Rwenzori Mountains & Mount Karisimbi Trekking Expedition

Plan your Rwenzori & Mount Karisimbi trekking expedition. A 14-day dual-summit itinerary, including a day-by-day guide, costs, difficulty, and tips for East Africa’s two greatest peaks.

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🗓️ 14 Days Duration
🏔️ 5,109m Max Altitude
🎯 2 Peak Summits
Challenging Difficulty
📍 Kigali - Kampala Start & End
💰 From $1,400 Per Person

Rwenzori & Karisimbi Trekking Expedition: The Ultimate 14-Day Dual Summit Adventure in East Africa

Two countries. Two mountain ranges. One expedition that stretches from the volcanic highlands of Rwanda to the glaciated equatorial peaks of Uganda’s Mountains of the Moon. This itinerary is not two separate trips stitched together; it is a single, coherent mountaineering journey across some of the most spectacular terrain in Africa, and it belongs on the shortlist of any serious trekker who wants to experience this continent’s high places at their deepest and most rewarding.

Few combined trekking expeditions in East Africa can match the ambition and variety of a dual ascent of Mount Karisimbi in Rwanda and Margherita Peak on Mount Stanley in Uganda’s Rwenzori Mountains. These are two of Africa’s most compelling high-altitude objectives, separated by a few hundred kilometres of equatorial landscape and united by the extraordinary biodiversity, physical challenge, and sheer improbability of standing on glaciated summits this close to the equator.

Mount Karisimbi, at 4,507 metres, is the highest peak in Rwanda and the highest of the eight Virunga volcanoes. It stands on the border of Rwanda and the Democratic Republic of Congo within Volcanoes National Park, the same park that shelters the endangered mountain gorilla families made famous by Dian Fossey’s research at the Karisoke Institute. A two-day guided ascent of Karisimbi through bamboo forest, hagenia-hypericum woodland, giant lobelias, and open Afroalpine moorland to a summit with 360-degree views across the Virunga range is, in itself, one of the outstanding hiking experiences of central Africa.

The Rwenzori Mountains, the Mountains of the Moon, Uganda’s UNESCO World Heritage alpine range, sit roughly 400 kilometres to the northeast. The highest summit, Margherita Peak on Mount Stanley, at 5,109 meters, is the third-highest point in Africa and one of only a handful of equatorial glaciated peaks remaining on the continent. The standard 8-day Kilembe Trail expedition takes you from the former copper-mining town of Kilembe through five vegetation zones and across the Stanley Plateau Glacier to a summit that towers 600 meters above Karisimbi and demands both physical preparation and glacier travel techniques.

Combined into a single 14-day expedition, arriving in Kigali, ascending Karisimbi, crossing into Uganda with an optional gorilla trekking stop at Bwindi Impenetrable Forest, and then completing the full Kilembe Trail to Margherita Peak, this itinerary represents one of the finest dual-summit mountain journeys available to a trekker anywhere in East Africa. Rwenzori Trekking Safaris designs and manages the Uganda section through an exclusive partnership with Rwenzori Trekking Services, coordinating the full expedition logistics so that the handover between the two mountain programs is seamless.

Rwenzori & Karisimbi Trekking Expedition Overview

Total Duration: 14 Days / 13 Nights

Mountains Summited: Mount Karisimbi (4,507m, Rwanda) + Margherita Peak, Mount Stanley (5,109m, Uganda)

Starting Point: Kigali International Airport, Rwanda

Finishing Point: Kasese / Entebbe International Airport, Uganda

Karisimbi Trail: Volcanoes National Park, Musanze, Rwanda (2 days on mountain)

Rwenzori Trail: Kilembe Trail, managed by Rwenzori Trekking Services (8 days)

Total Elevation Gain: ~4,200 m+ across both peaks

Countries Visited: Rwanda + Uganda

Difficulty: Challenging to Serious (high-altitude mountaineering)

Best Season: June–August | December–February

Group Size: 2–8 trekkers (private or small group)

Includes: guides, porters, all mountain meals, hut/camp accommodation, permits, and technical summit gear.

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Full Detailed Rwenzori & Karisimbi Trekking Expedition (Day-by-Day)

Day 1: Arrive Kigali, Transfer to Musanze / Volcanoes National Park.

