Kidepo Valley National Park is Uganda’s most remote national park — located in the Karamoja region of northeastern Uganda, bordering South Sudan in the north and Kenya in the east, approximately 700 km from Kampala on roads that include some of Uganda’s most challenging driving. This remoteness has preserved something rare in East Africa: a truly wild, completely uncrowded safari experience in a landscape of dramatic mountain and semi-arid savanna that looks and feels nothing like the better-known western Uganda parks. The park holds lion, cheetah, bat-eared fox, ostrich, and over 475 bird species — and on any given morning game drive, you may encounter literally no other vehicle. For visitors who have done the Masai Mara, the Serengeti, and Bwindi, Kidepo is the answer to “what’s left to see?”
Wildlife: What Kidepo Has That Others Don’t
Kidepo’s 1,442 sq km encompasses the Narus and Kidepo valleys and the Timu Forest in the south — a landscape that transitions from semi-arid savanna (Narus Valley, dry season water concentrate) to broadleaf woodland and mountain grassland at higher elevations. The park holds species absent from Uganda’s western parks:
- Cheetah: Uganda’s only viable cheetah population lives in Kidepo — approximately 15-20 individuals on the open Narus Valley plains. Sighting success on dedicated morning drives: approximately 40-60%. Kidepo is the only place in Uganda where cheetah can be reliably found.
- Bat-eared fox: Present in good numbers on the short grass plains of the Narus Valley. These large-eared, insect-eating canids are seen foraging in the early morning and late afternoon.
- Ostrich: Somali and Maasai ostriches both present in the park’s open areas — Uganda’s most reliable ostrich sighting location.
- Striped hyena: Occasional sightings in the rocky escarpment areas — a species not found in western Uganda.
- Lion: The Kidepo lion population (approximately 130 individuals in 2025) is one of Uganda’s healthiest. The Narus Valley prides are well-established and reliable on morning drives.
Getting to Kidepo: The Drive
The drive from Kampala to Kidepo is approximately 700 km via the Gulu route, taking 10-12 hours with no stops. Kampala → Gulu (340 km, 5 hours on good A-road) → Kitgum (450 km, 7 hours, paved but deteriorating near Kitgum) → Kidepo park gate at Apoka (700 km, 10-12 hours total). This is a single long driving day that most visitors split over 2 days (Kampala overnight in Gulu, then Gulu to Kidepo next morning). The road from Kitgum to Kidepo (250 km, last section) is unpaved and requires 4×4 — the Kitgum to Apoka section passes through Karamoja semi-arid landscape on a laterite track that is tough but manageable in a Land Cruiser in dry season. In wet season (April-May, October-November), parts of the Karamoja approach road can be deeply rutted. A Land Cruiser 76 Series is the recommended vehicle for the Kidepo self-drive.
The alternative — flying — is dramatically easier. Eagle Air operates chartered flights from Entebbe (EBB) to Kidepo’s Apoka airstrip (approximately 1.5 hours, USD $400-600 one-way per person depending on group size — fly charter pricing). Several Kidepo lodges operate their own aircraft transfers. Flying removes the 2-day road approach and makes a 3-night Kidepo trip practical even from Entebbe.
The Narus Valley: Kidepo’s Core Wildlife Area
The Narus Valley is Kidepo’s main game drive area — a flat, open plain with permanent water at the Narus River that concentrates wildlife throughout the year but particularly in the dry season (October-February). The valley has natural hot springs that create year-round water sources even when the main river dries in the harshest periods. Buffalo herds of 500-1,000 are regular on the Narus plains — one of Uganda’s largest single-area buffalo concentrations. Elephant herds of 30-80 move through from the South Sudan border area. Eland (the world’s largest antelope) in herds of 50+ are common — Kidepo is Uganda’s best eland sighting location. The short grass of the Narus Valley allows sightlines of 5-8 km — an entirely different visual experience from the closed-in game viewing of western Uganda’s forest parks.
The Karamojong Cultural Experience
The Karamoja region surrounding Kidepo is inhabited by the Karamojong people — a pastoralist group who have maintained traditional cattle-herding culture and dress (colourful shuka cloth, elaborate bead jewellery, walking with long spears for the men) more completely than almost any other community in Uganda. A visit to a Karamojong manyatta (homestead) near Apoka (arranged through the Apoka Safari Lodge, approximately USD $20-30 per person) provides a culturally respectful introduction to a community that lives in close geographic proximity to the national park while maintaining traditions predating the park’s creation.
Accommodation at Kidepo 2025
- Apoka Safari Lodge (Wilderness Safaris): USD $400-550/night per person all-inclusive (2025). The park’s flagship lodge, 10 cottages above the Narus Valley, swimming pool, excellent guiding, fly-in transfers available.
- Nga’Moru Wilderness Camp: USD $160-220/night per person full-board. Good mid-range tented camp near Apoka, guided game drives, community-focused.
- UWA Apoka Rest Camp: USD $40-60/night per room (basic self-catering). Functional bandas at the park headquarters. Bring food supplies from Kampala or Gulu — no shop inside the park.
- Camping (UWA campsite): USD $25/person/night. Basic facilities at the Apoka area. 4×4 access required.