The Ultimate 7-Day Uganda Safari Itinerary for First Timers: Gorillas, Tree-Climbing Lions & Savannah Wildlife
Planning your first safari feels overwhelming. Where do you start? Which parks? How many days? After 15 years of guiding first-time travelers through Uganda, I’ve perfected the ultimate 7-day itinerary. It’s not too rushed, not too slow—just right for seeing the best of Uganda: mountain gorillas, tree-climbing lions, elephants, hippos, and breathtaking savannas.
This guide delivers a complete, day-by-day 7-day Uganda safari itinerary for first-timers. You’ll learn exactly where to go each day, what animals you’ll see, where to stay for every budget, driving times, insider tips, and how to book it all stress-free.
Quick Overview of the 7-Day Itinerary
Day
Destination
Main Activity
Overnight
Day 1
Entebbe
Arrival, rest, orientation
Entebbe
Day 2
Queen Elizabeth NP
Transfer + first game drive
Mweya sector
Day 3
Queen Elizabeth NP
Kasenyi predators + Kazinga boat
Mweya sector
Day 4
Ishasha sector
Tree-climbing lions
Ishasha
Day 5
Bwindi Impenetrable Forest
Scenic transfer + rest
Bwindi
Day 6
Bwindi Impenetrable Forest
Gorilla trekking
Bwindi
Day 7
Entebbe
Fly/drive back, departure
–
The deeper truth: A 7-day safari is the sweet spot for first-timers. You’ll see gorillas, lions, elephants, and hippos without feeling rushed. This itinerary is proven—I’ve guided it hundreds of times.
As a licensed IATA-certified tour operator with the Uganda Tourism Board and a member of AUTO (Association of Uganda Tour Operators), Travel Giants Uganda brings you field-tested expertise from over 15 years of organizing safaris for first-time travelers.
Why 7 Days Is the Perfect Duration for First-Timers
Too short, and you’ll miss the gorillas. Too long, and you’ll be exhausted. Here’s why 7 days hits the sweet spot.
The 7-Day Advantage
Duration
Pros
Cons
5 days
Shorter, cheaper by $500-800
Too rushed for gorillas + safari; you’ll choose one or the other
7 days
Perfect balance of both experiences
Requires good planning (you’re reading it)
10+ days
More parks (Kibale, Murchison), deeper experience
Longer time commitment, $1,500+ more expensive
Time Breakdown
Activity
Days
Travel and transfers
~2 days
Queen Elizabeth safari (including Ishasha)
3 days
Bwindi gorilla trekking
1 day
Buffer and rest
1 day
TOTAL
7 days
The Honest Truth: “7 days lets you experience both the classic savanna safari and gorilla trekking without feeling like you’re rushing from place to place. It’s the itinerary I recommend to friends and family.”
[IMAGE PLACEMENT 1 – Map of the 7-day safari route: Entebbe → Queen Elizabeth → Ishasha → Bwindi → Entebbe. 1200px+. Caption: “The ultimate 7-day first-timer’s route: savanna, tree-climbing lions, and mountain gorillas.”]
Day-by-Day Itinerary – Your Complete 7-Day Safari
Here’s exactly how your 7 days will unfold. No guesswork. No stress.
Day 1 – Arrival in Entebbe: Welcome to Uganda
Your safari begins the moment you land. Today is about rest, orientation, and the first taste of Uganda’s warmth.
Morning/Afternoon:
Arrival at Entebbe International Airport (EBB)
Clear immigration (visa available on arrival for most nationalities, but pre-book online to save time)
Meet your Travel Giants Uganda guide holding a sign with your name
Welcome briefing and transfer to lodge (15-20 minutes)
Evening:
Optional (if you arrive early): Visit Entebbe Botanical Gardens ($10) – see monkeys, unique birds, and the lakefront
Welcome dinner with safari briefing – your guide will review tomorrow’s schedule
Early night—big adventure starts at dawn
Lodging Options:
Budget
Lodge
Price Range (per night)
Vibe
Budget
Karibu Guest House
$60-80
Friendly, basic, garden setting, good breakfast
Mid-range
Lake Heights Hotel
$100-150
Lake views, pool, comfortable rooms
Luxury
Protea Hotel by Marriott
$200-250
International standard, lakeside, airport shuttle
Insider Tip:*“Resist the urge to start sightseeing immediately. Jet lag + safari = exhaustion. I’ve seen travelers arrive at 8 AM, go straight to the botanical gardens, then crash by 2 PM. Rest today, thrive tomorrow.”*
Day 2 – Entebbe to Queen Elizabeth National Park: First Game Drive
*A 6-hour drive brings you to Uganda’s most biodiverse park. Your first game drive sets the tone for the safari ahead.*
Morning (7:00 AM – 1:00 PM):
Breakfast at lodge
Drive to Queen Elizabeth National Park (6-7 hours including stops)
Stop at the Equator for photos and experiments – stand in both hemispheres simultaneously
Afternoon (1:00 PM – 6:30 PM):
Arrive Mweya sector, check into lodge, lunch
Afternoon game drive in the northern sector (4:00 PM – 6:30 PM)
What you’ll see on day one: elephants, buffalo, Uganda kob, warthogs, and if lucky, lions lounging on the open plains
Insider Tip:“The Equator experiment—watching water drain clockwise in one hemisphere and counterclockwise in the other—is genuinely fascinating. Also, craft prices at the Equator souvenir shop are often better than in Kampala. Don’t skip it.”
