Sipi Falls is Uganda’s most spectacular waterfall complex — three distinct waterfalls that cascade down the southwestern escarpment of Mount Elgon in eastern Uganda, with the largest fall dropping 100 metres in a single curtain of white water. Located near Kapchorwa town in the Sebei region, 245 km from Kampala (approximately 4.5 hours drive), Sipi Falls is both a natural spectacle and a cultural immersion into the Sabiny people who farm the fertile Mount Elgon slopes. The surrounding landscape is the most photographically dramatic in Uganda outside the gorilla parks — steep escarpment cliffs, arabica coffee farms terracing the slopes, and the vast plain of eastern Uganda spread below to the horizon. This guide covers the three falls, the treks, accommodation options, and the practical information for a Sipi Falls visit in 2025.

The Three Falls: A Route Description

First Fall (Sipi Main Fall, 100 metres)

The highest and most dramatic of the three, the main Sipi Fall drops 100 metres from the basalt clifftop into a rock pool below. Access: a 25-minute walk from Sipi Falls town through coffee farms and along a clifftop trail. The falls are visible from across the escarpment from a kilometre distant — the white curtain against the dark basalt cliff is the image that defines Sipi Falls photography. The viewpoint platform (free, no guide required) is 15 metres from the falls’ base — close enough for waterfall spray on your face and camera lens. For photographers: the main fall is best photographed in the morning (the spray catches the eastern light), or at golden hour when the cliff face behind the fall turns warm orange. The pool at the fall’s base supports significant birdlife — African black swift nesting in the cliff, mountain wagtail on the wet rocks.

Second and Third Falls

The second fall (35 metres, a narrower horseshoe fall 1.5 km from the main fall along a lower escarpment track) and the third fall (25 metres, the most forest-enclosed of the three) require a guide for the connecting trails (trailhead safety and route marking). A full three-falls trek takes 3.5-4 hours and covers approximately 8 km of escarpment trail with 250m of descent and re-ascent. Guide fee: UGX 30,000-50,000 (approximately USD $8-13) negotiated at the Sipi Falls Community Tourism Office in the town centre (open daily 07:00-17:00). The community guide programme is well-managed and the guides are knowledgeable on Sabiny culture as well as trail navigation.

Rope Abseiling Down the Main Fall

Several guesthouses in Sipi Falls (Moses Camp, Lacam Lodge) operate guided rope abseiling descents of the main 100-metre waterfall. Cost: USD $30-40 per person for a single descent with full equipment (harness, helmet, rope) and an experienced guide. The abseil follows the waterfall’s edge — participants are within the spray for the lower 50 metres of the descent. This is one of Uganda’s most unusual adrenaline experiences and requires no prior climbing experience. The guide brief takes 30 minutes; the actual descent is 15-20 minutes. Age minimum: 12 years, weight maximum: 120 kg. The community abseil programme has been operating since 2009 and the safety record is excellent — this is not a cowboy operation but a professional abseil run with certified guides and regularly inspected equipment.

Arabica Coffee Farm Tour

Mount Elgon’s slopes between 1,500m and 2,200m altitude grow some of Uganda’s finest arabica coffee — Sipi Falls arabica is sold internationally as a specialty coffee, with flavor notes of citrus and dark chocolate from the altitude and volcanic soil combination. Community-run coffee farm tours (USD $8-12 per person, 2 hours, booked through the community office) cover the complete coffee process: identifying ripe cherry on the bush, hand-picking, pulping (wet process or dry process options), fermentation tanks, drying beds, and cupping (tasting) session. The farmer guides the tour in their own farm — an authentic small-farm coffee encounter rather than a plantation demonstration. The tour ends with brewed Sipi arabica at the farmer’s kitchen — some of the best coffee available anywhere in Uganda.

Accommodation 2025

  • Lacam Lodge: USD $80-120/night per room with breakfast. The best-positioned guesthouse in Sipi — a clifftop lodge with each cottage having a private veranda directly overlooking the main fall. The fall is audible from bed. Restaurant with good local and international menu. Best choice for visitors wanting comfort and the closest-possible waterfall access.
  • Moses Camp: USD $40-60/night. Long-established backpacker-style camp with wooden bungalows on the escarpment edge. Restaurant, bar, and the abseil operation on-site. Excellent community connections — Moses himself is one of Sipi Falls’ most knowledgeable guides. Budget favourite.
  • Sipi River Lodge: USD $90-130/night full-board. 1 km below the main falls along the Sipi River. More private setting, good tents and cottages, river bathing pool. Different viewpoint orientation from the other lodges — the river-valley perspective is less dramatic than the clifftop view.

Route from Kampala

Kampala to Sipi Falls: 245 km, approximately 4.5-5 hours. Take the Kampala-Jinja expressway east, then continue to Mbale (213 km, 3.5 hours). From Mbale, take the Kapchorwa road north along the Mount Elgon base — the road climbs steadily through the Sebei foothills to Sipi Falls village at 1,850m altitude. The Kampala-Mbale section is good tarmac all the way. The Mbale-Sipi section (32 km) is tarmac but steep in the final 10 km — a 2WD manages it in dry conditions, a 4×4 is more secure in wet season (April-May, October-November). Sipi Falls combines naturally with a Jinja visit (white water rafting on the Nile source, 3 hours from Sipi) as a two-day eastern Uganda loop.

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