Uganda’s road network has improved significantly since 2015, with major UNRA (Uganda National Roads Authority) highway upgrades on the Kampala-Mbarara, Kampala-Gulu, and Kampala-Jinja corridors. However, the final approach roads to Uganda’s most visited national parks — Murchison Falls, Queen Elizabeth, Kibale, Bwindi, and Kidepo — all involve murram (graded unpaved) sections that vary from easy-going in dry season to genuinely challenging in wet conditions. Understanding which sections of the circuit are tarmac and which are murram, and how road quality changes between seasons, is essential for accurate driving time planning and vehicle selection in 2027/2028.
Kampala Highways: Good Tarmac
- Kampala-Mbarara (A109): Good tarmac dual carriageway for sections, 3.5 to 4 hours for 270km. Some pothole sections through Masaka and Lyantonde town centres — reduce speed to 50km/h through these areas. Overall: comfortable highway driving.
- Kampala-Gulu (A109 north): Good tarmac. 4 to 4.5 hours for 340km. The Karuma Bridge section (230km from Kampala) is the major Nile crossing. Good tarmac to Gulu city.
- Kampala-Jinja (A109 east): 80km, good tarmac, 1 to 1.5 hours depending on traffic at the Nile bridge.
- Mbarara-Kasese: Good tarmac, 1.5 hours for 95km through the Bushenyi area.
Murchison Falls National Park Approach
- Masindi to Kichumbanyobo Gate: 45km on good murram, 45 to 60 minutes in dry season. The road from the main tarmac to the gate is well-graded and maintained.
- Kichumbanyobo Gate to Paraa: 45km murram through the park, including the Paraa Ferry crossing. Good murram track in dry season — dusty but navigable at 40 to 50km/h. In wet season (March-May, October-November): this section can be muddy with standing water sections. 4×4 recommended but not usually mandatory in light wet season conditions.
Kibale Forest National Park Approach
- Fort Portal to Kamwenge (Kibale/Kanyanchu road): 35km murram from Fort Portal to Kanyanchu. Good condition in dry season (30 to 45 minutes). After heavy rain: becomes slippery on the clay-soil sections immediately before the forest edge. A standard 4×4 in 4H handles this route in most conditions.
Queen Elizabeth National Park Approach
- Kasese to Katunguru Gate: 50km tarmac, good condition.
- Mweya to Kyambura (chimp gorge): 25km on good murram inside the park.
- QENP internal roads: Well-maintained murram tracks, some sandy sections near the Kazinga Channel banks. Comfortable in 4×4, passable in light conditions in a high-clearance 2WD.
Bwindi Impenetrable Forest National Park Approach
- Kabale to Buhoma (northern sector): Tarmac to Butogota (75km), murram last 15km to Buhoma. The murram section can become difficult after heavy rain — steep descent into the Buhoma valley. 4×4 mandatory for the final 15km, especially in wet season.
- Kabale to Rushaga (southern sector): Murram for the majority of the 80km route from Kabale via Rubanda. Good condition in dry season; some steep and muddy sections in wet season.
- Kabale to Nkuringo (southwest sector): Via Kisoro, then steeply descending murram 30km to Nkuringo — the most challenging approach road in Uganda. 4×4 low range required in sections.
Kidepo Valley National Park Approach
- Gulu to Kitgum: 100km on good tarmac.
- Kitgum to Kaabong: 100km, partially murram with improving sections — road condition has improved since 2023 upgrades but remains variable.
- Kaabong to Kanangorok Gate: 40km on rough, rocky murram. This is the most challenging section on any Uganda main circuit road. Low-range 4×4 required in sections (rocky outcrops, steep grades). A Land Cruiser 70 Series or Prado 150 with experienced off-road driving technique is the appropriate vehicle — smaller 4x4s with limited clearance are not recommended.
Season Impact: Wet vs Dry
Uganda’s two wet seasons (March-May and October-November) affect road quality significantly on murram sections. Dry season (June-September and December-February) produces the best road conditions: compact murram, good traction, predictable surfaces. Wet season: the Bwindi approaches, the Kibale road, and the Kidepo approach all become more challenging — the clay-rich soils in the western highlands turn to sticky mud that can stop a vehicle even in 4L. Plan wet season travel with additional time buffers (add 1.5x the dry season drive time estimate) and ensure your vehicle has been properly serviced and the tyres have adequate tread.