Day 3 – Queen Elizabeth: Kasenyi Plains & Kazinga Channel
Today is the heart of your safari. Morning predators on the Kasenyi Plains. Afternoon hippos and elephants from the water.
Morning (6:30 AM – 11:00 AM):
Early morning game drive in Kasenyi Plains – park gates open at 6:30 AM
Best time for predators: Lions returning from night hunts, leopards on termite mounds
Animals you’ll likely see: Lions (60-70% probability in dry season), elephants, buffalo, Uganda kob, hyenas, maybe a leopard at dawn
Afternoon (12:30 PM – 6:00 PM):
Lunch at lodge, rest during the midday heat (animals do the same)
Kazinga Channel boat safari (2:00 PM – 4:00 PM) – the highlight of Queen Elizabeth
What you’ll see from the boat: Hundreds of hippos (the channel has one of Africa’s highest hippo densities), elephants drinking and bathing, buffalo, crocodiles, incredible birdlife (over 600 species)
Evening:
Sunset at a scenic viewpoint over the channel
Return to lodge for dinner
Lodging: Same as Day 2
[IMAGE PLACEMENT 6 – Kazinga Channel boat safari: hippos, elephant on shore, golden light. Caption: “Day 3: The Kazinga Channel—hippos, elephants, and Africa’s best birding.”]
Insider Tip:*“The key to seeing predators is being at the park gates when they open at 6:30 AM. Most tour groups arrive at 8 AM after a relaxed breakfast. That 90-minute head start changes everything. I’ve had guests watch a lioness make a kill at 6:45 AM while other vehicles arrived just in time to see the aftermath.”*
Day 4 – Queen Elizabeth to Ishasha: Tree-Climbing Lions
Today you drive to the Ishasha sector—famous for lions that lounge in fig trees. It’s a phenomenon found only here and in Tanzania’s Lake Manyara.
Morning (8:00 AM – 12:00 PM):
Breakfast at lodge
Drive to Ishasha sector (2-3 hours through beautiful savanna)
Check into lodge, lunch
Afternoon (12:30 PM – 6:30 PM):
Rest during the heat (1:00 PM – 3:30 PM)
Afternoon game drive in Ishasha (3:30 PM – 6:30 PM) – search for tree-climbing lions
Lions often rest in large fig tree branches during afternoon heat
Lodging Options (Ishasha):
Budget
Lodge
Price Range (per night)
Highlights
Budget
Ishasha Jungle Lodge
$80-120
Basic tented camp, close to park, authentic safari feel
Mid-range
Ishasha Wilderness Camp
$150-220
Excellent tented camp, superb wildlife access
Luxury
Elephant Plains Lodge
$300-400
Stunning savanna views, pool, gourmet dining
[IMAGE PLACEMENT 7 – Tree-climbing lion in fig tree, Ishasha sector. Caption: “Day 4: Ishasha’s tree-climbing lions—a phenomenon found only here and in Tanzania.”]
Insider Tip:*“Tree-climbing lions are most active in late afternoon (4:00-6:30 PM) when the heat is intense and they seek shade in fig tree branches. Don’t rush this drive. I once spent 45 minutes watching a female lion settle into a tree—she took her time, and so should you. Patience pays.”*
Day 5 – Ishasha to Bwindi Impenetrable Forest
A short but beautiful drive takes you from savanna to misty rainforest. Today is about transition—both landscape and mindset.
