Uganda’s national parks are connected by a network of roads that range from smooth tarmac highways to steep, boulder-strewn murram tracks that will test both driver and machine. Knowing which route to take — and what condition to expect — can mean the difference between a seamless safari and a frustrating day stuck in red mud. This guide covers the best 4×4 routes in Uganda for self-drive, assessed honestly by road surface, difficulty, and what you will encounter along the way.
Why Route Planning Matters in Uganda
Uganda covers 241,038 square kilometres and its road network reflects decades of under-investment followed by rapid improvement in recent years. The main highways between major towns are generally well-tarmacked. The moment you leave the tarmac for a national park approach road, however, conditions can deteriorate rapidly — especially during the rainy seasons (March to May and October to November). A well-chosen route keeps you on driveable ground and maximises time in the parks rather than digging out of ditches.
Route 1: Kampala to Queen Elizabeth National Park via Mbarara
Distance: 420 km | Driving time: 5–6 hours | Road surface: Predominantly tarmac
This is Uganda’s most-used safari route and arguably its easiest. Leave Kampala on the Masaka Road heading southwest and join the Kampala–Mbarara highway (A109). The dual-carriageway section from Kampala to Masaka (135 km) is excellent. Beyond Masaka, the road narrows but remains good tarmac through Mbarara to the Kasese junction. From there, you follow the road northwest toward Katunguru, which marks the entry into Queen Elizabeth National Park’s northern corridor.
The tracks inside Queen Elizabeth — particularly the Kasenyi Plains circuit and the Mweya Peninsula road — are compacted murram. They are driveable in a standard 4×4 year-round, though the main circuit develops deep ruts in heavy rain. The Ishasha sector (famous for tree-climbing lions) is reached via a separate southern entrance near the Congo border. The 50 km approach road from Kihihi to Ishasha is narrow, unpaved, and becomes slippery in rain — but is manageable in a Land Cruiser or Prado.
Route 2: Kampala to Murchison Falls via Masindi
Distance: 305 km | Driving time: 5 hours | Road surface: Tarmac to Masindi, murram thereafter
The standard route to Murchison Falls National Park runs northwest from Kampala via Luwero and Masindi. The Kampala–Masindi stretch (210 km) is mostly good tarmac, with some patches of road construction near Kigumba. From Masindi (where you should fill the tank — it is the last reliable fuel stop), the road heads north toward Kichumbanyobo Gate. This section is unpaved murram — generally well-graded and manageable, but deeply corrugated after rain.
An alternative route via Gulu adds about 60 km but uses better tarmac for longer. This is the preferred route for travellers continuing to Kidepo Valley after Murchison Falls. Once inside the park, you cross the Nile on the UWA-operated Paraa Ferry (runs roughly 7am–7pm, multiple crossings daily). The north bank game circuit — where most lion, elephant, giraffe and buffalo sightings occur — is well-marked laterite track that dries quickly after rain.
Route 3: Kampala to Bwindi via Mbarara and Kabale
Distance: 489 km to Buhoma sector | Driving time: 7–8 hours | Road surface: Tarmac to Kabale, steep unpaved descent to Bwindi
This is the most challenging of Uganda’s main safari routes and the one that earns the most respect from self-drive visitors. The drive from Kampala to Kabale (419 km) follows the same Mbarara highway before turning south. The tarmac is good all the way to Kabale town. From Kabale, however, the character changes completely.
The descent to Bwindi Buhoma sector (about 55 km from Kabale) involves a steep, narrow unpaved road that drops dramatically into the Bwindi valley. In dry conditions it is a controlled challenge — tight corners, loose gravel, and steep gradients. In wet conditions it becomes treacherous, with water channelling down the road surface and the laterite turning to slick red clay. A Land Cruiser Series 70 or 76 with good mud-terrain tyres handles it well. Smaller vehicles with highway tyres have no business on this road in the rain.
An alternative approach to the Nkuringo sector of Bwindi comes via Kisoro in the far southwest — an additional 40 km of equally demanding mountain road. The views, however, are extraordinary: the Virunga volcanoes visible across the border into DRC and Rwanda.
Route 4: Kampala to Kibale Forest via Fort Portal
Distance: 340 km | Driving time: 4–5 hours | Road surface: Tarmac all the way
The Kampala–Fort Portal highway is one of Uganda’s most scenic drives and one of its most reliable. The road heads west from Kampala via Mityana and climbs through the Rift Valley escarpment, offering panoramic views over the lakes below. Fort Portal is a pleasant highland town and a good fuel and supply stop before heading to Kibale Forest (22 km south) or to Queen Elizabeth NP via Kasese (90 km further west).