Day 2: Karisimbi Ascent: Bamboo Forest to High Mountain Camp (3,700m)

Day 3: Karisimbi Summit Day (4,507m) and Descent to Musanze

Day 4: Transfer Musanze to Bwindi Impenetrable Forest (Optional Gorilla Trekking) or Direct to Kasese

Day 5: Kilembe: Arrival, Briefing, and Expedition Preparation

Day 6: Kilembe Trailhead (1,450m) to Sine Camp (2,596m)

Day 7: Sine Camp to Mutinda Camp (3,588m) via Kalalama Camp

Day 8: Mutinda Camp to Bugata Camp (4,062m)

Day 9: Bugata Camp to Hunwick's Camp (3,974m) via Bamwanjara Pass (4,450m)

Day 10: Hunwick's Camp to Margherita Camp (4,485m) via Lake Kitandara

Day 11: Summit Day: Margherita Peak (5,109m) and Descent to Hunwick's Camp..

Day 12: Hunwick's Camp to Kiharo Camp (3,460m) via Oliver's Pass (4,505m)

Day 13: Kiharo Camp to Kilembe Trailhead and Transfer to Kasese

Day 14: Kasese to Entebbe International Airport: Departure

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Why This Expedition Stands Apart: The Case for the Dual-Summit Combination

Plenty of operators offer Rwenzori trekking, and plenty offer Karisimbi hiking. The combination is far rarer, and for good reason: it requires coordinating two entirely separate mountain management systems across two countries, with a complex logistics chain running between them. But the combination is greater than the sum of its parts for reasons that go beyond simple geography.

Karisimbi and the Rwenzori represent two fundamentally different types of African high mountain: one volcanic and open, with rapid changes in vegetation and the atmospheric weight of Dian Fossey’s gorilla conservation legacy; the other a tectonic block mountain, densely vegetated, ancient in a different way, and topped by one of the last equatorial glaciers in Africa. The contrast in geology, ecology, and character between the two ranges makes the combined expedition a more complete picture of East African mountain systems than either could provide alone.

The acclimatisation argument is also compelling. Two days on Karisimbi at up to 4,507 metres provide an excellent physiological foundation for Rwenzori’s higher demands. Trekkers who complete Karisimbi first arrive at the Kilembe Trail with their bodies already adapted to sustained effort at altitude, their gear already fully tested in mountain conditions, and their psychological confidence in their own high-altitude performance established. The transition from the Virunga volcanic environment to the Rwenzori forest environment enriches every subsequent day on the second range, as these two mountain ecosystems are as different as can be, despite both carrying UNESCO designations.

The Optional Gorilla Trekking Extension at Bwindi Impenetrable Forest

For trekkers with the time and budget, the geographical position of Bwindi Impenetrable Forest between the Virunga range and the Rwenzori makes it a logical addition to this expedition. Bwindi, in southwestern Uganda, is home to approximately half of the world’s surviving mountain gorillas, roughly 500 individuals across four gorilla trekking sectors. A permit-based one-hour encounter with a habituated gorilla family in the impenetrable forest is routinely described as the most profound wildlife experience available anywhere in Africa.

Adding one or two nights at Bwindi between the Karisimbi descent and the Kasese arrival extends the expedition by one to two days and adds an entirely different dimension to the trip: from volcanic highland to dense lowland forest, from summit to canopy, from mountain glacier to gorilla family. The contrast reinforces what makes this part of Africa unlike anywhere else: the density of extraordinary experiences within a compact geographical area. Gorilla trekking permits for Uganda are currently priced at approximately $800 per person and must be booked well in advance. Rwenzori Trekking Safaris coordinates the full logistics of the Bwindi extension as part of the combined expedition package.

Fitness, Training, and Preparation for the Combined Expedition.

The combined Karisimbi-Rwenzori expedition is a serious undertaking that demands genuine physical preparation. You will be trekking for up to twelve days consecutively at altitudes ranging from 1,450 to 5,109 meters in weather conditions that can include cold rain, wind, mist, and subzero temperatures at high camp. The summit day on Margherita involves glacier travel that adds technical demands above what is required on Karisimbi.

As a minimum preparation standard, trekkers should be able to walk six to nine hours continuously on steep, uneven terrain, carrying a daypack of eight to twelve kilograms, for at least five consecutive days. Prior multi-day trekking experience is strongly recommended, not because the navigation is complex (your guides handle all route-finding) but because understanding how your body responds to sustained daily effort over multiple days is genuinely useful information for managing pace, nutrition, and recovery on the mountain. A structured training program beginning eight to twelve weeks before departure that incorporates regular hill walking, stair climbing, or running is the minimum preparation standard.

