Sipi Falls in eastern Uganda — a series of three consecutive waterfalls on the Sipi River as it descends from the Mount Elgon escarpment into the Karamoja plains below — is one of Uganda’s most visited nature destinations outside the main wildlife parks, and for good reason. The setting is extraordinary: the falls cascade over a series of basalt escarpments at approximately 1,800 m altitude, with clear views across the agricultural lowlands of eastern Uganda to the distant plains of Kenya. The surrounding landscape is intensively cultivated with Arabica coffee (Sipi’s coffee is sold internationally and is one of Uganda’s finest Arabica producing areas), bananas, and beans — a human agricultural landscape of unusual beauty on the slopes of Africa’s fourth-highest mountain. This guide covers Sipi Falls for 2025.

The Three Falls

The Sipi system comprises three distinct waterfalls within a 5 km walking distance: the Upper Falls (85 m, the tallest and most impressive — a single plunge into a deep pool surrounded by basalt columns), the Middle Falls (83 m, accessible by a 2 km path from the main road, with a walking trail behind the falls through the cavern at the base), and the Lower Falls (100 m — the tallest of the three by descent, but approached more closely and with a different character from the others). All three falls are accessible on foot without technical equipment on maintained paths (the Sipi River valley trail connects all three in a 4-hour guided circuit). Each fall has a different character: the Upper Falls’ single powerful plunge, the Middle Falls’ dramatic walk-behind access, and the Lower Falls’ setting in a more agricultural landscape with a large pool suitable for swimming. All access through a guided walk (guide fee: UGX 15,000–20,000 per person, approximately USD $4–5, arranged at any Sipi accommodation).

Coffee Farm Tour

Sipi’s Arabica coffee farms produce specialty-grade coffee that is exported to premium buyers in Europe and North America — the volcanic Mount Elgon soil, high altitude (1,800–2,400 m), and equatorial climate produce a coffee with distinctive fruit-forward acidity and clean finish that has won international specialty coffee competitions. Coffee farm tours (2–3 hours, organised by all Sipi accommodations, approximately USD $15–25 per person) cover: the coffee plant biology (the Coffea arabica var. bourbon and SL14/SL28 varieties used in the Sipi farms), the cherry-to-bean process (picking ripe red cherries, the wet processing by washing station, the drying on raised beds, the hulling and grading), and the cupping — a formal tasting of the washed and dry-processed versions of the same beans to compare flavour profiles. The coffee farming context also reveals the economics: the Sipi smallholder coffee farmer typically receives USD $0.80–1.20/kg of green coffee from the washing station, while the roasted coffee sells in European specialty shops for USD $20–35/250g (equivalent to USD $80–140/kg) — the value chain discussion is one of the most instructive commodity economics conversations available on any Africa trip.

Abseiling and Rock Activities

Abseil Uganda (based at Sipi, the country’s longest-running adventure activity operator) offers an abseil down the Upper Falls face — a 85 m rappel down the basalt cliff face beside the waterfall itself, the falling water on one side and the valley view on the other. Cost: approximately USD $40 per person, all equipment provided, training given to beginners before the descent. The activity is suitable for beginners with normal fitness and no acrophobia. The abseil operators also run rock climbing on the basalt columns above the Upper Falls (multi-pitch trad climbing on 4c–6b routes, approximately USD $50–70 per person for a full day with instruction) — one of the few genuine rock climbing venues in Uganda outside the Rwenzoris.

Getting There and Accommodation

  • Distance from Kampala: 240 km via Jinja (A109 then B99), approximately 4 hours drive. The town of Mbale (30 km from Sipi) is the gateway — good hotel options in Mbale for pre-Sipi overnight.
  • Sipi River Lodge: USD $80–120/night per person (the classic Sipi accommodation — private cottages on the escarpment edge above the Upper Falls view, excellent restaurant).
  • Lacam Lodge: USD $60–90/night per person (slightly higher above the valley, panoramic views, good coffee on the terrace).
  • Crow’s Nest Camp: USD $30–50/night (budget camping and basic rooms on the escarpment — the best falls view of any Sipi accommodation at the cheapest price).

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