Morning (7:00 AM – 10:00 AM):
Early morning game drive in Ishasha (6:30 AM – 9:00 AM) – one more chance for tree-climbing lions before breakfast
Return to lodge, breakfast, pack up
Driving (10:00 AM – 2:00 PM):
Depart Ishasha to Bwindi (Rushaga or Buhoma sector – we’ll recommend based on permit availability)
Driving time: 3-4 hours through stunning mountain scenery
Route: Through what locals call the “Switzerland of Africa” – terraced hills, winding roads, eucalyptus forests
Afternoon (2:00 PM onwards):
Arrive Bwindi, check into lodge
Rest, soak in the forest atmosphere (it’s cooler, mistier, greener than anything you’ve seen)
Insider Tip:“The drive is short, but don’t sleep through it. The landscapes shift from savanna to rolling hills to terraced mountains to misty rainforest. Your camera should be ready around every bend. This transition is one of the most photographed segments of the entire itinerary.”
Day 6 – Gorilla Trekking: The Main Event
This is why you came. Today you’ll come face-to-face with mountain gorillas—and nothing prepares you for how it feels.
Timeline:
Time
Activity
6:00 AM
Wake-up call
6:30 AM
Early breakfast (eat hearty – you’ll need energy)
7:30 AM
Report to park headquarters for briefing, group assignment
8:30 AM
Trekking begins (duration: 2-6 hours depending on gorilla location)
10:00 AM – 2:00 PM
Locate gorilla family
Once located
1 hour exactly with the gorilla family
After trek
Return to lodge (another 1-3 hours of hiking)
Afternoon
Lunch, rest (you’ll need it), optional community walk
Evening (6:00 PM)
Certificate presentation and celebration with fellow trekkers
Forest monkeys (colobus, blue monkeys), birds, butterflies
The look in a silverback’s eyes – ancient, intelligent, curious (priceless)
The Gorilla Families You Might Visit (Bwindi):
Mubare family (Buhoma) – the first habituated group, 16 members including two silverbacks
Rushegura family (Buhoma) – known for coming close to park boundaries, easier trek
Bikingi family (Rushaga) – large group with a massive silverback
Nshongi family (Rushaga) – one of the largest, up to 25 members
[IMAGE PLACEMENT 8 – Trekker with gorilla in background (safe distance, 7+ meters), emotional moment. Caption: “Day 6: The moment everything changes—face to face with mountain gorillas.”]
Insider Tip:“The first five minutes, take photos. Get the shots. Then put the camera down. Just watch. Just be. The photos will be there. The moment won’t. I’ve watched trekkers spend the entire hour looking through a viewfinder, then ask me, ‘Did that really happen?’ It did. But you need to feel it.”
Fitness Reality Check:
Trekking difficulty ranges from moderate (1-2 hours on maintained trails) to challenging (5-6 hours on steep, muddy slopes)
Porters are available for $15-20 – hire one. Not just for help – you’re supporting the local community
Walking stick provided at park headquarters – use it
Day 7 – Bwindi to Entebbe: Departure
All good safaris must end. But Uganda will remember you, and you’ll carry it home.
Morning:
Breakfast at lodge (your last Ugandan coffee – savor it)
Transfer to Kisoro airstrip (1.5 hours) or Kihihi airstrip (2 hours)
Fly to Entebbe (1-1.5 hours) – this saves 7+ hours of winding mountain driving
Afternoon:
Arrive Entebbe around 11:00 AM – 1:00 PM depending on flight schedule
Optional (if time allows): Last-minute souvenir shopping at the Uganda Crafts Village
Transfer to Entebbe International Airport for departure (arrive 3 hours before international flight)
Alternative (Drive Option – Not Recommended for Same-Day Flights):
Drive Bwindi to Entebbe (7-9 hours on winding roads)
Only recommended if your flight is the next day
Insider Tip:“Fly out of Bwindi. The charter flight from Kisoro or Kihihi to Entebbe costs about $200 per person and is worth every penny. You’ll arrive fresh, not exhausted from 8 hours of winding mountain roads. Book this flight before you leave home – they fill up during peak season.”
The Peak – What 15 Years Has Taught Me About This Itinerary
*After 15 years and hundreds of first-time safaris, here’s what I’ve learned about why this itinerary works.*
I’ve guided this exact 7-day itinerary hundreds of times. I’ve watched first-time safari planners arrive anxious, overwhelmed, and unsure. And I’ve watched them leave transformed—not just by the gorillas, but by the entire journey.