Altitude sickness is the primary risk on both mountains. The expedition’s acclimatisation profile is carefully structured to manage this risk, starting at moderate altitude in Rwanda, ascending to 4,507 metres over two days, and then descending and re-ascending through the Kilembe Trail’s well-designed altitude ladder. Before departure, discuss the use of Diamox (acetazolamide) for altitude prophylaxis with your physician. Our guides are trained in altitude illness recognition and carry supplemental oxygen. The 10:00 AM turnaround rule on Margherita summit day is non-negotiable and has a direct bearing on safety.

Essential Kit for the Combined Expedition

Packing for a 14-day dual-summit expedition across two mountain systems requires careful thought. The key principle is the same on both mountains: layering, waterproofing, and not skimping on footwear. The conditions on Karisimbi and the Rwenzori are different; the Virunga’s volcanic terrain is steeper and more open, while the Rwenzori’s forest sections are more sheltered but wetter, but the core kit requirements overlap almost completely.

Your base layer should be synthetic or merino wool, never cotton, which holds moisture and kills warmth when wet. A substantial mid-layer fleece, a fully waterproof hardshell jacket with taped seams, and a down or synthetic insulated jacket for camp and summit use are all essential. For the lower body, waterproof trail trousers or softshell trousers with waterproof over-trousers are the combination that works on both mountains. Waterproof, ankle-supporting boots that have been properly broken in before the expedition departs are non-negotiable; blisters and boot failure at altitude have ended more expeditions than weather or fitness. Trekking poles for the steep descents on both mountains save knees and improve stability on wet root and rock sections.

For the Margherita summit specifically: a warm sleeping bag rated to at least minus ten degrees Celsius for the Rwenzori high camps, a down or heavy synthetic insulated jacket for the glacier, warm gloves, a balaclava, and sunglasses for glacier glare are all essential. Rwenzori Trekking Services provides crampons, ice axes, helmets, and harnesses at the Kilembe trailhead; you don’t need to bring your own. For Karisimbi, the same sleeping bag and insulation are required for the 3,700-metre camp night; the summit day is cold but does not require technical glacier equipment.

Best Time for the Combined Expedition

Both mountains have aligned dry seasons that make planning this combined expedition straightforward. The primary dry window, June through August, is the best period for both Karisimbi and the Rwenzori, offering lower rainfall, firmer trails, better visibility at altitude, and the highest summit success rates on Margherita. This month is also the peak booking season for gorilla trekking at Bwindi, so Bwindi permits should be secured as far in advance as possible if the gorilla extension is planned.

The secondary dry window, late December through February, is the second-best option. December and January conditions on both mountains are generally reliable, and this window avoids the peak-season crowds of July-August while still offering excellent summit prospects. Christmas and New Year on the Rwenzori glacier is a genuinely extraordinary experience for those whose family schedules allow it.

The wet seasons, April-May and October-November, make both mountains significantly more demanding. Karisimbi’s trails become deeply muddy, and its summit is frequently obscured by cloud; the Rwenzori’s forest sections are at their most demanding, with river crossings requiring more careful management. Experienced trekkers who can only travel in these windows are accommodated by Rwenzori Trekking Safaris year-round, but first-time high-altitude trekkers are strongly advised to target the dry season windows.

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From $1,400 per person
  • Duration 14 Days / 13 Nights
  • Group Size 1–8 people
  • Start Point Kigali
  • Departures Year-round
  • Summits Mount Karisimbi & Margherita Peak
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I had done Kilimanjaro twice and thought I knew what African mountains were. The Rwenzori completely reset my understanding of what a mountain can be. The Kilembe Trail is unlike anything in Tanzania, with the forest, waterfalls, and lobelia at 4,000 meters. It's a different world. And doing Karisimbi first gave me exactly the altitude preparation I needed.

James HUnited Kingdom

The combination of two very different mountains, a Virunga volcano and a Rwenzori glacier peak, in a single two-week trip was precisely what I was looking for. Karisimbi in two days, gorillas at Bwindi, then eight days inside the Mountains of the Moon. It was the best hiking trip I have ever done

Sophie LAustralia

Margherita Peak at sunrise, with the Rwenzori glaciers on one side and the Congo basin on the other. Two weeks earlier I had been standing on Karisimbi looking at Nyiragongo. This expedition gave me both mountains in a single journey, and I cannot imagine a better way to experience East African mountaineering.

