Kisoro Travel Guide: 4 Days in Uganda’s Volcanic Southwest
KISORO Travel Guide · Southwest Uganda
ByStays — Destinations

-Kisoro Travel GuideDistrict · Where Uganda Meets Rwanda & Congo
4 Days in Kisoro.
Gorillas, volcanoes, and a valley that holds its breath.
The complete ByStays- Kisoro Travel Guide to Uganda’s most dramatic southwest
— from the forest gates of Mgahinga to the still islandsof Lake
Bunyonyi and every red-earth road in between.
4
Days recommended
3&2
Virunga volcanoes & Gorilla families
$600
Gorilla permit (non-resident)
The Destination
KISORO Travel Guide,
Uganda

Southwest Uganda
Borders Rwanda & DRC
Elevation: ~1,800–4,127m
Best time: Jun–Aug · Dec–Feb
Nearest airstrip: Kisoro
From Kampala: 9–10 hrs drive
The red pin on that map sits where three countries press
against each other and the Virunga volcanoes rise from the
seam. Kisoro is Uganda’s most southwestern district, a
place where the landscape refuses to be ordinary — terraced
hills dropping into crater valleys, mist pooling in the
morning, and the constant low drama of mountains that
are geologically young and visibly alive.
Women work the red earth on steep hillsides. Smoke rises from cooking fires behind eucalyptus groves. The road from Kabale takes you through some of the most intensively farmed land in East Africa every slope cultivated, every contour planted before the forest begins and the farms stop and you enter a different kind of silence.
Come for the gorillas. That is the truth. But stay long enough to understand that Kisoro is not just a departure point for one famous morning in the forest. It is a full place with its own pace, its own food, its own reasons to slow down.

“Kisoro is not a stopover. It is the destination that makes everywhere else
feel like a warm-up. The volcanoes are not metaphorical. The gorillas are
not behind glass.”
— ByStays Destinations, Kisoro Travel Guide,Southwest Uganda
The Itinerary in the KISORO Travel Guide
Day
01
Arrival. Settle In. First Light.
Kisoro Travel Guide:Drive in from Kabale · Check in · Evening at the lodge

The last hour of the drive from Kabale is the one you remember. The road lifts into the hills, the valley opens below you, and somewhere on the left when the clouds cooperate three volcanic peaks appear in the distance like something a child drew to represent mountains. That is your destination.
Arrive before 15:00 if you can. Check in, drop your bag, and give yourself the afternoon. If your lodge has a deck and the good ones in Kisoro always do sit on it. The Virungas at late afternoon light are not the same thing they are at midday. They are better. The wicker chairs, the champagne bucket if you are celebrating, the mountains going from green to blue to grey as the sun drops and this is the unhurried opening Kisoro deserves.
Evening: dinner at the lodge, briefing from your guide on the gorilla trek, and an early night. Tomorrow starts at 06:00.
Insider note
If you are driving from Kampala, leave before 05:00 to arrive in daylight. The
Kabale–Kisoro stretch is best driven before dark — the road is beautiful but narrow in
places and does not forgive tired driving.
Day
02
Kisoro Travel Guide:Gorilla Trekking — Mgahinga
The main event · Nyakagezi family · 1 hour in their world
Up at 06:00. Breakfast — eggs, toast, tea, banana — and then the transfer to Ntebeko Gate. The briefing begins at 08:00 sharp. A UWA ranger walks you through the rules: stay 7 metres from the gorillas at all times, no flash photography, no eating in their presence, follow your guide’s instructions without delay. Then you walk into the forest.
The sign says “Where Gold Meets Silver” a reference to the golden monkeys and the silverback gorillas that both call Mgahinga home. It is one of those signs that undersells what is on the other side of it. The montane forest here is wet, close, and alive in the specific way that old forests are mosses that have been growing since before you were born, trees with root systems the size of rooms, the constant sound of water moving somewhere nearby.
The trek to find the Nyakagezi family takes 1 to 3 hours depending on where they have moved overnight. When you find them, you get one hour. The silverback will likely be resting. The juveniles will be playing. The mothers will be watching you with the particular patience of animals who have decided you are not a threat. Use the hour slowly. You will not forget it.
Since October 2019, the Hirwa family which migrated from Rwanda’s Volcanoes National Park is also trackable in Mgahinga. 16 permits are available per day across both families.
Permit note
Book gorilla permits through Uganda Wildlife Authority (UWA) well in advance — 3
months minimum in high season (Jun–Aug). $600 for foreign non-residents, $500 for
residents, UGX 250,000 for East African citizens. Mgahinga has fewer crowds than
Bwindi and is often easier to permit.
Day
03
Kisoro Travel Guide: Golden Monkeys, Batwa & the Buniga Trail
Morning in the bamboo · Afternoon on the community trail
Golden monkeys are one of the most underrated wildlife encounters in Uganda. Over 500 of them live in the Mgahinga bamboo zone ; fast, acrobatic, copper-gold against the deep green, completely uninterested in performing for you in the way that makes wildlife photography honest. The permit is $100 through UWA. Start at Ntebeko Gate for the 08:00 briefing ; the same gate as the gorilla trek, a different forest, a different pace.
After lunch, take the Buniga Community Forest Trail. The sign reads: “Walk in the footsteps of the Batwa and discover many uses of the Buniga Forest.” This is not marketing copy. The Batwa are the indigenous forest people of this region aka Uganda’s oldest inhabitants, displaced from the Bwindi and Mgahinga forests when the national parks were gazetted in 1991. The trail they now offer is an act of cultural preservation and a frank conversation about what conservation costs when the people who lived inside the forest are not part of the decision.
Walk it slowly. Ask questions. The mist on the red dirt road and the figure ahead carrying firewood that image tells you something true about daily life here that no hotel brochure will.
Cultural note
Book the Buniga Trail through a community-led operator rather than a third-party
agent. Ask your lodge to connect you directly — the
money goes further and the experience is more honest than any packaged version.
Day
04
Kisoro Travel Guide:Lake Bunyonyi & The Road Out
Morning on the water · Kisoro town · Departure