Unique phenomenon, a break from standard game drives.
Day 5
Transition
Rest day before gorillas – crucial for recovery.
Day 6
Gorillas
The emotional peak. You’re rested and present.
Day 7
Departure
Fly out, arrive fresh, leave wanting more.
The rhythm is deliberate. You’re not rushed. You have time to process each experience before the next begins. And by Day 6, when you’re watching a silverback eat bamboo ten feet away, you’re not exhausted—you’re present.
That’s why 7 days works. Not too rushed. Not too slow. Just right for your first time.
The gorillas are waiting. The lions are in their fig trees. And now, you have the plan.
What Animals Will You See? (Sightings Probability)
Here’s what you can realistically expect to see each day – no false promises, just field-tested probabilities.
The Honest Truth:*“Leopard is the hardest. If you see one, consider yourself exceptionally lucky – maybe 1 in 5 itineraries spot one. Everything else – lions, elephants, hippos, gorillas – is highly likely. Tree-climbing lions are about 60% in dry season, lower in wet season when they stay on the ground.”*
Sample Budget – What This 7-Day Safari Actually Costs
*Let’s talk money. Here’s what this 7-day itinerary costs at different comfort levels. All prices in USD, based on 2 people sharing.*
Cost Per Person Breakdown
Category
Budget
Mid-Range
Luxury
Gorilla permit
$800
$800
$800
Park entrance fees (QENP + Bwindi)
$150
$150
$150
Accommodation (6 nights)
360(360(60/night)
900(900(150/night)
2,400(2,400(400/night)
Transport (private 4×4 safari vehicle)
$500
$600
$800
Guide/driver fees & tips
$150
$200
$300
Meals (where not included)
$120
$180
$240
Activities (Kazinga boat, etc.)
$50
$50
$50
Charter flight Bwindi → Entebbe (optional)
$200
$200
$200
TOTAL (excluding international flights)
$2,330
$3,080
$4,940
What’s Included in Travel Giants Uganda Packages
Item
Budget
Mid-Range
Luxury
Gorilla permit procurement
✓
✓
✓
All park entrance fees
✓
✓
✓
Accommodation (per above)
✓
✓
✓
Private 4×4 transport
✓
✓
✓
English-speaking guide
✓
✓
✓
Bottled water in vehicle
✓
✓
✓
Airport transfers
✓
✓
✓
Meals (breakfast + dinner)
✓
✓
✓
Lunch
✗ (pay as you go)
✓
✓
Alcoholic drinks
✗
✗
some lodges
Gorilla trekking porter
✗ ($15-20 extra)
✗
✓
Ways to Save $500-800 on This Itinerary
Travel with 2-4 people – share vehicle costs (a solo traveler pays $1,200-1,500 more)
Choose budget accommodation – clean, safe, basic, but you’ll miss nothing animal-wise
Drive instead of fly from Bwindi – save $200, but add 7-8 hours of travel (not recommended for same-day flights)
Book directly with a local operator – avoid 20-30% middleman markups from international agencies
Travel in shoulder season (March-May or November) – lodges offer 20-40% discounts
[IMAGE PLACEMENT 3 – Cost breakdown infographic for budget, mid-range, and luxury options. Caption: “7 days, 3 budget levels, one unforgettable safari. Choose your comfort.”]
The Honest Truth:*“As a licensed IATA-certified tour operator, Travel Giants Uganda offers competitive rates with no hidden markups. We’ve been rated 4.9 stars by 217 travelers on TripAdvisor – our clients consistently say we deliver value. The price you’re quoted is the price you pay.”*
What to Pack for This Itinerary
You’re visiting two different environments: savanna (hot, dry, dusty) and rainforest (cool, wet, muddy). Here’s what you need for both.
Quick Packing Checklist
Category
Items
Why You Need It
Clothing – Savanna
Neutral colors (khaki, olive, beige) – no bright colors or black
Park rangers check all of these at gorilla briefing
Camera Gear
Camera with zoom lens (100-400mm minimum), extra batteries, extra memory cards
You’ll take 500+ photos – no joke
Extras
Gardening gloves (for gorilla trekking), resealable bags (for electronics), small first aid kit
$5 gloves = happy hands
What NOT to Pack
Camouflage clothing – illegal for non-military personnel in Uganda
Drones – prohibited in all national parks
Plastic bags – banned in Uganda (you’ll be fined at customs)
Heavy suitcases – you’ll be repacking daily; soft-sided duffels only
[IMAGE PLACEMENT 4 – Flat lay of safari gear: boots, hat, binoculars, camera, daypack, gardening gloves. Caption: “Pack smart for 7 days in two different worlds—savanna and rainforest.”]
