The Nyungwe Forest canopy walkway in Rwanda is a 160-metre suspension bridge system hanging 50 to 70 metres above the forest floor in the heart of one of Africa’s oldest montane forests. The walkway was constructed in 2010 and remains the only canopy walkway in Rwanda, offering a perspective on montane rainforest that no ground-based trail can match. For self-drive visitors staying in or near Nyungwe Forest National Park, the walkway is a half-morning activity that pairs well with the Uwinka trail system and chimpanzee trekking. This guide covers the booking procedure, access, the physical experience, and what wildlife to expect during the walkway visit.
Practical Information: Cost, Booking and Opening Hours
The canopy walkway permit costs USD $50 per person. It must be booked through Rwanda Development Board either in advance online at rdb.rw or at the Uwinka visitor centre on the day of your visit, subject to availability. Maximum group size per walkway session: 8 people. The walkway operates 07:00-17:00 daily with guided sessions departing every 1-2 hours depending on ranger availability. The most popular session is the 07:00 departure — book this if arriving the previous day and staying near the park.
Getting to Uwinka: The Uwinka visitor centre is located on the main RN1 road through Nyungwe Forest, 8 km inside the park boundary from the northern (Kitabi) gate. It is clearly signposted. The car park at Uwinka is large and secure. From Gisakura (where most accommodation is located), the drive to Uwinka is approximately 10 minutes. From Cyangugu (southern approach), allow 45 minutes.
The Walkway Experience: What Happens
From the Uwinka visitor centre, a guided trail descends approximately 300 metres through montane forest on a maintained path before reaching the first suspension bridge at canopy level. The entire walkway system consists of several connected suspension bridges totalling 160 metres. At its highest point, the walkway is 70 metres above the forest floor — 7 storeys above the ground. At the lowest point it is approximately 50 metres high. The bridges are constructed from aluminium framing with wooden plank flooring and steel cable handrails. The movement is noticeable — walking at pace makes the bridge sway, and groups are asked to space out to reduce oscillation.
The total walking time including the descent to the walkway, the bridges, and the return ascent is approximately 2-3 hours. The descent involves a 200m elevation change on a path that is steep in sections and wet year-round. Proper hiking boots are essential — sandals or flat shoes are prohibited by park rangers and genuinely dangerous on the steep wet path. The ranger guide accompanying your group points out wildlife, identifies bird calls, and explains the forest ecology throughout the walk.
Wildlife You Can See from the Canopy Walkway
Primates
The canopy walkway passes through the home range of the black-and-white Ruwenzori colobus monkeys — groups of 100-400 individuals that are Nyungwe’s most spectacular primates. From the walkway, colobus troops feeding in the canopy around and below you create a remarkable visual — dozens of black-and-white monkeys with flowing white tails and mantles moving through the trees at eye level or below. These encounters are not guaranteed but colobus troops are large and active enough that walkway visitors see them on approximately 70-80% of visits. L’Hoest’s monkey, olive baboon, and grey-cheeked mangabey are also present in the Uwinka area and sometimes visible from the walkway or the access trail.
Birds
Bird watching from the canopy walkway is exceptional. At 50-70 metres height, you are at or above the main canopy layer where sunbirds, hornbills, and turacos forage. The Ruwenzori turaco — a stunning purple, red, and green bird endemic to the Albertine Rift — is regularly seen near the walkway and is one of the most reliable sightings in Nyungwe. The red-throated alethe, mountain masked apalis, and Grauer’s rush warbler (a globally vulnerable species found only in Albertine Rift papyrus) are present in the Uwinka area. With 310 species in Nyungwe, the canopy walkway bird list for a morning visit typically runs to 30-50 species for an attentive observer.
The Forest Itself
Even without specific wildlife sightings, the perspective from the walkway is extraordinary. Looking down 60 metres into undisturbed montane rainforest — seeing the layered structure of emergent trees, main canopy, sub-canopy, and forest floor — gives a spatial understanding of this ecosystem that ground-based walking cannot provide. The emergent trees of Nyungwe reach 45 metres; from the walkway you look out across their crowns. On clear mornings (more common in dry season) the view extends to distant ridgelines of the Congo-Nile Divide with Lake Kivu glimpsed to the west.
Best Time for the Canopy Walkway
The 07:00 session is best for two reasons: cool air temperature (Nyungwe at 2,300m is 15-20°C in the morning, cooling for active walking) and maximum wildlife activity. Primates and birds are most active in the first 2 hours after sunrise. By 10:00, activity diminishes as temperatures warm and animals rest. The tradeoff: morning often brings mist in the forest, reducing visibility on the walkway. In dry season (June-September), mornings are clearer. In wet season (March-May), morning mist is nearly certain. Both moods are beautiful — mist in the canopy has its own dramatic photography opportunities, even if longer views are obscured.
Rain: Nyungwe receives over 2,000mm of rain annually with no genuinely dry month. The walkway operates in light rain but closes in heavy rain or strong wind for safety reasons. If you arrive for a session and rain is heavy, rangers will ask you to wait at the visitor centre. Sessions are often rescheduled the same day rather than cancelled entirely — morning rain typically clears by 10:00-11:00 in the dry season.
Combining the Walkway with Other Nyungwe Activities
A full Nyungwe day itinerary: 07:00 canopy walkway (returns by 10:00). 10:30 breakfast at Uwinka visitor centre café (basic food available). 11:00-13:00: Uwinka ridge trail walk (a 3 km loop with good bird watching and views). 14:00: rest at accommodation. 15:00: drive to Gisakura Tea Estate for afternoon tea estate walk (guided by estate staff, approximately USD $10 per person). This fills a full day and costs USD $50 (walkway) + USD $30 (afternoon walk) per person plus park entry (USD $40 per person for the day).
If chimpanzee trekking is the priority activity, note that chimp tracking at Cyamudongo (Nyungwe’s smaller satellite forest 5 km from the main park boundary) starts at 07:00 and conflicts with the walkway morning session. Organise chimpanzee tracking on a separate day from the canopy walkway. The Nyungwe main park chimpanzee tracking (in the deeper forest 15 km from Uwinka) starts at 08:00 and can theoretically follow a 07:00 walkway session with a vehicle transfer between activities, but this requires pre-coordination with the park office.