By Charles Lubega | Senior Gorilla Trekking Expert, Travel Giants Uganda
15 Years | Thousands of Treks | Bwindi, Mgahinga & Volcanoes NP Specialist


The Explicit Answer: What You’ll Learn in This Guide

The mountain gorillas live in only two places on earth: Uganda’s Bwindi Impenetrable Forest and Mgahinga National Park, and Rwanda’s Volcanoes National Park. That’s it. 1,063 individuals across just a few hundred square kilometers.

After 15 years of guiding trekkers to both countries, I’ve learned that “where to see mountain gorillas” isn’t just a geography question—it’s a question of budget, fitness, travel style, and what you want from the experience.

This guide delivers a complete, up-to-date comparison of every location where you can see mountain gorillas in Uganda and Rwanda. You’ll learn the differences between countries, the best sectors in each, the easiest and most challenging treks, the cheapest and most expensive options, insider tips for each location, and exactly how to choose the right spot for your specific situation.

Quick Overview of Locations

Country Park Sectors Gorilla Families Permit Cost Best For
Rwanda Volcanoes NP 1 sector 12 habituated families $1,500 Luxury, convenience, first-timers
Uganda Bwindi NP 4 sectors (Buhoma, Rushaga, Ruhija, Nkuringo) 20+ families $800 Value, variety, repeat visitors
Uganda Mgahinga NP 1 sector 1 family (Nyakagezi) $800 Solitude, photographers, volcano scenery

The deeper truth: You can see mountain gorillas in all these places. But the experience—the cost, the difficulty, the scenery, the crowds, the lodging—could not be more different. This guide helps you choose the right one for you.

I’ve trekked every sector, every family, every season. I’ve helped thousands of travelers decide between Rwanda and Uganda. Let me help you make the right choice.

[IMAGE PLACEMENT 1: Split image: Volcanoes National Park (left) with volcano backdrop vs. Bwindi forest (right) with dense canopy. Caption: “Rwanda’s volcano views (left) vs. Uganda’s forest immersion (right)—two dramatically different experiences.”]


The Quick Answer – Which Country Should You Choose?

Gist: Before we dive deep, here’s the quick decision guide. Scan this table, find your priority, and you’ll know where to go.

Uganda vs. Rwanda – Decision Matrix

Your Priority Choose Why
Lowest permit cost Uganda 800vs.1,500 (saves $700)
Closest to international airport Rwanda 2-3 hours drive vs. 6-9 hours
Easiest trekking Uganda (Rushaga sector) Gentle slopes, shorter average treks
Most dramatic scenery Rwanda or Uganda (Nkuringo) Volcano backdrop (Rwanda) or forest canopy views (Nkuringo)
Luxury lodges Rwanda More high-end options, world-class service
Value for money (mid-range) Uganda More options at lower price points
Most gorilla families to choose from Uganda (Bwindi) 20+ families vs. 12 in Rwanda
Habituation experience (4 hours) Uganda (Rushaga) Only offered here, $1,500
Quietest, fewest tourists Uganda (Mgahinga or Ruhija) Only 8 permits/day (Mgahinga)
Combine with other safari parks Uganda Queen Elizabeth, Murchison, Lake Mburo nearby
Combine with Rwanda (two-country trip) Both East African Visa makes border crossing easy

The One-Sentence Answer


Overview – Where Mountain Gorillas Live (Geography Lesson)

Gist: Mountain gorillas don’t roam freely across Africa. They’re confined to two small regions. Here’s the geography.

The Two Populations

Population Location Estimated Gorillas (2026) Countries Parks
Virunga Massif Volcanic mountains ~600 Rwanda, Uganda, DRC Volcanoes NP (Rwanda), Mgahinga NP (Uganda), Virunga NP (DRC)
Bwindi Isolated forest ~460 Uganda only Bwindi Impenetrable NP

Where Tourists Can Trek

Country Park Sectors Gorilla Families Daily Permits Permit Cost
Rwanda Volcanoes NP 1 12 ~96 $1,500
Uganda Bwindi NP 4 (Buhoma, Rushaga, Ruhija, Nkuringo) 20+ ~168 $800
Uganda Mgahinga NP 1 1 (Nyakagezi) 8 $800
DRC Virunga NP 1 8 ~64 $400 (but security concerns)

[IMAGE PLACEMENT 2: Map of East Africa showing Virunga Massif and Bwindi locations, with country borders highlighted. Caption: “Mountain gorillas live in only two regions: the Virunga Massif (shared by Rwanda, Uganda, DRC) and Bwindi (Uganda only).”]