David KUnited States

The Kitandara Lakes on Day 5, after summiting that moment will stay with me forever. Mirror water, surrounded by Baker and Stanley, totally silent. The porters were incredible athletes who carried more than their weight and still arrived smiling. A very humbling, transformative week.

Anna MGermany

What is the Mount Rwenzori and Mount Karisimbi trekking expedition?

The Mount Rwenzori and Mount Karisimbi trekking expedition is a 14-day combined dual-summit adventure covering two of East Africa’s greatest mountain objectives in a single integrated itinerary. The expedition begins in Rwanda with a 2-day ascent of Mount Karisimbi (4,507 m) in Volcanoes National Park, Rwanda’s highest peak and the highest of the Virunga volcanoes, before crossing into Uganda for the 8-day Kilembe Trail expedition to Margherita Peak (5,109 m) on Mount Stanley in the Rwenzori Mountains. The combined itinerary is designed around the acclimatisation benefit of ascending Karisimbi first, using the Virunga ascent to prepare the body for the higher and more technically demanding Rwenzori summit. It represents one of the finest dual-summit mountain journeys in Africa.

How high is Mount Karisimbi and how does it compare to Margherita Peak?

Mount Karisimbi stands at 4,507 metres above sea level and is the highest peak in Rwanda, the highest of the eight Virunga Range volcanoes, and the 11th highest mountain in Africa. Margherita Peak on Mount Stanley in the Rwenzori Mountains stands at 5,109 metres, 602 metres higher than Karisimbi, making it the highest point in Uganda, the highest in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the third-highest summit in Africa after Kilimanjaro (5,895 m) and Mount Kenya (5,199 m). The two summits represent fundamentally different types of mountain: Karisimbi is a dormant stratovolcano accessed via forest and open moorland with no technical climbing required; Margherita is a glaciated tectonic block mountain that requires crampons, ice axes, and roped team movement on the Stanley Plateau Glacier.

How long does the combined Rwenzori and Karisimbi expedition take?

This trek is rated challenging. You should be able to hike 6–8 hours per day for multiple consecutive days with a daypack on uneven, muddy, and rocky terrain. Summit day is the most demanding, with up to 13 hours of combined hiking, glacier travel, and high-altitude effort. We recommend three to four months of preparation, including regular long-distance hiking with elevation gain, cardiovascular training (running or cycling), and ideally one or two altitude hikes above 3,000 m before your Rwenzori departure.

Do I need mountaineering experience for this combined expedition?

Mount Karisimbi does not require technical mountaineering experience; it is a demanding hike over steep and sometimes muddy terrain at altitude, but no ropes, crampons, or ice axes are involved. Margherita Peak on the Rwenzori requires glacier travel using crampons and ice axes, with movement done on roped teams under guide supervision.

Prior crampon experience is helpful but not strictly required, as the Rwenzori Trekking Services guides provide full instruction at Margherita Camp before summit day. What is essential for a full combined expedition is strong cardiovascular fitness, prior multi-day trekking experience, and comfort with sustained physical effort at altitudes above 4,000 metres. The Karisimbi ascent earlier in the expedition serves as excellent physical and psychological preparation for the more demanding Rwenzori summit.

What gear and equipment do I need to bring personally?

We provide all technical summit equipment (crampons, ice axes, ropes, harnesses, and helmets) and complimentary rubber boots for the boggy sections. You are responsible for personal trekking gear: a quality sleeping bag rated to -10°C, waterproof hiking boots, waterproof jacket and trousers, insulating mid-layer, base layers (moisture-wicking), warm hat, gloves, trekking poles, headlamp, sunscreen, sunglasses, and personal medications. A full detailed packing list is provided upon booking. Gear hire is available locally in Kasese for items you don’t own.

Is there a gorilla trekking option included in the Rwenzori-Karisimbi expedition?

Gorilla trekking is an optional extension to the combined expedition, not a standard inclusion. The geographical routing of the expedition from Rwanda’s Volcanoes National Park to Uganda’s Rwenzori Mountains passes within two to three hours of Bwindi Impenetrable Forest, home to approximately half of the world’s remaining mountain gorillas and one of the finest wildlife experiences available anywhere in Africa. Adding one or two nights at Bwindi extends the total expedition by one to two days.

