3-Day Rwanda Gorilla Safari in Volcanoes National Park
Overview
This 3-day Rwanda itinerary is the shortest practical gorilla safari available — a tightly structured trip designed for travellers with limited time who want the gorilla experience without a multi-week commitment. It covers the essentials: one day in Kigali (Genocide Memorial and city orientation), a scenic drive through Rwanda’s thousand hills to Volcanoes National Park, one full day for the gorilla trek, and a return to Kigali on Day 3.
The routing is direct. Kigali sits just two to three hours by road from Volcanoes National Park — Rwanda’s compact geography makes this combination genuinely achievable in three days without feeling rushed. The Kigali Genocide Memorial visit on Day 1 is not incidental: it is an essential introduction to the country, providing the historical and human context that makes Rwanda’s national recovery — of which its gorilla conservation programme is a significant part — fully legible.
Mountain gorilla trekking in Volcanoes National Park is one of the most sought-after wildlife experiences on earth. The Virunga volcanic mountain chain — eight peaks straddling Rwanda, Uganda, and the DRC — is the only place outside Bwindi where mountain gorillas can be tracked. Rwanda’s permit regime limits each habituated family to eight visitors per day, with one hour spent with the group on finding them.
It suits business travellers with a spare few days, travellers adding Rwanda as a short extension to a longer East Africa trip, and first-time visitors who want to assess whether a longer Rwanda itinerary is right for them.
Key Information:
- Duration: 3 days
- Departure Location: Kigali International Airport
- Trip Type: Personalized / Physical
- Price: USD 3,899

Three days is enough to do Rwanda's gorillas properly — one day in Kigali, one day trekking, one day returning. The drive between the two is beautiful, and the Memorial is genuinely essential context. People come for the gorillas but leave understanding why Rwanda protects them.
Highlights
- Kigali Genocide Memorial — Rwanda’s most important cultural site
- Kigali markets and galleries — an introduction to the city’s cultural life
- Scenic road journey through Rwanda’s terraced highland landscapes
- Mountain gorilla trekking in Volcanoes National Park — one hour with a habituated family in the Virunga Mountains
- Optional afternoon visit to the Ellen DeGeneres Campus, Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund
General Information
Rwanda is a small, densely populated, strikingly beautiful country of a thousand hills — one of the most intensely terraced agricultural landscapes in Africa, with every available slope cultivated from valley floor to ridge. The drive from Kigali to Volcanoes National Park passes through the heart of this landscape, crossing the Northern Province and climbing towards the Virunga foothills.
Volcanoes National Park covers 160 km² of the Rwandan Virunga — five volcanic peaks, bamboo forest, Hagenia woodland, and alpine zones above 3,500m. It is the site of Dian Fossey’s Karisoke Research Centre, established in 1967, and the park where the world first learned that mountain gorillas could be habituated to human presence for observation. The park currently holds multiple habituated gorilla families, each monitored daily by trackers and researchers from the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund.
Kigali is one of Africa’s most ordered and well-maintained capitals — a city that surprises first-time visitors with its cleanliness, its good restaurants, and the directness with which it addresses its own history at sites like the Genocide Memorial.
What's Included?
- Accommodation in mid-range lodges, meals as indicated
- 1 gorilla trekking permit ($1,500 — Rwanda Development Board)
- Park entrance fees
- All excursions and activities listed in the itinerary
- Professional English-speaking guide throughout
- Ground transport and transfers in a 4×4 safari Land Cruiser
- AMREF emergency evacuation insurance cover
- Government taxes
- International flights to/from Kigali
- Travel insurance (required — not provided)
- Rwanda tourist visa costs and processing
- Optional Ellen DeGeneres Campus visit (entrance fee — confirm at booking)
- Extra activities and meals not listed in the itinerary
- Service tips, gratuities, souvenirs, and snacks
- Accommodation after the end of the trip
Detailed
Itinerary
This 3-day itinerary is structured for efficiency without sacrifice — every element serves a purpose. Day 1 is Kigali orientation and the Memorial, plus the afternoon drive to the park. Day 2 is the gorilla trek. Day 3 is the return. There is no padding, and the logistics are clean throughout.
The two-night stay at Mountain Gorilla View Lodge provides a stable base at the park’s edge — a mid-range property with good access to the Kinigi visitor centre where trekking briefings take place. For travellers wanting a higher-tier lodge, alternatives at Volcanoes National Park can be discussed at the planning stage.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Yes — Rwanda’s compact geography makes it genuinely achievable. Kigali to Volcanoes National Park is two to three hours by road; the permit allows one confirmed gorilla trek on a single day; and the return to Kigali on Day 3 is straightforward. The only constraint is permit availability — Rwanda’s permits are limited and sell out months in advance, particularly in peak season (July–October and December–February). Booking early is essential.
Yes, one gorilla trekking permit ($1,500 per person, Rwanda Development Board) is included in the USD 3,899 price. This is the current RDB permit rate for non-East-African-Community residents. The permit covers one habituated gorilla family visit and one hour with the group. Confirm the current rate at booking as RDB fees are subject to periodic revision.
The two countries offer the same species — mountain gorillas — in different forest environments. Rwanda’s Virunga forest is at higher altitude, with bamboo and Hagenia woodland in a more open landscape than Uganda’s Bwindi. The trek in Rwanda is generally considered somewhat less physically demanding than Bwindi’s steeper sectors. Rwanda’s permit is $1,500 (versus Uganda’s $800) and the overall trip price is higher, but Kigali’s international connections are strong and the logistics are somewhat simpler. Both are exceptional experiences; many travellers do both.
Mountain Gorilla View Lodge — a mid-range property near Musanze at the park’s edge — is the included option. It has good access to the Kinigi visitor centre and views of the Virunga volcanic peaks. Higher-tier alternatives at Volcanoes National Park (including One&Only Gorilla’s Nest, Bishops House, or Kataza House) can be substituted for travellers wanting a luxury lodge; discuss at the planning stage.
Yes — a visit to the Ellen DeGeneres Campus of the Dian Fossey Gorilla Fund can be arranged on the afternoon of Day 2, after returning from the gorilla trek. The campus is a short drive from the lodge. Entrance fees apply and should be confirmed at booking. It is particularly well-suited to conservation-focused travellers or anyone wanting context beyond the permitted hour with the gorillas.
Yes, and easily. The most natural extension adds Nyungwe Forest National Park in the southwest for chimpanzee trekking and the canopy walk (covered in the 5-Day Chimps & Canopy Walk itinerary), making a 7–8 day Rwanda trip. Akagera National Park in the east adds the Big Five game drive element for two to three additional nights. The 3-day Rwanda circuit also works as a clean extension to any Uganda or Tanzania itinerary for travellers flying in and out of Kigali.