The Honest Truth: Most tourists choose between Rwanda’s Volcanoes National Park and Uganda’s Bwindi. Mgahinga is a hidden gem for returning visitors. DRC is for the truly adventurous (check security before booking).


Rwanda – Volcanoes National Park (The Luxury Option)

Gist: Rwanda’s Volcanoes National Park is the most famous gorilla trekking destination in the world. It’s also the most expensive. Here’s what you need to know.

Quick Facts

Factor Details
Location Northwestern Rwanda, 2-3 hours from Kigali airport
Number of gorilla families 12 habituated
Daily permits ~96 (8 per family)
Permit cost $1,500 (foreign non-resident)
Trek difficulty Moderate to challenging (volcanic terrain)
Altitude 7,500-12,000 ft (2,300-3,700 m)
Best time Dry seasons (June-Sept, Dec-Feb)
Best for Luxury travelers, convenience seekers, first-timers

The Experience

You’ll wake up early at your lodge near the park (most are 15-45 minutes from the trailhead). After briefing at the park headquarters, you’re assigned to a gorilla family based on fitness levels and preferences. Trekkers are matched to families—easier treks for those who need them, harder ones for adventurers.

The trek takes you through farmland, bamboo forest, and then into the volcanic slopes. The terrain is steep but the trails are well-maintained. The big advantage over Bwindi? The views. On clear days, you’ll see the peaks of the Virunga volcanoes—Bisoke, Sabinyo, Gahinga—towering above. The gorillas here are fully habituated and accustomed to human presence.

The Twelve Gorilla Families (Most Famous)

Family Silverback Notes
Susa One of the oldest groups, featured in Dian Fossey’s research
Sabyinyo Guhonda (one of the largest silverbacks) Accessible trek
Amahoro Peaceful group
Umubano Formed after a split from Amahoro
Agashya One of the easiest treks
Karisimbi Highest altitude trek
Hirwa Known for many infants
Bwenge Named after the silverback
Isabukuru Named after the silverback
Kuryama Named after the silverback
Muhoza Named after the silverback
Titus Named after the famous silverback from Fossey’s research

Best Lodges in Volcanoes NP

Lodge Price Range Vibe Best For
Bisate Lodge $1,800-2,500 Ultra-luxury, architectural masterpiece Honeymooners, design lovers
Singita Kwitonda Lodge $2,000-3,000 Ultimate luxury, exceptional service Celebrities, unlimited budget
Sabyinyo Silverback Lodge $800-1,200 Classic luxury, community-owned Conscious luxury travelers
Five Volcanoes Boutique Hotel $400-600 Mid-range, comfortable Value-conscious luxury
Da Vinci Gorilla Lodge $300-500 Good value, gardens Budget luxury

[IMAGE PLACEMENT 3: Gorilla in Volcanoes National Park with volcano backdrop, misty morning light. Caption: “Rwanda’s Volcanoes National Park—gorillas with volcano views, luxury lodges, and a $1,500 permit.”]

Insider Tip

Request an easier family if you’re worried about fitness. Agashya is a good choice. The rangers will assign you based on your stated fitness level—be honest.


Uganda – Bwindi Impenetrable National Park (The Value & Variety Option)

Gist: Bwindi is where you go for variety, value, and the deepest forest immersion. Four sectors. Over 20 gorilla families. Hundreds of bird species. And a permit that costs $700 less than Rwanda.

