Best Things to Do in Rwanda

Rwanda is a small, landlocked East African country known as the Land of a Thousand Hills, covering 26,000 sq km in the Great Rift Valley region. Since the genocide of 1994, it has undergone one of the most remarkable development trajectories in Africa β€” today it is among the cleanest, safest, and most efficiently governed countries on the continent. The primary draw is mountain gorilla trekking in Volcanoes National Park, one of the world's most extraordinary wildlife experiences, combined with chimpanzee tracking in Nyungwe Forest and the cultural depth of Kigali.

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The unmissable in Rwanda

These are the staple sights β€” don't leave Rwanda without seeing them.

1
Kigali Genocide Memorial
#1 must-see

Kigali Genocide Memorial

πŸ“ KG 14 Avenue, Kigali
πŸ• Mon–Fri 9:00 AM-5:00 PM Β· Sat 1:00 PM-5:00 PM Β· Sun 9:00 AM-5:00 PM
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2
Volcanoes National Park
#2 must-see

Volcanoes National Park

πŸ“ Musanze District, Northern Province
πŸ• Mon–Sun Open 24h
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Destinations in Rwanda

Kigali

Kigali

Kigali is the capital and largest city of Rwanda, one of Africa's cleanest, safest, and most rapidly developing…

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More attractions in Rwanda

Kigali Genocide Memorial 1
#1 must-see

Kigali Genocide Memorial

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πŸ“ KG 14 Avenue, Kigali

The Kigali Genocide Memorial stands as Rwanda’s most important site of remembrance, bearing witness to the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi in which an estimated 800,000 people were murdered in the space of just one hundred days. Located in the Gisozi neighbourhood of the capital, the memorial site contains the remains of more than 250,000 victims interred in mass graves on the grounds β€” a number that is itself a measure of the catastrophe’s scale. The permanent exhibition inside traces the history of Rwanda’s colonial period and the decades of ethnic tension deliberately cultivated by successive governments, leading methodically and unflinchingly to April 1994. Rooms dedicated to the personal stories of victims β€” photographs, clothing, and possessions preserved behind glass β€” transform statistics into individual human lives with devastating effect. A separate gallery documents genocides from other parts of the world, situating Rwanda within a broader and painful history of humanity’s capacity for mass violence. The children’s room, which presents the names, ages, and favourite things of child victims, is among the most quietly devastating spaces in any memorial anywhere. The memorial is sensitively designed and carefully maintained, with trained guides available to assist visitors. For anyone seeking to understand modern Rwanda, it is an essential and sobering starting point.

Volcanoes National Park 2
#2 must-see

Volcanoes National Park

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πŸ“ Musanze District, Northern Province

Volcanoes National Park in Rwanda’s Northern Province protects one of the last great strongholds of the mountain gorilla (Gorilla beringei beringei), a species whose survival has become one of conservation’s most celebrated success stories. The park covers approximately 160 square kilometres of Afromontane forest and bamboo woodland draped across five dormant volcanic peaks β€” Karisimbi, Bisoke, Muhabura, Gahinga, and Sabyinyo β€” whose forested slopes straddle the borders of Rwanda, Uganda, and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Guided gorilla trekking, which requires a permit and offers a one-hour visit with a habituated family group, remains the park’s signature experience and one of the most moving wildlife encounters available anywhere in the world. The research station established by Dian Fossey in 1967 lies within the park boundaries, and her grave β€” alongside those of the gorillas she studied β€” can be visited on a separate hike to the Karisoke Research Centre site. Beyond gorillas, the park shelters golden monkeys, forest buffalo, and more than 178 bird species. The misty, high-altitude forest creates an atmosphere of primordial mystery that no amount of preparation quite readies you for. Visit fees directly fund conservation efforts and community development programmes in surrounding villages.

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Rwanda’s transformation since 1994 is extraordinary: a country that emerged from genocide with nearly 90% of its population either dead, displaced, or imprisoned has rebuilt itself into one of Africa’s best-governed, cleanest, and safest states. Kigali is regularly cited as the cleanest city in Africa; plastic bags are banned; motorcycle taxis are fully licensed and helmeted. The things to do in Rwanda are anchored by mountain gorilla trekking β€” one of the world’s most intense wildlife experiences β€” and increasingly include chimpanzee tracking in Nyungwe Forest, birding (Rwanda has 700+ bird species, including many Albertine Rift endemics), golden monkey trekking in the Virunga volcanoes, and relaxing on the shores of Lake Kivu.

Best time to visit

June through September (the long dry season) is the best time for gorilla trekking: trails are drier and clearer, though this is also peak tourist season. December through February (the short dry season) is an excellent alternative with fewer visitors. The two rainy seasons (March-May and October-November) make gorilla trekking more physically challenging (muddy, wet) but permits are easier to obtain and landscape is at its most lush. Gorilla trekking is possible year-round β€” the gorillas are habituated and resident in the park regardless of weather.

Getting around

Kigali International Airport (KGL) has good connections from European and African hub cities. Within Rwanda, a car (with or without driver) is the most practical transport. The Kigali-Musanze (Volcanoes Park gateway) road is 2.5 hours on a good paved road. Musanze to Nyungwe Forest is 5+ hours. Lake Kivu’s shore towns (Gisenyi/Rubavu, Kibuye/Karongi, Cyangugu/Rusizi) are reached by road or boat along the lake. Rwanda has no passenger rail. Moto taxis (motorcycle taxis) in Kigali are efficient and formally regulated.

What to eat and drink

Rwandan food is simple and filling: brochettes (grilled meat skewers, the national street food), ugali (maize porridge), isombe (cassava leaves with eggplant and beans), matoke (cooked plantain), and fresh tilapia from Lake Kivu. Kigali’s restaurant scene has developed significantly with Ethiopian, Indian, Lebanese, and international options alongside Rwandan food. Primus and Mutzig are the local beers; Urwagwa (banana beer, traditional, slightly sour and low-alcohol) is worth trying once. Coffee is excellent β€” Rwanda produces some of Africa’s finest specialty coffee.Top things to doMountain gorilla trekking – The reason most visitors come to Rwanda. Volcanoes National Park hosts five habituated gorilla families, each visited by groups of 8 per day. A permit costs $1,500 (increased from $700 in 2017; part of the conservation model). The trek takes 1-8 hours depending on the gorillas’ location, and you spend 1 hour with the family. It is extraordinary: being in the presence of these animals in their natural habitat is one of the most affecting wildlife encounters on earth.Kigali Genocide Memorial – A moving and important site: the mass graves of 250,000 victims of the 1994 genocide and a comprehensive museum on the history, causes, and aftermath. Essential context for understanding Rwanda. The memorial is in Gisozi, 4km from the city center.Golden monkey trekking – The Virunga volcanoes also host habituated golden monkeys (endemic to the Albertine Rift), trekked in a separate program from the gorillas. Permits are $100, the trek is shorter and easier, and the encounters are genuine. A good addition to a gorilla trek day in Volcanoes Park.Nyungwe Forest – Rwanda’s ancient montane rainforest in the southwest, harboring chimpanzees, colobus monkeys (the most spectacular troop of Angola colobus in Africa, visible from the forest canopy walk), and over 300 bird species. The Nyungwe Forest Canopy Walk (200m long, 50m above the forest floor) is one of the most unusual experiences in East Africa.