The Insider Tip:“Gardening gloves for gorilla trekking. $5 at any hardware store. Every trekker who brings them thanks me. Every trekker who doesn’t wishes they had. You’ll grab stinging nettles, thorny branches, and muddy roots – your hands will thank you.”
Frequently Asked Questions About This Itinerary
These are the questions I answer most often from first-time safari planners. If yours isn’t here, email us.
Is 7 days enough for gorillas and safari?
Yes. This itinerary is optimized to give you both without feeling rushed. You’ll have 2 full days in Queen Elizabeth, 1 day dedicated to tree-climbing lions in Ishasha, and the gorilla trekking experience. What you won’t get is chimpanzees (add 2 days) or Murchison Falls (add 2-3 days).
When is the best time for this itinerary?
Season
Months
Wildlife Viewing
Gorilla Trekking Difficulty
Price
Peak dry
June-Sept, Dec-Feb
Excellent
Moderate (trails drier)
Highest
Shoulder
March, Oct
Good
Moderate
Medium
Wet
April-May, Nov
Fair (animals harder to spot)
Challenging (muddy)
Lowest (20-40% off)
How fit do I need to be?
Moderately fit. Gorilla trekking requires 2-6 hours of hiking on steep, muddy terrain at 7,000-8,500 feet elevation. Queen Elizabeth game drives are easy (you’re in a vehicle). If you can hike 5 miles with occasional steep sections, you’re fine. If you’re uncertain, hire a porter ($15-20) – they’ll carry your daypack and pull you up the steep parts.
Can I add chimpanzee tracking to this itinerary?
Yes, but it becomes a 9-day itinerary. Add 2 days: Day 2.5-3.5 in Kibale National Park (the “chimpanzee capital of Africa”) before Queen Elizabeth. Contact us for the 9-day version.
What about Murchison Falls?
Save it for a longer trip or a return visit. Murchison Falls is in northern Uganda, 7-8 hours from Entebbe in the opposite direction from Bwindi. Adding it would require 10-12 days minimum. Most first-timers choose gorillas + tree-climbing lions – Murchison is spectacular but better for a second safari.
Is this itinerary suitable for children?
Yes, with age restrictions. Gorilla trekking minimum age is 15 years (strictly enforced by Uganda Wildlife Authority – no exceptions). Children under 15 can:
Enjoy the Queen Elizabeth and Ishasha safari portions fully
Do alternative activities at Bwindi (community walks, nature hikes, cultural experiences)
Be left at the lodge with a guardian (not ideal)
Can I do this itinerary solo?
Yes. Solo travelers pay more because vehicle and guide costs aren’t shared. A solo budget itinerary runs about 3,200−3,800vs.3,200−3,800vs.2,330 for shared. Contact us for exact solo pricing.
How far in advance should I book?
Booking Window
Gorilla Permit Availability
Accommodation
Price
6+ months
Best selection (any family, any sector)
Best selection
Standard
3-6 months
Good selection (most families available)
Good selection
Standard
1-3 months
Limited (may not get preferred sector)
Limited
Standard
<1 month
Unlikely (sold out in peak season)
Very limited
May pay rush fees
Bottom line: For peak season (June-Sept, Dec-Feb), book permits 4-6 months ahead. For shoulder/wet season, 2-3 months is usually fine.
What about the gorilla permit – is it really $800?
Yes, $800 for non-residents (as of 2026). This fee includes:
Park entry for the day
Guide and ranger team (2-3 armed rangers per group)
1 hour with the gorilla family
Certificate of trekking completion
The permit is non-refundable and non-transferable. Book only through UWA (Uganda Wildlife Authority) or licensed operators like Travel Giants Uganda.
What’s the tipping etiquette?
Role
Suggested Tip (per day/per group)
When to Give
Safari guide
$15-25 per day (total per group)
End of safari
Gorilla trekking rangers
$10-15 per trekker (total to share)
After trek
Porter
$10-15
After trek
Lodge staff
$5-10 per day (total for housekeeping)
Upon departure
Driver (airport transfers)
$10-15 total
Upon drop-off
Insider tip: Carry small bills (5,5,10, $20 USD). Tips in Ugandan shillings are fine, but guides prefer USD. Never tip in coins.
Why Book This Itinerary with Travel Giants Uganda?