Quick Facts

Factor Details
Location Southwestern Uganda, 6-9 hours from Entebbe (or 1 hour flight + drive)
Number of sectors 4 (Buhoma, Rushaga, Ruhija, Nkuringo)
Number of gorilla families 20+
Daily permits ~168 total (varies by sector)
Permit cost $800 (foreign non-resident)
Habituation experience Available in Rushaga only ($1,500, 4 hours)
Trek difficulty Varies by sector (easy to very challenging)
Altitude 1,160-2,607 m
Best time Dry seasons (June-Sept, Dec-Feb), but trekking year-round
Best for Budget travelers, variety seekers, repeat visitors

The Four Sectors Compared

Sector Trek Difficulty # Families Avg Trek Duration Best For
Rushaga Easy-Moderate ~5-6 1-3 hours First-timers, fitness concerns, habituation experience
Buhoma Moderate ~3-4 2-4 hours Classic experience, most established lodges
Ruhija Challenging ~3-4 2-5 hours Quiet, higher altitude, birders
Nkuringo Very Challenging ~2-3 3-6+ hours Adventurers, dramatic views, photographers

Sector Deep Dives

Rushaga Sector (Easiest, Most Families)

Buhoma Sector (Classic, Most Established)

Ruhija Sector (Quiet, High Altitude)

Nkuringo Sector (Hard Mode, Dramatic Views)

[IMAGE PLACEMENT 4: Split image of Bwindi’s four sectors: Rushaga (gentle), Buhoma (moderate), Ruhija (misty), Nkuringo (steep). Caption: “Bwindi’s four sectors offer dramatically different experiences—from gentle Rushaga to punishing Nkuringo.”]


Uganda – Mgahinga Gorilla National Park (The Hidden Gem)

Gist: Mgahinga is the smallest park, with only one habituated gorilla family. But for repeat visitors and those who want solitude, it’s a treasure.

Quick Facts

Factor Details
Location Southwestern Uganda, near the borders of Rwanda and DRC
Drive from Entebbe 7-9 hours (or 1 hour flight to Kisoro + 45 min drive)
Number of gorilla families 1 (Nyakagezi)
Daily permits 8
Permit cost $800
Trek difficulty Moderate (volcanic terrain)
Additional activity Golden monkey tracking ($100)
Best for Repeat visitors, photographers, solitude seekers, those combining with Rwanda

The Nyakagezi Family

Mgahinga’s only habituated family is the Nyakagezi group—famous for crossing between Uganda, Rwanda, and Congo. They’re nomadic, unpredictable, and thrilling to track. The silverback named Mark leads the group. Current size is approximately 9 individuals.

Pros and Cons

Pros Cons
Only 8 trekkers daily (very exclusive) Only one family (if they cross the border, trek may be canceled)
Stunning volcano backdrop Fewer lodges than Bwindi
Combine with gorilla trekking in Rwanda (2-3 hours drive) Less established tourism infrastructure
Add golden monkey tracking (unique to Mgahinga) Permits still $800 (same as Bwindi)

Best Lodges Near Mgahinga

Lodge Price Range Vibe
Mount Gahinga Lodge $450-600 Classic, authentic, only lodge inside park area
Amajambere Iwacu Community Camp $80-120 Budget, community-run
Travelers Rest Hotel (Kisoro) $100-150 Historic, Hemingway connection
Lake Mutanda Resort $350-500 Stunning lake views

[IMAGE PLACEMENT 5: Gorilla in Mgahinga with volcano backdrop, golden monkeys visible in foreground. Caption: “Mgahinga’s Nyakagezi family—nomadic, unpredictable, and framed by the Virunga volcanoes.”]

Insider Tip

Mgahinga is best for repeat visitors who’ve already done Bwindi or Rwanda. The Nyakagezi family is less predictable—but when they’re in Uganda, the experience is magical. Call ahead to check recent sightings.


Side-by-Side Comparison – All Locations at a Glance

Gist: Here’s everything compared in one table.

