Ten days gives you enough time to cover Uganda’s four premier wildlife destinations — Bwindi, Queen Elizabeth, Murchison Falls, and Kibale — without rushing. This itinerary adds Murchison Falls to the 7-day core route, bringing in the drama of the Nile, northern savannah wildlife, and the shoebill stork. It is the most comprehensive introductory Uganda self-drive you can do in under two weeks.
Route Overview
- Days 1–2: Entebbe/Kampala → Queen Elizabeth National Park
- Days 3–4: Queen Elizabeth full days (Kasenyi circuit + Kazinga Channel + Ishasha)
- Day 5: Queen Elizabeth → Bwindi Impenetrable Forest
- Day 6: Gorilla trekking at Bwindi
- Day 7: Bwindi → Kibale Forest via Fort Portal
- Day 8: Chimpanzee tracking at Kibale
- Days 9–10: Kibale → Murchison Falls National Park + return to Kampala
Days 1–2: Arrival and Drive to Queen Elizabeth (305 km)
Collect your vehicle in Kampala on arrival day. If your flight lands midday or later, overnight near Entebbe or in Kampala and depart early next morning. The drive to Queen Elizabeth via Masaka and Mbarara takes approximately five hours on good tarmac. Enter through the Katunguru gate and head to Mweya Peninsula for the first two nights — the peninsula sits between Lake George and Lake Edward and offers the best access to both the Kasenyi circuit and the Kazinga Channel.
Days 3–4: Full Days at Queen Elizabeth
Two full days at Queen Elizabeth is the correct allocation. Day three: early morning Kasenyi Plains game drive (6:30am departure) for lions, then a midday Kazinga Channel boat trip (USD $30, departs 9am and 2pm). Day four: drive south to the Ishasha sector for tree-climbing lions, then continue to Bwindi — this turns day four into a travel day but allows you to see Ishasha’s famous fig-tree lions without backtracking. The Ishasha circuit takes 2–3 hours before the 60 km drive to Buhoma.
Day 5: Drive to Bwindi
The final descent to Bwindi’s Buhoma sector from the Kabale road involves 20 km of steep, unpaved mountain track. In a Land Cruiser, engage low-range 4WD for the descent. The track rewards patience — views of the Bwindi canopy emerging from valley mist as you descend are among the most striking scenes of the entire trip. Arrive by early afternoon and take a forest-edge walk to acclimatize to the altitude (1,160 metres at Buhoma).
Day 6: Gorilla Trekking at Bwindi (USD $800 permit)
Report to UWA briefing at 7:30am. Trek durations vary — the Mubare group, Bwindi’s most habituated family, is often found within 2 hours. The Rushegura and Habinyanja families sometimes require 4–5 hours of trekking through steep forest. Regardless of duration, the 60 minutes spent with the gorilla family will be unlike anything else on this trip. The silverback — often over 200 kg — may ignore your group entirely while the younger animals play and the females nurse infants within arm’s reach.
Day 7: Bwindi to Kibale Forest via Fort Portal (220 km, ~5 hours)
Leave Bwindi early to make Fort Portal by early afternoon. The drive north through Kihihi and the Rift Valley escarpment is spectacular. Fort Portal itself, at the foot of the Rwenzori Mountains, is worth a quick stop — the town has the best supermarkets between Kampala and western Uganda. Kibale Forest National Park is 35 km south of Fort Portal. Afternoon chimp habituation walk available if pre-booked (USD $250).
Day 8: Chimpanzee Tracking at Kibale
The 8am tracking session at Kibale is the highest-success chimp encounter in East Africa. Kibale’s chimpanzee community occupies the same forest patch year-round, and the regular patrol movement makes them reliably findable. You get one hour with the chimps once located — typically spent watching them feed in the canopy, groom each other, and call across the forest with the resonant pant-hoot that carries for a kilometre through the trees. After tracking, the afternoon is free. Consider visiting the Bigodi Wetland Sanctuary (10 km from Kibale, USD $10 entry) for shoebill stork, sitatunga antelope, and excellent primates.
Day 9: Kibale to Murchison Falls National Park (330 km, ~6 hours)
This is the longest driving day of the itinerary but passes through some of Uganda’s most varied scenery. From Fort Portal, drive north via Hoima on a road that passes through savannah, sugarcane fields, and eventually the Buliisa district as you approach the park’s southern boundary. Alternatively, route via Masindi (longer but better tarmac). Enter through the Kichumbanyobo gate on the south bank or Tangi gate for the north bank, depending on where you are staying. Arrive with enough time for a late afternoon game drive on the north bank circuit.
North bank game circuit basics: The track runs from the Paraa area east to Pakuba and covers open savannah with giraffe, elephant, lion, leopard, and buffalo. The north bank has the best lion sighting rates in Uganda outside Queen Elizabeth. Giraffes here are Rothschild’s — one of Africa’s most endangered subspecies with fewer than 2,000 remaining. You will not see them anywhere else in Uganda.
Day 10: Murchison Falls + Return to Kampala (305 km, ~5.5 hours)
Wake at 6am for the dawn north bank game drive — the best wildlife hour of the day. Return for breakfast, then take the Murchison Falls hike or boat trip to the base of the falls (1.5 hours, USD $30 per person). The Nile at the base of the falls is lined with nesting Nile crocodiles — some over four metres — and the hippo pool below the falls contains the most concentrated hippo pod in Uganda. In the water, watch for the shoebill stork — an enormous prehistoric-looking bird that stands over 1.2 metres tall and is found only in papyrus swamps connected to the Nile.
Depart Murchison by noon for the five-hour drive to Kampala via Masindi. The Masindi road is tarmac throughout and in reasonable condition. Return your vehicle in Kampala that evening or the following morning for a late departure flight.
Permits and Pre-Booking Checklist
- Gorilla trekking permit — USD $800 (book 3–6 months ahead in peak season)
- Chimpanzee tracking — USD $200 (book 1–3 months ahead)
- 4×4 vehicle — book minimum 3 weeks ahead, 6 weeks in July–September
- Accommodation — Bwindi lodges book out 6 months ahead in peak season
Car Hire 4×4 Drive provides well-maintained Land Cruisers and Prados ideal for this route. Contact us with your travel dates to check availability.