Uganda’s northern safari circuit — covering Murchison Falls National Park, Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary, and Kidepo Valley National Park — is the country’s most wildlife-rich combination outside the gorilla parks and provides a safari experience qualitatively different from the southern circuit. Murchison is Uganda’s largest national park (3,840 sq km), famous for the Nile’s most powerful waterfall and excellent game including substantial lion and elephant populations. Kidepo Valley is Uganda’s most remote park and arguably its finest safari destination — lying near the South Sudan border with a wilderness character and predator density that rivals any East African park. Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary (between Kampala and Murchison) holds Uganda’s only white rhino population — the only place in Uganda to see this species. Together these three destinations create a 7-10 day northern loop from Kampala that should be on every serious Uganda safari itinerary.
Route Overview and Distances
- Kampala to Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary: 175 km, 2.5 hours on the A109 Gulu Road
- Ziwa to Murchison Falls NP (Masindi Gate): 60 km, 1 hour
- Murchison Falls area (Paraa to Northern Sector): 50 km internal
- Murchison Falls to Kidepo Valley (via Gulu and Kitgum): 520 km, 7-8 hours (the longest single drive of the circuit)
- Kidepo to Kampala (return via Gulu): 700 km, 9-10 hours
- Total circuit distance: approximately 1,550 km, recommended over 7-10 days
Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary
Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary (7,000 hectares of savanna on private land, 175 km from Kampala) holds 33 southern white rhino as of 2025 — the result of a reintroduction programme that began with 6 individual animals from Kenya and the US in 2005. This is the only place in Uganda where rhino are found — white rhino were extirpated from Uganda in the 1980s by poachers and this sanctuary is the re-establishment breeding population. Entry: USD $35 per person for a 1-hour guided rhino tracking walk (the standard visit format). The sanctuary’s small size and the rhinos’ habituated status means sightings are virtually guaranteed — groups of 2-5 rhinos are encountered within 30-60 minutes of beginning the walk. Being approached by a 2,300 kg white rhino at 10 metres on foot (with a guide who knows the individual animals’ behaviour) is an experience of a different quality than any vehicle-based rhino encounter. Ziwa is a practical 2-3 hour stop on the Kampala-Murchison drive — leave Kampala at 06:00, arrive Ziwa by 08:30, complete the rhino walk, continue to Masindi for lunch and Murchison by afternoon.
Murchison Falls National Park
Murchison Falls NP (3,840 sq km) is Uganda’s flagship game park — the White Nile forces through a 7-metre gap in the Rift Valley escarpment to create the world’s most powerful waterfall (measured by force per unit area), then continues northwest through game-rich savanna to Lake Albert. The park divides into two safari zones: the Northern Bank (north of the Nile, accessed by a UWA ferry at Paraa) holds the main lion and elephant populations, with open savanna game drives producing sightings of giraffe, hippo, buffalo, Uganda kob, Jackson’s hartebeest, Oribi, and the resident lion prides. The Southern Bank is more forested — primates including chimpanzee (habituated chimp tracking at Kaniyo Pabidi), red-tailed monkey, olive baboon, and black-and-white colobus are the southern bank’s wildlife highlights. The Nile boat trip (1.5 hours upstream from Paraa jetty to the Falls, USD $30/person on UWA boats) is the essential Murchison activity — hippo, Nile crocodile (large adults up to 4.5 metres), elephant drinking at the bank, and the drama of the Falls itself at the trip’s climax.
Kidepo Valley National Park
Kidepo Valley NP (1,442 sq km) in the Karamoja region near the South Sudan border is Uganda’s most remote and, for many experienced Africa travellers, its finest park. The landscape is semi-arid savanna in a valley between the Timu Forest to the south and the Narus Valley (the permanent water source that concentrates wildlife in the dry season). Kidepo holds species absent from the rest of Uganda: lion (the most reliable Uganda lion sightings are here), cheetah (the park’s most distinctive predator, present in the Narus Valley year-round), eland, Burchell’s zebra, greater and lesser kudu, caracal, aardwolf, and striped hyena. The bird list of 476 species includes 60 that are found nowhere else in Uganda — the park’s Karamoja position adds Northeast African species that do not occur in the rest of the country. Access: 700 km from Kampala (9-10 hours drive on the A109 Gulu Road then B45 via Kitgum, or fly from Entebbe to Kidepo airstrip — flight 1.5 hours, USD $280-380 return on scheduled charter). Flight access is strongly recommended if budget allows — the drive from Murchison to Kidepo on the B45 road is challenging (600+ km, variable surface quality), but the overland journey through Acholi and Karamoja landscapes is itself remarkable for visitors wanting the complete northern Uganda experience.
Accommodation North Uganda 2025
- Paraa Safari Lodge (Murchison): USD $200-280/night per person full-board. Nile-frontage lodge with pool, the best Murchison position directly at the ferry crossing. Good restaurant and bar.
- Nile Safari Lodge (Murchison): USD $150-210/night. Private tented camp on the Nile downstream from Paraa, excellent guiding, swimming platform above the river.
- Apoka Safari Lodge (Kidepo): USD $300-450/night per person all-inclusive. The premier Kidepo lodge, award-winning, private plunge pool, outstanding guiding team with 10+ years Kidepo experience. The benchmark for Kidepo accommodation quality.
- Nga’Moru Wilderness Camp (Kidepo): USD $150-220/night per person full-board. Budget comparison to Apoka with high standards, community-owned.