You could book this itinerary yourself. But here’s why hundreds of first-timers trust us each year.
Our Credentials
Credential
What It Means for You
IATA Accredited
Internationally recognized, financially protected, able to issue air tickets
UTB Licensed
Legally authorized by Uganda Tourism Board – we follow their code of conduct
AUTO Member
Association of Uganda Tour Operators – industry standards, ethics, safety
4.9 Stars (217 reviews)
Proven track record on TripAdvisor – real clients, real experiences
15+ Years Experience
We’ve guided this exact itinerary hundreds of times – no learning curve
[IMAGE PLACEMENT 5 – Travel Giants Uganda logo with IATA, UTB, AUTO badges. Caption: “IATA-certified, UTB-licensed, AUTO-member—your safari is in trusted hands.”]
What We Handle for You (So You Don’t Have To)
Task
DIY Complexity
Travel Giants Does It
Gorilla permits
High (UWA website is clunky, permits sell out in minutes)
We secure them, often when public inventory shows sold out
Accommodation
Medium (many lodges have minimum stays, no online booking)
We’ve vetted every lodge personally
Transport + guide
High (reliable 4×4 rental + driver is complicated)
Private 4×4 with experienced driver-guide
Logistics coordination
High (permits + lodging + transport + flight timing)
Seamless, with contingency plans
Emergency support
Very low (you’re on your own)
24/7 local support – if something goes wrong, we fix it
Recent Client Review (Verified TripAdvisor)
“They handled everything – permits, border crossing from Rwanda, even my lost luggage. The gorilla trek was flawless. James (our guide) knew every animal track, every shortcut. We saw lions on three separate game drives, a leopard (lucky!), and the gorilla trek was the best day of my life. Worth every penny.” – Sarah T., May 2025
The Honest Truth:*“You can book this itinerary yourself. I won’t pretend you can’t. But with over 15 years of experience, IATA certification, and a 4.9-star rating from 217 travelers, Travel Giants Uganda offers peace of mind that’s hard to put a price on. When you’re 4 hours into a muddy gorilla trek and realize you forgot your rain jacket, you’ll be glad someone has your back.”*
Your 7-Day Safari Checklist – Ready to Book?
Before you reach out, run through this checklist:
I’ve reviewed the complete 7-day itinerary and it fits my travel style
I understand the gorilla permit process ($800, book 3-6 months ahead, non-refundable)
I’ve chosen my budget level (budget, mid-range, or luxury – see table above)
I’ve checked my passport validity (6+ months beyond planned departure)
I’ve arranged yellow fever vaccination (required for entry, certificate must be presented)
I’ve looked at flights – arriving Entebbe (EBB) ideally before 2 PM on Day 1
I’m ready to book with confidence
Ready to Book Your 7-Day Uganda Safari?
You’ve read the itinerary now. Seven days. Three parks. Gorillas, tree-climbing lions, elephants, hippos. Every detail, every lodging option, every insider tip from 15 years in the field.
But reading isn’t the same as being there—standing on the Kasenyi Plains at dawn, watching a lioness stretch after a night hunt. Floating on the Kazinga Channel as hippos grunt and splash just feet from your boat. Looking into the eyes of a silverback and feeling something shift inside you that you can’t quite explain.
At Travel Giants Uganda, we’ve guided this exact itinerary hundreds of times. We’re IATA-certified, UTB-licensed, AUTO-member, and rated 4.9 stars by 217 travelers on TripAdvisor. We know every turn, every animal, every insider secret.
Step 2: We’ll check gorilla permit availability, book your accommodations, arrange your transport, and send you a complete quote – usually within 24 hours.
Step 3: Review the quote, ask questions, then confirm with a deposit (30%). We handle the rest. You show up.
Feel the cool morning air on the Kasenyi Plains. Hear the grunt of a hippo from the Kazinga Channel. See the fig tree where a lion lounges in the afternoon heat. Look into the eyes of a silverback and watch the world shift.
The animals are waiting. The plan is ready. And now, you know exactly what to expect.
Charles has guided this 7-day itinerary hundreds of times—he knows every turn, every animal, every insider secret..
Written by Charles Lubega, Founder & Senior Safari Guide, Travel Giants Uganda. 15+ years experience. IATA-certified. 1,000+ happy first-time safari travelers.
This guide was last updated May 2026. Gorilla permit fees, park entrance fees, and lodging prices are subject to change. Always confirm current pricing with your tour operator.