Chimpanzee Trekking in Uganda | Kibale Forest | Savannah Explore Africa
Plan This Experience
Uganda · Africa's Primate Capital

Chimpanzee
Trekking.

Our closest living relatives. Over 5,000 wild chimpanzees in Uganda alone, and Kibale Forest offers the finest habituation experience on the continent. Fast, chaotic, loud and utterly compelling.

5,000+
Chimps in Uganda
USD 200
Permit Cost
1 hour
With the Community
The Experience

What is Chimpanzee Trekking?

Chimpanzee trekking is a guided forest encounter with a habituated community of wild chimpanzees. Chimps share approximately 98.7% of human DNA, making them our closest living relatives, and tracking them through the forest is a completely different experience to gorilla trekking: faster, louder, more chaotic, more unpredictable and frequently more exhilarating.

Where gorillas move slowly and deliberately through the forest floor, chimps travel at speed through the canopy, calling, screaming, chasing each other and occasionally descending to the ground to display, forage or investigate visitors. A chimpanzee staring directly into your eyes from three metres away, curious and completely unafraid, is one of the most unsettling and extraordinary moments in nature.

Uganda is the best country in East Africa for chimpanzee trekking. With over 5,000 wild chimps, the country holds more than Tanzania, Rwanda and Kenya combined. Kibale Forest National Park in western Uganda has the highest density of chimps in Africa, with a habituated community of over 120 individuals that has been studied continuously since the 1970s. The familiarity of the Kibale chimps with human presence makes for encounters of extraordinary intimacy and duration.

The trekking experience begins at park headquarters where you receive a briefing, then set off with a guide and armed ranger. Unlike gorilla trekking where you follow trackers to a known location, chimp trekking requires active listening and tracking through the forest: following calls, checking fruiting trees the chimps favour and reading the morning's signs. When the community is located, you have one hour in their presence. Many visitors describe their chimp encounter as equal to or exceeding their gorilla trek in emotional intensity.

Best Location
Kibale Forest NP, Uganda
Permit Cost
USD 200 per person (Kibale)
USD 150 other locations
Group Size
Max 6 visitors per session
Time with Chimps
1 hour standard trek
Trek Duration
1 to 4 hours (variable)
Minimum Age
12 years (varies by park)
Best Season
Year-round. Wet season when fruit is abundant makes chimps easier to locate.
Booking Lead Time
3 to 6 months ahead. Less than gorillas but still advance booking needed.
Habituation Exp
USD 250 full day with chimps in habituation process
Where to Trek

The Best Chimp Locations

Uganda has five main chimpanzee trekking destinations, each offering a different experience. One is clearly outstanding.

Bwindi Adjacent · Gorilla Circuit Add-on

Kyambura Gorge

The Kyambura Gorge is a dramatic 100-metre-deep forest-filled ravine cutting through the floor of Queen Elizabeth National Park. It is sometimes called the Valley of Apes and harbours a small but habituated chimp community of around 20 individuals. The combination of open savannah above and dense riverine forest below makes Kyambura unique among Uganda's chimp sites. Encounters here feel genuinely wild. The gorge pairs naturally with Queen Elizabeth game drives and Kazinga Channel boat safaris, making it an ideal half-day addition to any Queen Elizabeth itinerary.

PermitUSD 50 per person
Community Size~20 habituated
Sighting RateLower than Kibale
Best Combined WithQueen Elizabeth NP game drives
Northwest Uganda · En Route to Murchison

Budongo Forest

Budongo Forest Reserve sits on the edge of Murchison Falls National Park and is often visited as a morning activity before or after a Murchison Falls safari. The Kaniyo Pabidi and Busingyi sectors have habituated chimp communities and the forest is exceptional for birding, hosting several Albertine Rift endemic bird species. Budongo is a pure forest experience with no savannah wildlife nearby, making it best suited to visitors who specifically want to combine chimp trekking with Murchison Falls game drives and the Nile boat cruise.

PermitUSD 30 to 50 per person
Community SizeHabituated communities
Best Combined WithMurchison Falls NP
BirdingExcellent Albertine endemics
What to Expect

Your Chimpanzee Trek
Step by Step

6am

Early Morning Start

Morning sessions at Kibale start at 8am with a 6am wake-up recommended. Chimps are most active in the early morning when they descend from their sleeping nests in the canopy and begin searching for food. This is the best time to find the community together and active. An early breakfast at your lodge is followed by a short transfer to the Kanyanchu Visitor Centre where morning briefings take place. Your guide will have information from rangers who tracked the community's evening nesting site the previous day.

