build our safaris around guaranteed leopard sightings. What we offer is the right conditions, the fewest vehicles, and the patience to make the most of whatever the park gives. That’s the honest deal.

Park at a glance

Size 26,000+ hectares (full park)
Blocks covered Block 5 & 6
Leopard density Lower than Block 1
Best time to visit Jan–Apr or Jul–Aug
Entry times 6am – 6pm
Nearest town Kataragama
Vehicle type Open-roof 4WD jeep

The packages

Three ways to go slow

All packages are private, your group only. Prices are per person. Yala offers the Signature safari, Full Day safari, and Photography Tours, with the same guide and the same honest approach.

Full day · Both parks

From $91 per person
GroupPer person
1 person$205
2 persons$133
3 persons$110
4 persons$97
5 persons$91

Not included

  • Park entrance fees, taxes and service charges
  • Tips (entirely optional)
  • Travel insurance
  • Personal expenses

Full Day Safari

Sunrise entry, midday rest, afternoon circuit, sunset exit. You'll cover parts of whichever park you choose that most visitors never reach. Packed lunch included. The kind of day that takes a few days to fully absorb.

What's included

  • Private jeep
  • Naturalist guide
  • Less-traveled routes through Block 5 and 6, going deeper and slower
  • Bush lunch picnic inside the park
  • Bottled water, cool box, snacks and soft drinks
  • 2 professional binoculars
  • Photographic Guide to Wildlife of Sri Lanka (Gehan De Silva) to use during the safari
  • DJI Osmo Mobile 7 to use for video (download DJI Mimo app beforehand)

✓ Wildlife photography

Sony a6700 + 200–600mm. While you take in what's in front of you, your guide shoots alongside, focused on behaviour, light, and the moments that are hard to catch on a phone. A curated selection shared with you after the safari, so you leave with proper images of what you saw.

Best for: Serious wildlife enthusiasts, photographers, those who want everything

Custom · Both parks

Pricing Custom built around your trip

Priced around

  • Your camera gear and style
  • Golden hour windows, both ends of day
  • Target species and habitats
  • Your travel schedule
Full details

Photography Tours

Purpose-built for photographers. Golden hour timing, remote sections, and a guide who understands light and animal behaviour. Built around your camera, not a tourist schedule. Available in both parks.

What's included

  • Private jeep
  • Wildlife photographer as guide
  • Park entrance fees
  • Golden hour access at both ends of the day
  • Hotel pickup included

Built for

  • Camera enthusiasts & professionals
  • Multi-day options available
  • Not for those in a hurry

Best for: Photographers who want the full story, not just the sighting

Common kingfisher in golden light, Yala National Park

When to come

The light at 6am makes everything worth it.

Yala Block 5 & 6 are open year-round, but the dry season (January to April and July to August) is peak time. Lower vegetation means leopards are more visible and waterholes draw animals in. The monsoon shoulder months bring lush green forest, far fewer vehicles, and a quieter, more personal version of the park.

Peak season: January to April and July to August. Dry weather, lower grass, clearer sightings. The park is at its busiest during these months.

Monsoon months: The rest of the year. Rain in Sri Lanka's monsoon season is rarely the all-day affair people expect. Most mornings are warm and clear. The rain usually holds off until late afternoon and passes quickly. The park is noticeably less crowded, which is a genuine advantage.

Honest advice: If avoiding crowds matters to you more than perfect dry-season conditions, the quieter months in Yala can actually give you a better, more personal experience than peak season.

Common questions

Things people usually ask about Yala

Yes honestly it feels very different, and we only recommend Block 5 & 6 for guests who actually prefer quieter and slower safari experiences. We don’t usually suggest Block 1 for people looking for calm nature experiences at all.

Block 1 became famous mainly because of its higher leopard density and easier leopard sightings. Because of that, jeep traffic there can become very intense sometimes, especially once an animal is spotted. Some guests enjoy that excitement, but others leave feeling stressed or disappointed because the whole experience can feel rushed.

Block 6 is the more spacious and relaxed part of Yala. Jeep numbers are lower than in the main block, and it generally feels less intense compared to the busy side of Yala most people know. Elephants are present here, fewer than in Udawalawe, but still very possible to see, especially during quieter afternoons. In terms of elephant chances, we’d place Block 6 just after Udawalawe. Leopards are almost impossible here and never something we promise.