The road from Fort Portal to Kibale Forest National Park is tarmac and takes about 30 minutes. The Kanyanchu visitor centre (where chimp tracking is based) has a car park directly off the road. This is genuinely one of Uganda’s easiest self-drive routes — suitable for even nervous first-time African drivers.
Route 5: Kampala to Kidepo Valley via Gulu
Distance: 700 km | Driving time: 9–11 hours | Road surface: Good tarmac to Gulu, roughening north
Kidepo Valley National Park in Uganda’s remote northeast is the country’s most spectacular park and its most challenging to reach. The route runs north from Kampala via Luwero and Gulu — the main northern highway has been significantly upgraded and the Kampala–Gulu stretch (340 km) is now mostly good tarmac, taking about 4 hours.
North of Gulu, the road quality declines progressively. The stretch from Gulu to Kitgum (100 km) is mixed tarmac and murram. From Kitgum to Kidepo (150 km) the road is increasingly rough — laterite and gravel through Karamoja scrubland, with occasional dry riverbeds that become impassable after heavy rain. The last 30 km before the park gate is the roughest section.
Most visitors break the journey with an overnight stop in Gulu. Departing Kampala by 6am, you reach Gulu for lunch (4 hours), overnight in Gulu, then complete the final leg to Kidepo by early afternoon the following day. This is the recommended approach — attempting the full Kampala–Kidepo drive in one day is possible but exhausting and leaves no daylight margin for the rough section north of Kitgum.
Route 6: The Western Uganda Circuit — Fort Portal, Kibale, Queen Elizabeth, Bwindi
This is the route that connects Uganda’s three most popular western parks in a logical loop. Starting in Kampala, drive to Fort Portal (4 hours) and spend two nights in Kibale for chimpanzee tracking. Then drive south from Fort Portal to Queen Elizabeth NP via Kasese (2 hours) for two nights of game drives. Continue south to Bwindi via Ishasha (3 hours) for gorilla trekking. Return to Kampala via Kabale and Mbarara (6 hours).
Total loop distance: approximately 1,100 km over 8–10 days. The western circuit is the most popular multi-park self-drive route in Uganda because it combines three completely different wildlife experiences — chimps, savannah game, and gorillas — on roads that, while varied, are all manageable in a standard 4×4.
Route 7: Lake Mburo to Mbarara — Uganda’s Underrated Short Route
Distance: 30 km from Mbarara | Driving time: 45 minutes | Road surface: Tarmac to gate, murram inside
Lake Mburo National Park sits just 30 km east of Mbarara town, making it the most easily reached Ugandan national park from Kampala (just 240 km, about 3.5 hours). It is an excellent first-day destination for self-drivers who want to ease into Uganda’s road and wildlife before tackling the longer western routes.
The park’s tracks are generally flat and easy to navigate — good gravel roads through acacia woodland, with zebra, impala, topi, and eland frequently seen. The Rwonyo area has good viewpoints over the lake and boat trips are available from the jetty. For self-drivers this is often a strategic overnight stop between Kampala and Queen Elizabeth.
Key Tips for All Uganda 4×4 Routes
- Never rely solely on Google Maps inside parks — it shows roads as lines but cannot tell you which are flooded or impassable. Download OsmAnd or Maps.me with Uganda offline maps before departure.
- Always fill the tank in the last town before a park — fuel is unavailable inside any Ugandan national park. Last reliable fuel before Murchison: Masindi. Before Kidepo: Kotido or Kitgum. Before Bwindi: Kabale.
- Start all long drives by 6am — arriving at park gates mid-afternoon limits your game viewing and leaves no buffer if you have a puncture or get stuck.
- Carry at least one full-size spare — not a space-saver. Park tracks eat tyres, and being stuck 40 km from a gate with a flat and no spare is a genuine problem.
- Check road conditions the day before departure — ask your accommodation or the Uganda Wildlife Authority gate office. Conditions can change overnight after heavy rain.
Start Your Uganda 4×4 Route Today
Whether you are planning a focused gorilla trip to Bwindi, a wildlife-packed circuit through Queen Elizabeth and Kibale, or the epic drive north to Kidepo, Car Hire 4×4 Drive has the right vehicle for every route. Our Land Cruisers and Hilux 4x4s are fully equipped with spare tyres, jacks, recovery boards, and camping kits. Contact us to discuss your route and we will make sure you have exactly what you need.