The Rwenzori Mountains — Ptolemy’s “Mountains of the Moon” that he described as the source of the Nile in 150 CE — are the highest mountain range in Africa outside the volcanic peaks of Kilimanjaro and Kenya. The range’s highest point, Margherita Peak on Mount Stanley, reaches 5,109m — the third highest point on the African continent. Unlike Kilimanjaro or Kenya, the Rwenzori are genuine alpine mountains in a glaciated range: wet, permanently clouded (clearing briefly on exceptional days), draped in moss, giant heather, and the extraordinary giant groundsel and giant lobelia vegetation of the Afroalpine zone. The Rwenzori trekking experience is completely different from the classic East Africa safari — physically demanding (8-day standard circuit), technically non-technical but requiring good fitness, and visually unlike anywhere else on Earth. This guide covers the 2025 permit structure, the main trekking circuit, and the physical preparation required.
The Central Circuit: 8 Days to Margherita Peak
The standard Rwenzori trekking route is the Central Circuit — an 8-day round trip from Nyakalengija (the main trailhead, 26 km from Kasese town) that accesses the Bujuku valley, the lakes at the heart of the range, and the summit glaciers of Mounts Baker, Speke, and Stanley. The full 8-day circuit covers approximately 70 km with a total elevation gain of approximately 4,000 vertical metres. The route can be shortened to 6 days (skipping the Margherita summit attempt but covering the Bujuku lake area and Mount Baker) or extended to 10-12 days for climbers wanting to attempt multiple peaks.
Day-by-day overview of the standard circuit: Day 1: Nyakalengija (1,646m) to Sine Hut (2,651m), 12 km through cultivated zone and lower forest. Day 2: Sine to Nyabitaba Hut (2,651m) to John Matte Hut (3,414m), 14 km through montane forest. Day 3: John Matte to Bujuku Hut (3,962m), 10 km through giant heather and first giant groundsel zone. Day 4: Bujuku to Cooking Pot Cave/Lac du Speke (4,200m), 6 km in the Afroalpine zone — fog, giant groundsel everywhere, Scott Elliott Pass at 4,372m. Day 5: Margherita summit attempt from high camp (requires roped glacier crossing, technical equipment, 5,109m). Day 6-8: Descent via Elena Hut, Guy Yeoman Hut, back to Nyakalengija.
Permits and Costs 2025
- Rwenzori trekking permit (UWA, 8-day circuit): USD $600 per person
- Park entry fee: USD $40 per person per day (additional to permit)
- Compulsory guide fee: USD $30 per guide per day (1 guide minimum per group)
- Porter hire: USD $15 per porter per day (each porter carries max 15 kg — most trekkers need 2 porters for an 8-day kit bag)
- Hut fees: USD $5-10 per person per night at the mountain huts (6 huts on the circuit)
- Total cost for 1 trekker, 8 days (guide + 2 porters + permit + park fees + huts): approximately USD $1,200-1,400
Physical Preparation: What’s Required
The Rwenzori is not a casual trek. The combination of high altitude (summit attempt at 5,109m), sustained daily elevation gain (600-900m per day on the ascent days), constant mud and wet conditions (the Rwenzori receives 2,000-3,000mm rainfall annually — the wettest high mountain in Africa), and 8 consecutive days of physical effort requires preparation that many gorilla trekkers underestimate. Minimum fitness standard: comfortable hiking 15+ km per day with 500m+ elevation gain, with a full day-pack (10-12 kg), for multiple consecutive days. Cardiovascular fitness is more important than strength. The recommended physical preparation: 3 months of weekly hiking (at least 2 days per week with loaded pack), stair-climbing or step machine work for quadricep development, and if possible, acclimatisation at altitude (Kampala is at 1,190m — inadequate preparation for 5,100m. Arrive early to Uganda and spend 2-3 days in Kabale or Fort Portal at 1,500-2,000m before beginning the trek).
Equipment: The Wet Mountain Essentials
- Waterproof hiking boots: Fully waterproof (Gore-Tex or equivalent), high ankle for support. The Rwenzori mud is ankle-deep in sections — low-cut shoes are not suitable.
- Gaiters: Full-length gaiters for the mud sections in the lower forest zone (Days 1-3)
- Waterproof outer layer: A true shell jacket AND waterproof trousers — you will be rained on every day at some point. A rain poncho over a heavy pack doesn’t work in mountain conditions.
- Insulation: Fleece or down midlayer for hut evenings (4°C-8°C at Bujuku hut), warm hat and gloves
- Sleeping bag: -5°C rated minimum for comfort at the high huts
- Trekking poles: Two poles for the Rwenzori — the constant mud, tree-root obstacles, and gradient make poles essential for balance and knee protection
- Dry bags: Everything in waterproof bags inside your pack — cameras, sleeping bag, clothing. The porters will get your pack soaking wet on the trail.
Getting to the Rwenzori: Kasese Access
Kasese town is the nearest urban centre to the Rwenzori main trailhead. From Kampala: 380 km via Fort Portal on the A106/A307, approximately 6-7 hours on mostly paved road. From Fort Portal (75 km east of Kasese, 1.5 hours): the most common overnight stop before the trek. From Kasese to the Nyakalengija trailhead: 26 km on a rough road requiring 4×4 (the road deteriorates significantly in the final 10 km — a standard sedan cannot reach the trailhead). The Rwenzori Mountaineering Services (RMS) office in Kasese is the booking and coordination point for all treks — confirm your permit, guide, and porter arrangement at the RMS office before proceeding to the trailhead.