8am

Briefing and Trek Begins

The park ranger brief covers chimpanzee behaviour, safety protocols and what to do if a chimp charges or shows aggression (hold your position, do not run, avoid direct eye contact). Groups of maximum six visitors then set off into the forest with a lead guide and armed ranger. The tracking process is active and engaging: your guide is listening for calls, checking fruiting trees and reading signs of recent passage. The forest itself is remarkable, a living cathedral of ancient trees, filtered light, butterflies and bird calls. You may hear the chimps' distinctive 'pant-hoot' calls before you see them, carrying through the forest canopy at extraordinary volume.

Variable

The Encounter

When the community is located, one hour begins. The experience is dramatically different from a gorilla trek. Chimps rarely sit still. They move through the canopy at speed, swing between branches, descend suddenly to the ground, chase each other, display, groom and occasionally charge toward visitors in excitement before veering away. The noise when the full community is together, the drumming, screaming, whooping and pant-hooting, is elemental. In the middle of all of it, an adult male may sit directly in front of you and stare with absolute, unsettling intelligence. These are not animals that feel small beside a human. They feel entirely equal.

Half Day

Bigodi Wetland Walk

The Bigodi Wetland Sanctuary sits just outside Kibale Forest and is one of Uganda's finest birding experiences. A two-hour guided walk through the papyrus swamp and riverine forest delivers sightings of over 200 bird species including the beautiful grey-crowned crane, African fish eagle and multiple kingfisher species. The wetland also supports red colobus monkeys, L'Hoest's monkeys, black and white colobus and occasional baboons. Pairing the morning chimp trek with an afternoon Bigodi walk is one of Uganda's finest half-day nature experiences and costs just a few dollars in community fees.

Side by Side

Chimps vs Gorillas

Many visitors do both. Understanding the differences helps you plan the right sequence.

Chimpanzee Trekking

PermitUSD 200 in Kibale (Uganda)
PaceFast, chaotic, unpredictable. Chimps move constantly through the canopy.
NoiseExtremely loud. Pant-hoots, screams, drumming on tree buttresses.
DistanceOften very close, sometimes uncomfortably so. Chimps approach visitors.
EmotionExhilarating, kinetic, sometimes overwhelming. High-energy throughout.
PhotographyChallenging due to speed and canopy. Fast lens and high ISO essential.
Best LocationKibale Forest NP, Uganda
DifficultyModerate. Less steep than gorilla trekking but more aerobic as chimps move.

Gorilla Trekking

PermitUSD 800 Uganda / USD 1,500 Rwanda
PaceSlow and deliberate. Gorillas move at ground level in dense vegetation.
NoiseMostly quiet. Occasional silverback vocalisations. Deeply atmospheric.
DistanceMinimum 7 metres enforced. Gorillas may approach closer voluntarily.
EmotionProfound, moving, often described as life-changing. Deeply contemplative.
PhotographyExcellent. Gorillas move slowly. Good close-up shots very achievable.
Best LocationBwindi NP Uganda / Volcanoes NP Rwanda
DifficultyModerate to strenuous. Steep rainforest terrain, can be very demanding.
Our Verdict

If you can only choose one, gorilla trekking is the more transcendent experience. If you can do both, Kibale chimps in the morning and Bwindi gorillas two days later is one of the greatest back-to-back wildlife experiences on earth.

Expert Tips

How to Get the Most From Your Trek

🌞

Go in the Morning

Morning sessions offer the best encounters. Chimps build new sleeping nests every night and descend at dawn hungry and active. The morning community is often together in one area. Afternoon sessions are available but chimps tend to be more dispersed and less active in the heat of the day.

📷

Use a Fast Lens

Chimp photography is genuinely challenging. They move fast through dark forest canopy. Bring a 70-200mm f/2.8 or a 100-400mm zoom, set your ISO to 3200 or higher and use continuous autofocus. Shoot in burst mode. Accept that many shots will be blurred. The ones that work will be extraordinary.

🔥

Stay Calm When Chimps Charge

Chimp bluff charges, where a male runs toward you at speed before veering away, do happen. Your guide will brief you. Stay absolutely still, crouch slightly and look away. Do not run. Running triggers a chase response. Guides are experienced at managing these situations and actual contact is extremely rare.