Block 5 is where the leopard and sloth bear potential really comes in, but it’s also where expectations need to be managed carefully. Leopard chances are lower compared to Block 1, and elephant sightings are much less common. Safaris here often involve more patience. Slow driving, alarm calls, waiting near rocky areas. Sometimes it pays off beautifully, sometimes it doesn’t. This block suits people who are comfortable with uncertainty and understand that walking away without a leopard sighting is always a possibility.

Because of that, we often suggest combining Block 6 and Block 5 together. Block 6 brings the peaceful atmosphere and better elephant chances, while Block 5 adds the possibility of leopard or sloth bear sightings without the heavier crowds of Block 1.

Honestly we always try to answer this carefully because we never want guests to feel like they were promised something unrealistic.

If someone’s only goal is maximizing leopard chances above everything else, then statistically Block 1 still has better odds. That’s simply the reality. But it also comes with far more jeep traffic and a much busier safari atmosphere.

In Block 5, leopard sightings are still definitely possible and we’ve had some beautiful sightings there over the years, but it usually requires more patience and a bit of luck. Some safaris become unforgettable. Some don’t. That’s just the honest side of wildlife.

This is also why we don’t build our safaris around “guaranteed leopard experiences.” we feel the pressure of chasing only one animal can sometimes ruin the whole feeling of being in nature.

So when we guide guests into Block 5 & 6, we usually encourage them to enjoy the entire experience. The silence, the elephant encounters, tracks on the road, bird calls, changing light, maybe a sloth bear suddenly appearing out of nowhere. And if the leopard comes too, then it becomes a bonus rather than the only thing that decides whether the safari was successful.

Yes definitely, and honestly many guests who enjoy wildlife deeply end up loving that combination because the parks feel completely different from each other.

Udawalawe is usually the more reliable park for elephants. Sightings are often easier, the landscape is more open, and the whole safari can feel a little gentler and more predictable.

Yala Block 5 & 6 feel more wild and uncertain in comparison. Block 6 gives that peaceful open safari feeling with decent elephant chances, while Block 5 adds the possibility of leopards and sloth bears, even though sightings are never guaranteed.

Personally we think the combination works beautifully because you are not depending on one park to give you everything. Udawalawe covers the stronger elephant experience, while Yala gives a different atmosphere and the excitement of unpredictability.

But we also try to think realistically about travel pace because too many safari days back to back can become tiring. So usually we help guests plan it depending on their route, energy level, and what kind of safari feeling they actually want.

One thing we love about Block 5 & 6 is that the safari experience becomes less about ticking animals off a checklist and more about observing whatever nature gives you naturally.

In Block 6, elephants are usually the main highlight. You can also commonly see crocodiles, water buffalo, spotted deer, sambar deer, wild boar, jackals, peacocks, mongoose, and monkeys, along with beautiful birdlife around the lagoons and open grasslands. If lucky, even fishing cats or jungle cats are possible, though quite rare. It’s more about the overall safari feeling and natural atmosphere rather than chasing one specific animal.

Block 5 adds real possibility for leopards and sloth bears, though both are always unpredictable. Elephant sightings there are actually much less common compared to Block 6, which surprises some guests. Apart from the big draws, Block 5 can also have crocodiles, deer species, wild boar, jackals, mongoose, peacocks, changeable hawk eagles, serpent eagles, and many smaller birds and reptiles.

And honestly some of the best moments are not even the rare animals. Sometimes it’s simply driving through empty wilderness with no other jeeps around you, or watching birds react to predators nearby. Those quiet moments are usually what guests remember most.

Usually earlier is safer, especially during the main tourist season and holidays when jeep availability becomes limited.

But honestly we also don’t like creating pressure around bookings. Sometimes last minute safaris are still possible too.

For us the bigger reason to book earlier is simply so we can arrange things properly and calmly. The right jeep, experienced drivers who work for us, better timing, and enough flexibility to plan the safari around weather and park conditions instead of rushing everything at the last moment.

Especially for Block 5 & 6 safaris, we prefer planning things properly because these experiences work best when they feel relaxed from the beginning itself.

Honestly yes, parts of it can definitely be rough sometimes, especially after rain.

Block 5 & 6 are more remote and less developed compared to the main tourist sections of Yala, and that’s partly why they still feel quieter and more natural. Some roads become dusty, uneven, or bumpy depending on the season.

But to be honest many guests actually enjoy that side of the experience because it feels more authentic and less commercialized. You genuinely feel like you are entering deeper wilderness.

We always arrange proper safari jeeps and experienced drivers who know these roads well, but we still think it’s important to mention honestly that this is not a luxury smooth-road safari experience. If someone has serious back problems or prefers very soft comfortable travel, we’d rather explain that openly beforehand instead of pretending otherwise.

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