Factor Rwanda (Volcanoes NP) Uganda (Bwindi) Uganda (Mgahinga)
Permit cost $1,500 $800 $800
Number of gorilla families 12 20+ 1
Daily permits ~96 ~168 8
Drive from airport 2-3 hours 6-9 hours (or 1 hr flight + drive) 7-9 hours (or 1 hr flight + drive)
Trek difficulty Moderate-challenging Varies (easy to very challenging) Moderate
Scenery Volcanoes Dense forest Volcanoes
Luxury lodges World-class Good options in Buhoma/Nkuringo Limited
Mid-range lodges Few Excellent in all sectors Few
Budget lodges Limited Many in Buhoma/Rushaga Few
Other activities Golden monkeys, gorilla guardian Chimp tracking, birding, community visits Golden monkeys
Best for Luxury, convenience, first-timers Value, variety, repeat visitors Solitude, photographers, combo with Rwanda

The Peak: What 15 Years of Guiding Trekkers Has Taught Me

Here’s what 15 years of guiding trekkers to every location has taught me:

The answer to “where to see mountain gorillas” isn’t a place on a map. It’s a feeling.

In Rwanda’s Volcanoes National Park, you’ll find efficiency, luxury, and gorillas with volcanoes behind them. The experience is polished, professional, and expensive. You’ll pay for convenience—and many decide it’s worth every dollar.

In Uganda’s Bwindi, you’ll find variety, value, and the deepest forest immersion. The experience is raw, unpredictable, and affordable. You’ll drive longer, hike harder, and spend less. For many, that trade-off is the point.

In Uganda’s Mgahinga, you’ll find solitude, volcano views, and the unpredictable Nyakagezi family. The experience is for the repeat visitor, the photographer, the one who’s already done the classic trek and wants something different.

There’s no wrong answer. Only the wrong answer for you.

So ask yourself: What do you want to feel when you lock eyes with a silverback?

The gorillas don’t know the difference. They’ll change you wherever you meet them.

Now choose. Book. Go. And let the forest do the rest.


How to Choose – Decision Framework by Traveler Type

Gist: Not sure which location is right for you? Answer these questions.

Question 1: What’s your budget for permits?

Question 2: How fit are you?

Question 3: How much time do you have?

Question 4: What’s your travel style?

Question 5: Is this your first gorilla trek or a repeat?

Question 6: Do you want to combine with other activities?

The Decision Flowchart

text
Start here:
│
├─ Is budget your primary concern?
│  ├─ Yes → Choose Uganda (Bwindi - Rushaga or Buhoma)
│  └─ No → Continue
│
├─ Is convenience (short drive from airport) your priority?
│  ├─ Yes → Choose Rwanda (Volcanoes NP)
│  └─ No → Continue
│
├─ Do you want the most dramatic scenery?
│  ├─ Volcano backdrop → Choose Rwanda or Uganda (Mgahinga)
│  ├─ Forest immersion → Choose Uganda (Bwindi - any sector)
│  └─ Both → Do both countries
│
├─ Is this your first trek?
│  ├─ Yes → Choose Rwanda or Uganda (Rushaga/Buhoma)
│  └─ No → Choose Uganda (Nkuringo, Mgahinga, or habituation)
│
└─ Want to combine with safari?
   ├─ Yes → Choose Uganda
   └─ No → Either works

[IMAGE PLACEMENT 6: Decision flowchart infographic guiding readers from question to conclusion. Caption: “Follow this flowchart to find your perfect gorilla trekking destination.”]


Two-Country Itinerary – The Best of Both Worlds

Gist: Why choose when you can do both? The East African Tourist Visa ($100) makes crossing borders easy.

Sample Combined Itinerary (7-8 Days)

Day Activity Country
1 Arrive Kigali, transfer to Volcanoes NP (2-3 hours) Rwanda
2 Gorilla trek in Volcanoes NP Rwanda
3 Rest day (optional: golden monkeys or hiking) Rwanda
4 Transfer to Bwindi via Cyanika border (4-5 hours) Rwanda → Uganda
5 Gorilla trek in Bwindi (Rushaga or Buhoma sector) Uganda
6 Transfer to Lake Bunyonyi or Queen Elizabeth Uganda
7 Optional safari or transfer back to Kigali (4-5 hours) Uganda → Rwanda
8 Depart from Kigali Rwanda

Why Do Both?

[IMAGE PLACEMENT 7: Map of two-country route: Kigali → Volcanoes NP → Cyanika border → Bwindi → Lake Bunyonyi → Kigali. Caption: “The ultimate East African gorilla safari: trek Rwanda, then cross to Uganda for a second trek.”]

