A mountain gorilla in the misty forest of Volcanoes National Park, Rwanda

Volcanoes National Park, Rwanda

96 gorilla trekking permits a day — that's the whole system

Rwanda Development Board issues exactly 96 permits daily — 12 habituated gorilla families, 8 visitors each — at a fixed $1,500 per person. There's no bidding, no upgrade tier, no way to buy more access. Once a day's permits are gone, they're gone, and the price doesn't move for demand.

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Unlike a normal attraction, Rwanda's gorilla trekking has zero flexibility on supply — Rwanda Development Board issues exactly 96 permits a day, full stop, and the price is fixed regardless of demand. The only lever you control is how far ahead you book.

Trip planning basics

Daily permit cap
96 total — 12 families × 8 visitors, fixed by RDB
Permit price
US$1,500/person, foreign non-resident rate — non-negotiable
Time with gorillas
Strictly 1 hour once your group finds them
Minimum age
15 — no exceptions

Why this isn't a normal ticket

The permit system is the product

Rwanda Development Board (RDB) issues gorilla trekking permits for Volcanoes National Park, capped at 96 per day — 12 habituated gorilla families, 8 visitors each. Permits can technically be booked directly through RDB's own portal, but in practice most travelers go through a tour operator, who checks real-time availability and typically takes a deposit with the balance due later.

One fixed price, no tiers

The foreign non-resident rate is a flat US$1,500 per person — there's no premium tier, no smaller-group upsell, no way to pay more for better access. A discounted rate (~$1,050) applies November through May when combined with an Akagera or Nyungwe park visit, but the June-October peak season runs full price only.

The trek itself is unpredictable by design

You don't choose which gorilla family you see — RDB assigns groups the morning of, based on where each family was last located. The hike to reach them can run anywhere from 30 minutes to 6-7 hours round trip, and there's no way to know in advance which you'll get. See the trek-length guide below for how to plan around that uncertainty.

Permits, cost & season guides

Questions people actually ask

How much does a Rwanda gorilla trekking permit cost?

US$1,500 per person for foreign non-residents, set directly by Rwanda Development Board — this is a fixed government rate, not something operators mark up or discount, except for the official November-May multi-park bundle rate of around $1,050.

Can I book a gorilla permit myself, without a tour operator?

Technically yes — RDB's own booking portal allows direct booking. In practice, most visitors go through a tour operator anyway, since operators handle real-time availability checks, logistics, and typically the pre-trek accommodation and transport that a standalone permit doesn't include.

How long is the actual hike to see the gorillas?

It varies enormously and isn't knowable in advance — anywhere from 30 minutes to 6-7 hours round trip depending on which gorilla family you're assigned and where they were last located. Once you find them, viewing time is a strict 1 hour regardless of how long the hike took.

Is there a minimum age for gorilla trekking?

Yes — 15, with no exceptions in Rwanda. This is stricter than neighboring Uganda, which sometimes allows some flexibility for a 14-year-old turning 15 within the year.

How does Rwanda compare to Uganda for gorilla trekking?

Rwanda's permit costs roughly double Uganda's (commonly cited around $800 for Uganda vs Rwanda's fixed $1,500), but Rwanda is significantly more accessible — Volcanoes National Park is about 2-3 hours' drive from Kigali International Airport, versus a much longer overland trip or a domestic flight to reach Uganda's Bwindi Impenetrable Forest.

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