Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary is the only place in Uganda where you can see white rhino — the only rhino species in the country. Located 160 km north of Kampala on the direct route to Murchison Falls National Park, Ziwa is a natural and cost-free detour for any visitor driving to Uganda’s largest national park. The sanctuary holds a growing population of southern white rhinos, reintroduced in 2005 after rhinos were exterminated from Uganda by poachers in the 1980s. Rhino tracking here is done on foot with armed rangers — one of the most viscerally different wildlife experiences compared to standard vehicle-based game drives.

Getting to Ziwa from Kampala

Ziwa Rhino and Wildlife Ranch is approximately 160 km north of Kampala on the Gulu highway (A109). Driving time: approximately 2.5 hours. The sanctuary is signposted from the main highway at Nakitoma — you turn off the A109 onto a short murram access road. For visitors driving to Murchison Falls via Masindi (standard route), Ziwa is directly on your way — build in a 2–3 hour stop without any route deviation.

Rhino Tracking: What the Experience Involves

The rhino tracking at Ziwa is done on foot — not from a vehicle. After a briefing at the sanctuary entrance, rangers lead a small group (maximum 8) to locate the rhinos, which typically takes 30–90 minutes depending on where in the 7,000-hectare sanctuary they are grazing. Once you find them, you approach on foot to within 30–50 metres. The armed ranger escort maintains safety — white rhinos are generally placid but can charge if threatened.

The experience of tracking white rhino on foot — following the rangers at walking pace through long grass, the earth showing fresh footprints and dung from an animal weighing up to 2,300 kg — is viscerally different from any vehicle safari. There is a proximity and a physical vulnerability to the encounter that makes it one of Uganda’s most memorable wildlife experiences.

Cost: USD $50 per person (2024). Includes ranger guide and the tracking experience. Book on arrival or in advance through the Ziwa website. No park entry fee — Ziwa is a private sanctuary, not a UWA facility.

The Rhino Population at Ziwa

The Ziwa population has grown from 6 founding animals imported from Kenya in 2005 to approximately 30 animals in 2024. The sanctuary’s long-term goal is to rewild rhinos back into Uganda’s national parks — Murchison Falls is the planned eventual release site. The population is managed carefully: rhinos are GPS-tracked and monitored daily, and breeding pairs are managed to maximise genetic diversity. Seeing this conservation programme in active operation — and understanding that these are the ancestors of rhinos that will eventually roam free in Uganda’s parks again — adds a powerful context to the tracking experience.

Shoebill Stork at Ziwa

Ziwa’s wetlands host a small shoebill stork population — a bonus sighting for the Kampala–Murchison drive. The shoebill boat trip at Ziwa (approximately USD $20–$30 per person, arranged at the sanctuary) explores the papyrus margins of the sanctuary’s lake system where shoebill are regularly seen. It is less reliable than Mabamba Bay but more convenient if Mabamba is not on your route. The shoebill trip takes 1–2 hours and can be combined with the rhino tracking on the same stop.

Car Hire 4×4 Drive includes Ziwa Rhino Sanctuary in pre-departure route briefings for all Murchison Falls visitors. Contact us for self-drive vehicle rental on the northern Uganda route.

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