Rwanda Gorilla Trekking for Solo Travellers 2026
Rwanda is one of the most solo-travel-friendly countries in Africa. It is safe (consistently ranked among Africa's safest destinations), compact (you can cross the country in 3 hours), and logistically straightforward. Kigali's boutique guesthouses have strong solo traveller communities. And gorilla trekking, while expensive, is structured in a way that works well for solo travellers.
How the Group System Works for Solo Trekkers
Every morning, trekkers are assigned to a gorilla family group at Kinigi headquarters. Each group has a maximum of 8 permit holders. As a solo traveller, you will be assigned alongside other permit holders — typically a mix of couples, small groups, and other solos. You trek together, guided by 2-3 armed trackers and a lead guide. You spend your 1-hour gorilla encounter with your assigned group of up to 8 people.
This means solo trekkers are never alone in the forest — the group structure is built in. You will meet your group at the morning briefing, trek together (typically 1-6 hours depending on where the gorillas have moved), and share the hour-long encounter. Many solo travellers make connections during trek day that turn into lunch together back at Kinigi or dinner at a lodge that evening.
Group Trek vs Private Trek for Solo Travellers
Group Trek (Shared Permit Slot, $1,500 RDB + $200 Guide = $1,700 total)
Most solo travellers book through Rwanda SafariTours in a private vehicle with a personal guide, but share their gorilla family group with whoever else has permits for that day. This is the standard approach and works very well. You have your own transport and guide while benefiting from the social atmosphere of the mixed trekking group.
Private Trek (All 8 Slots)
Some solo travellers choose to buy all 8 permits for a family group — $12,000 for a completely private hour with gorillas. This is extremely rare for solo travellers and only makes sense for those for whom budget is genuinely no consideration and maximum privacy matters above all else. The permit allocation is the same: $1,500 per permit × 8 = $12,000 total, plus Rwanda SafariTours guide and vehicle fee.
For most solo travellers, the standard group arrangement delivers an excellent experience at the standard $1,700 total cost.
Solo Travel Safety in Rwanda
Rwanda is genuinely one of Africa's safest countries. The Global Peace Index consistently ranks it among the top safe destinations on the continent. Kigali has street lighting, functioning traffic management, and very low street crime compared to other East African capitals. It is common to see solo female travellers walking in Kigali's Nyamirambo or Kimironko neighbourhoods in the evenings. Musanze (near Volcanoes National Park) is a small, safe town.
The national parks are fully protected with ranger-guided access — you are never without an armed escort in gorilla habitat. There are no safety concerns specific to gorilla trekking for solo travellers.
Best Lodges for Solo Travellers Near Volcanoes NP
- Five Volcanoes Boutique Hotel (Musanze) — the social hub for travellers near the park. Communal dining, a lively bar, and the terrace consistently fills with solo travellers comparing trek stories. Best value for solo traveller connection.
- Virunga Lodge — communal dinner set-up means you share the dining table with whoever else is staying. Solo travellers often meet couples and small groups here. Beautiful setting over Lakes Burera and Ruhondo.
- Mountain Gorilla View Lodge — budget-friendly, communal atmosphere, popular with solo backpackers who want to spend budget on the permit rather than the lodge.
Solo Travel Costs for Rwanda Gorilla Trekking 2026
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| RDB Gorilla Permit | $1,500 |
| Rwanda SafariTours private 4x4 + guide (1 pax) | $200 |
| Porter at Kinigi (recommended) | $15–20 |
| Lodge near Volcanoes NP (per night) | $60–350+ |
| Kigali accommodation (per night) | $30–200 |
The gorilla permit price is non-negotiable and the same for all solo travellers — it is an RDB government fee. The Rwanda SafariTours service fee covers a private vehicle and guide from Kigali to Kinigi and back ($200 for 1 person vs $200 split between 2 people on a shared booking). Single supplement pricing for vehicles is competitive and transparently quoted.
Practical Tips for Solo Gorilla Trekking Rwanda
- Book permits early — RDB allocates 8 permits per gorilla family per day. In peak season (June-September, December-January) permits sell out weeks in advance. As a solo traveller, you only need one permit but you are competing with groups who may book several at once.
- Trek day — wear your lodge name tag so other trekkers know where you are staying (useful for arranging shared transport or dinner). Most lodges near Kinigi know each other and it is easy to arrange an informal group dinner.
- Camera settings — as a solo trekker, nobody is managing your camera for you. Pre-set your camera the night before: turn off flash (mandatory anyway), set ISO to 1600–3200, set to burst mode. In the gorilla hour, you want to be shooting, not adjusting settings.
- Porter at Kinigi — hire one. As a solo trekker you will want both hands free for your camera during the encounter, and you will be significantly more relaxed on the trek if you are not carrying your own pack up the volcano.
Rwanda SafariTours handles over 200 solo travellers per year from Kigali to Volcanoes National Park. WhatsApp +250 787 619 387 to book or ask questions — response within 2 hours during Kigali business hours (8am–7pm CAT).
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