🗣

Listen as Much as You Look

Half the chimp experience is acoustic. The pant-hoot calls, the drumming on tree buttresses, the screaming disputes between individuals, the contact calls exchanged across the forest canopy are sounds you have never heard before and will never forget. Put the camera down occasionally and just listen.

🌵

Book the Habituation Experience

If your schedule allows, the Kibale Habituation Experience at USD 250 per person gives you a full day alongside researchers with a family still being habituated. The encounter is wilder and less predictable but you have four hours rather than one. It is limited to four visitors per day and should be booked months ahead.

🌿

Add the Bigodi Walk

The Bigodi Wetland Sanctuary is a 30-minute drive from Kibale headquarters and costs about USD 12. Pair it with your morning chimp trek for a full day of primates and birds. The wetland holds black and white colobus, red colobus, L'Hoest's monkeys and over 200 bird species. Community-run and excellent value.

FAQs

Everything You Need to Know

Sighting rates at Kibale Forest are very high but not 100% guaranteed. The Kibale habituation team tracks the community daily and the success rate is estimated at over 95% for morning treks. On the rare occasions the chimps have moved deep into the forest and cannot be located within the session window, the park will usually offer a free return visit. This is less of an issue than with gorilla trekking because chimp communities are larger, louder and easier to locate. If you trek with a reputable operator and experienced guides, you will almost certainly find them.
They are completely different experiences that complement each other beautifully. Gorilla trekking is quieter, more profound and more moving. Chimpanzee trekking is louder, more chaotic and more kinetic. Gorillas often produce tears. Chimps produce adrenaline. The permit cost difference is significant: USD 200 for Kibale chimps versus USD 800 for Uganda gorillas. Many visitors who have done both describe them as equally valuable but in entirely different ways. If budget forces a choice, gorilla trekking is generally considered the more unique global experience since chimps can be seen in Tanzania and Rwanda too, while the best gorilla trekking exists only in Uganda and Rwanda.
Habituated chimps in managed trekking settings are not dangerous if you follow your guide's instructions. However, chimps are significantly stronger than humans, pound for pound about four times as strong as an adult male, and must be treated with respect. Bluff charges happen and can be alarming if you are unprepared. The key rules are: never run, never make direct prolonged eye contact, never eat near the chimps, never separate from your group, always follow your guide. Park rangers accompanying every group are experienced at managing chimp behaviour. Serious incidents involving tourists at properly managed trekking sites are extremely rare.
Similar to gorilla trekking but slightly less demanding on footwear. Long trousers, long-sleeved shirt and a waterproof jacket are essential. Kibale Forest receives rain year-round and the forest can be cold in the early morning. Neutral colours are recommended. Good walking shoes or light hiking boots are sufficient for most Kibale treks though heavy ankle-support boots are needed for more demanding sessions. Bring DEET insect repellent, sunscreen, water and a small snack. Trekking poles are useful but not essential on the Kibale trail which is generally less steep than Bwindi.
Absolutely, and this is one of our most popular Uganda itineraries. Kibale Forest and Bwindi Impenetrable Forest are both in southwestern Uganda, approximately 5 to 6 hours apart by road. A 10-day Uganda circuit can comfortably include two nights at Kibale for chimp trekking, two nights at Queen Elizabeth National Park for game drives and the Kazinga Channel boat safari, and two nights at Bwindi for gorilla trekking. This combination gives you the three signature Uganda wildlife experiences in one seamlessly connected journey. We design this circuit regularly and consider it the ideal Uganda itinerary for first-time visitors.
The chimpanzee habituation experience (CHEX) at Kibale costs USD 250 per person and gives you a full day alongside researchers with a chimp family still in the habituation process. Unlike the standard one-hour trek, you spend four to six hours with the chimps, accompanying the research team as they continue their work. The chimps are less accustomed to humans and therefore more reactive and wild-feeling. The day starts at first light and includes a packed lunch in the forest. Maximum four visitors per session. It is significantly more expensive and more physically demanding than a standard trek, but for serious wildlife enthusiasts or photographers who want maximum time and the most authentic possible encounter, it is exceptional value.
More Experiences

Other Extraordinary Encounters

Book Your Chimp Trek

Ready to meet our
closest relatives?

Kibale Forest permits are best booked 3 to 6 months ahead. Speak with our specialists and we will secure your permits, pair your chimp trek with the right itinerary and handle everything.

Icons made by Freepik from www.flaticon.com