Insider Tip: Book Rwanda permits first (they sell out faster). Then Uganda permits. A tour operator can handle both border crossings and logistics seamlessly.


Seasonal Considerations – Best Time for Each Location

Gist: Gorilla trekking happens year-round, but seasons affect your experience. Here’s when to go where.

Dry Seasons (Best Conditions)

Season Months Uganda (Bwindi) Uganda (Mgahinga) Rwanda (Volcanoes)
Peak Dry 1 June-September Excellent Excellent Excellent
Peak Dry 2 December-February Excellent Excellent Excellent

Wet Seasons (Lower Prices, Fewer Crowds)

Season Months Uganda (Bwindi) Uganda (Mgahinga) Rwanda (Volcanoes)
Wet 1 March-May Good (muddy) Good (muddy) Good (muddy)
Wet 2 October-November Good (muddy) Good (muddy) Good (muddy)

Best Time for Photography

[IMAGE PLACEMENT 8: Seasonal calendar showing best months for each location with weather icons. Caption: “Dry seasons (June-September, December-February) offer the best trekking conditions year-round.”]

Insider Tip

Shoulder seasons (March, October-November) offer a sweet spot: lower prices, fewer crowds, decent weather. Expect some rain, but it rarely ruins a trek.


Frequently Asked Questions About Where to See Mountain Gorillas

Gist: These are the questions I answer most often from travelers deciding where to go.

Which country has the most gorillas?

Uganda (Bwindi + Mgahinga) has ~480-490 gorillas. Rwanda has ~600 (Virunga Massif total, shared with Uganda and DRC).

Which country has the easiest trek?

Uganda (Rushaga sector) has the easiest terrain overall. Rwanda will match you to an easier family if you request.

Which country has the best lodges?

Rwanda has more ultra-luxury options. Uganda has excellent luxury options in Buhoma and Nkuringo, plus many more mid-range and budget choices.

Which country is cheaper?

Uganda. The permit is 700less,andaccommodationrangesfrom50 to 400(vs.300-$2,500 in Rwanda).

Can I see gorillas in both countries on the same trip?

Yes. The East African Tourist Visa ($100) covers both. The border crossing takes 30 minutes.

Is Mgahinga worth visiting?

For first-timers, Bwindi or Rwanda are better (more families, more predictable). For repeat visitors, Mgahinga’s solitude and volcano scenery are a treasure.

What about DRC?

DRC’s Virunga National Park has cheaper permits ($400) and fewer tourists. But security is a concern. Check current travel advisories before booking.

What’s the best location for photographers?


Your Gorilla Destination Checklist – Ready to Choose?


The End: Your Invitation

You’ve read the guide now. Rwanda vs. Uganda. Four Bwindi sectors vs. Mgahinga. The costs, the difficulty, the scenery, the trade-offs.

But reading isn’t the same as choosing. And choosing isn’t the same as being there—in the forest, with the gorillas, realizing you made the right decision.

At Travel Giants Uganda, we’ve guided thousands of trekkers to every location. We know which sectors fit which fitness levels, which seasons favor which parks, and which lodges deliver the best value.

Ready to choose your gorilla destination?

Email us at info@travelgiantsuganda.com with:

We’ll help you choose the right country, the right sector, and the right lodge—and book your permits before they sell out.

Feel the volcano breeze in Rwanda. Hear the forest breathe in Uganda. See the gorillas—wherever you choose—and know that you picked the right place for you.

The gorillas are waiting. The locations are calling. And now, you know exactly where to go.


Charles Lubega | Senior Gorilla Trekking Expert
15 Years | Thousands of Treks | Bwindi, Mgahinga & Volcanoes NP Specialist

[IMAGE PLACEMENT 9: charles with gorilla in background (safe distance), pointing at map, forest setting. Caption: Charles has guided trekkers to every gorilla site in Uganda and Rwanda—he knows which location fits which traveler.”]

Credentials: Certified Uganda & Rwanda Gorilla Trekking Guide, East Africa Tourism Specialist, Member of Uganda Wildlife Authority Guide Association