Gorilla trekking permits for Uganda are currently approximately $800 per person and must be booked well in advance. Rwenzori Trekking Safaris coordinates the Bwindi extension as part of the combined package on request.

What food is provided on the mountain?

Our cook team prepares three hot meals per day throughout the trek. Breakfasts typically include porridge, eggs, bread, fruit, and hot drinks (tea, coffee, and cocoa). Lunches are packed meals eaten on the trail or at camp. Dinners are hot, filling dishes such as rice, pasta, beans, lentils, vegetables, and meat where available.

Special dietary requirements (vegetarian, vegan, gluten-free) can be accommodated with advance notice. High-altitude days often suppress appetite; our cooks are experienced at providing calorie-dense, appealing food to keep energy levels high.

What is the best time of year for the Rwenzori and Karisimbi combined expedition?

The best time for the combined expedition is during the shared dry seasons of both mountains: June to August (primary dry season) and late December through February (secondary dry season). Both Karisimbi and the Rwenzori have clearer trails, better visibility, lower rainfall, and higher summit success rates during these windows. July and August are the most reliable months overall. The dry season also coincides with the best gorilla trekking conditions at Bwindi. The rainy seasons, April-May and October-November, make both mountains significantly more demanding and are generally not recommended for a first combined expedition. Rwenzori Trekking Safaris operates the Kilembe Trail year-round, and expert advice on current conditions for any planned travel date is available on request.

How many people will be in my group, and can I book a private trek?

Groups range from 1 to 12 people. We accept solo climbers, couples, and small groups. Private, exclusive treks are available; simply indicate these options in your booking request. Smaller groups receive more personalized guide attention on summit day, which is particularly valuable during the glacier section. The guide-to-climber ratio is maintained to ensure safety and a quality experience regardless of group size.

Is Travel and Medical Evacuation Insurance Required?

Comprehensive travel insurance that specifically covers high-altitude trekking (to at least 5,200 m) and helicopter medical evacuation is not just recommended; it is strongly required for all participants. Evacuation from the Rwenzori Mountains is challenging and potentially expensive, although it rarely happens.
Policies from providers such as World Nomads, Battleface, or Allianz typically cover this level of activity. Please confirm your policy covers technical mountaineering and helicopter evacuation before arriving. Evidence of insurance may be requested at the time of booking confirmation.

What is included in the Rwenzori and Karisimbi expedition cost?

The all-inclusive expedition package covers the Rwanda Development Board. Karisimbi hiking permit ($400 per person), ranger-guide services and overnight mountain camp on Karisimbi, all meals and porter services on Karisimbi, road transfers in Rwanda and Uganda Wildlife Authority national park permit fees for the Rwenzori, all Kilembe Trail mountain hut accommodation fees, certified lead and assistant guides, a full porter team, three hot meals per day on the Rwenzori (Days 6–13), technical summit equipment (crampons, ice axes, helmets, harnesses, and rubber boots), first aid equipment including supplemental oxygen, and Kasese-trailhead vehicle transfers. Not included: international flights to Kigali and from Entebbe; Rwandan and Ugandan visas; personal travel insurance (mandatory; must cover glacier travel above 5,000 m); personal expenses; gratuities; and pre- andpost-expedition hotel accommodation.

How hard is Mount Karisimbi compared to the Rwenzori Mountains?

Mount Karisimbi is a challenging high-altitude hike but is significantly less technically demanding than a Margherita Peak summit on the Rwenzori. Karisimbi requires no mountaineering equipment, no glacier travel, and no roped team movement. It is a steep, sustained hike over two days through dense forest and open moorland to 4,507 metres, with an overnight camp at 3,700 metres. The demands are cardiovascular fitness and altitude tolerance rather than technical skill.

The Rwenzori’s Margherita summit adds glacier travel with crampons and ice axes, a 2:30 AM summit start, and a total summit day of ten to twelve hours from Margherita Camp at 4,485 metres. The Rwenzori is also more remote, has more complex weather, and its approach requires eight days rather than two. For a combined expedition, doing Karisimbi first is strongly recommended; it builds altitude acclimatisation and mountain confidence that are directly applicable to the harder Rwenzori summit.