Lake Bunyonyi sits 1–2 hours from Kisoro toward Kabale with 29 islands scattered across still water ringed by terraced hills. From above it looks like a map of something imagined. From a canoe at water level it looks like somewhere you would choose to live if you were given the choice.
Go in the morning before the light flattens. A boat ride between the islands takes 2–3 hours and covers enough of the lake to understand its scale — 25 kilometres long, 7 wide, 44 metres deep in places. Bring nothing except water and whatever you want to think about quietly.
Back through Kisoro town before you leave, the market near the centre runs until late morning and gives you one last honest hour of the place. Local produce, cooked food, ordinary Tuesday commerce. The rustic carved-wood architecture of the lodges and guesthouses around town is worth one slow walk before the road takes you back.
If flying: Aero Link departs Kisoro for Entebbe around midday — confirm your time at booking. If driving: leave by 09:00 to reach Kampala before dark.
Departure tip
Kisoro Airstrip has limited flights — book Aero Link early, especially June–August.
Driving back: the Kabale–Mbarara–Kampala road is 9–10 hours. The Kabale leg at
sunrise through the terraced hills is one of the most beautiful drives in Uganda.

Before You Go
Getting There
By air: Aero Link flies Entebbe
–Kisoro daily. Departs ~07:45,
arrives ~08:55. Book early
— small aircraft fill fast in high
season.
By road: 9–10 hours from
Kampala via Mbarara and
Kabale. Hire a car or use a
reliable shuttle. The Kabale–
Kisoro stretch takes about 2
hours on a winding but paved
road.
From Rwanda: 3–4 hours from
Kigali via the Cyanika border
crossing. An East Africa Tourist
Visa covers Uganda, Kenya,
and Rwanda.
Best Time to Visit
Dry seasons (ideal): June to
August and December to
February. Firmer trails, clearer
skies, longer views across the volcanoes.
Wet seasons: March–May and
September–November. Trails
are steep and muddy after
rain. The forest is more lush
and crowds are noticeably
thinner. Some travellers prefer
it.
Altitude note: Kisoro sits at
~1,800m and the trekking goes
higher. Nights are cool year
-round. Pack a warm layer
regardless of season.
WHAT IT COSTS
Gorilla permit:
Foreign non-residents: $600
Foreign residents: $500
East African citizens: UGX
250,000
Golden monkey permit:$100
Volcano hike (Sabinyo): from
$80
Buniga Forest Trail: community
rate
All gorilla and golden monkey
permits through Uganda
Wildlife Authority. Book at least
3 months ahead for Jun–Aug
high season.
Where to Stay in Kisoro

★ Featured · Bwindi Orugano
Bwindi Orugano Lodge
Bwindi / Kisoro area
Sleek architectural design meets
unexpected culinary flair
on the forest edge. The vibrant,
neon-lit indoor sushi bar
and lounge space is a striking
contrast to the rugged wilderness outside. Positioned perfectly
for long evening wind-downs, offering a sophisticated contemporary
dining escape right after your early morning gorilla
departures.
Premium rates · See current
availability
8 Properties Listed
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Kisoro, Uganda
A ByStays Destination Guide · bystays.com







