Nyungwe Forest National Park in southwest Rwanda is the largest intact montane rainforest in Central Africa and home to 13 primate species — more primate diversity in a single park than anywhere else on the continent. A Nyungwe Forest self-drive from Kigali covers 225km of good Rwanda tarmac (approximately 4.5 to 5 hours) and delivers visitors to the forest headquarters at Uwinka, where the RDB manages chimpanzee tracking permits, the suspended canopy walk (a 200-metre walkway through the forest canopy), colobus monkey habituation walks, and extensive trail network for independent hiking. The Nyungwe Forest self-drive is the most physically demanding of Rwanda’s main safari activities — the forest terrain is steep, the altitude reaches 2,950 metres, and the primate treks cover steep trail sections — but it is also Rwanda’s most ecologically extraordinary destination and a compelling alternative to the gorilla-focused Volcanoes circuit in the north.
Getting to Nyungwe Forest
The Nyungwe Forest self-drive route from Kigali follows the RN1 highway south to Butare (Huye), then the RN2 west toward Cyangugu on the Congo border. The Uwinka headquarters and the forest main entrance is approximately 225km from Kigali. The road passes through the spectacular Nyungwe Forest southern boundary at the Gisakura tea plantation — a distinctive landscape of geometric tea rows against the dark green forest edge. The final 30km before Uwinka runs directly alongside and through the forest edge — excellent for spotting colobus monkey groups in the forest margin trees and for hornbill species along the road. Total drive time Kigali to Uwinka: 4.5 to 5 hours on good tarmac.
RDB Entry Fees (2027/2028)
- Non-resident adult park entry: USD 50 per person per day
- Chimpanzee tracking permit: USD 150 per adult per trek (this is included in some RDB packages — confirm at booking)
- Colobus monkey habituation walk: USD 50 per adult
- Canopy walk: USD 60 per adult (included in the entry fee on some booking packages — confirm)
- Guided nature walk (shorter trail options): USD 30 to 50 per adult
- RDB accommodation (Uwinka Rest House, basic): USD 50 to 80 per person per night
Chimpanzee Tracking in Nyungwe Forest
Nyungwe Forest has habituated chimpanzee communities in the Cyamudongo enclave (a small forest patch 10km from the main forest, accessible separately) and in the main Nyungwe forest above Uwinka. The Nyungwe chimp tracking experience is more challenging than Kibale in Uganda — the terrain is steeper, the forest denser, and the chimps range over a larger home territory requiring longer treks of 2 to 5 hours to locate. However, the forest setting, the altitude-cooled air, and the colobus monkey encounters during the trek make the Nyungwe Forest self-drive chimp tracking a distinctly different and in many ways more immersive experience than the flat-terrain Kibale equivalent. Book chimp permits through the RDB website (rdb.rw) or at the Uwinka gate in advance — Nyungwe has a lower visitor volume than Kibale or Bwindi and permit availability is generally better for Nyungwe than for the gorilla parks.
The Canopy Walk
The Nyungwe canopy walk is Africa’s longest suspended walkway in a montane forest context — 200 metres of suspension bridge at 50 metres above the forest floor, with views across the forest canopy and, on clear days, the Congo watershed to the west. The walkway oscillates gently with foot traffic — acclimatisation to the movement is needed by first-time high-canopy visitors, though safety railings are present. The canopy walk is most rewarding in the morning (7:30am to 10am) when bird activity in the canopy is highest — more than 280 bird species are recorded in Nyungwe, including 25 Albertine Rift endemics. The Ruwenzori turaco, red-throated alethe, and African green broadbill are all findable in the forest immediately around the canopy walk approach trail.
Primate Diversity Beyond Chimps and Colobus
Nyungwe Forest’s 13 primate species include: chimpanzee, Angolan colobus (troops of 300 to 500 individuals — the largest colobus groups in Africa), grey-cheeked mangabey, L’Hoest’s monkey, owl-faced monkey (rare, in the denser interior forest), vervet monkey, blue monkey, red-tailed monkey, diademed monkey, and olive baboon. On the Nyungwe Forest self-drive approach from Kigali, colobus groups are regularly seen from the vehicle on the road through the forest southern boundary. The Uwinka-Bigugu trail (3km, 2 to 3 hours guided walk) passes through primary forest habitat where multiple species are encountered — this trail is the best single-day introduction to Nyungwe’s primate diversity for visitors doing the park as a day hike from the guesthouse.