Akagera National Park · Rwanda
Boat safaris on
Lake Ihema
A complete guide to planning your boat experience — schedules, honest recommendations, pricing, and what every visitor needs to know before booking.
Southern park · Lake Ihema only · 4 scheduled departures dailyOverview
A different perspective on the park
Lake Ihema sits in the southern part of Akagera and all boat safaris depart from and return here. Rwanda’s second largest lake after Lake Kivu, it covers approximately 90 square kilometres — its eastern shoreline forming the border with Tanzania. Fed by the Akagera River, the lake is surrounded by papyrus swamps and forested banks, and is home to one of the highest hippo concentrations in East Africa.
The experience trades the dust and heat of a game drive for something slower: open water, birdlife in the reeds, hippos surfacing nearby, crocodiles on the banks, and wildlife arriving at the shoreline to drink. Two boats serve all departures — one for up to 11 passengers, a larger vessel for up to 20. Each scheduled trip lasts one hour, except the sunset trip which runs 90 minutes.
What you will see
Wildlife on the water
The lake reliably delivers sightings that a game drive cannot — particularly aquatic and shoreline species.
Almost always present
- Hippo pods (largest concentration in East Africa)
- Nile crocodiles
- African fish eagle
- Malachite kingfisher
- Goliath heron & great egret
- Pink-backed pelican
- Hamerkop and enormous nests
- Open-bill stork & cormorant colonies
Regularly spotted from shore
- Buffalo & elephant at the water’s edge
- Waterbuck & sitatunga (swamp antelope)
- African darter
- Yellow-billed stork
- Jacanas & ibis
- Papyrus gonolek
- Saddle-billed stork
- Marabou stork
On the shoebill stork — be realistic
The shoebill is the bird every guide mentions and the one most visitors hope to see. It is genuinely extraordinary — a prehistoric-looking bird found only in dense papyrus swamps. It is also, without question, the rarest wildlife sighting in the entire park. Most visitors do not see one. Morning trips offer the best odds, as shoebills are more active while feeding early and local guides know the papyrus stretches where they occasionally appear. Do not book a boat safari expecting a shoebill. Book it knowing everything else on the water is already worth the hour.
Daily schedule
Choosing the right departure
Your choice of boat timing directly affects the rest of your day in the park. In some cases, certain trips are not viable depending on where you are staying.
07:30
Overnight guests onlyUnreachable for day visitors from Kigali. Even departing at 05:00, a 3-hour drive plus 30 minutes from the gate to reception and another 30 to the lake makes arrival before 09:00 impossible. For guests already in the park, this is the best trip for birdlife — feeding activity peaks at first light.
09:00
RecommendedThe earliest realistic option from Kigali. The boat wraps at 10:00, leaving you the full day to drive north to the Kilala plains — where wildlife is most abundant and visibility is unobstructed. Enough time to cover both south and north before the 18:00 park close.
15:00
Not recommended (day visitors)An afternoon boat trip for a day visitor means your morning is spent only in the south — predominantly shrubs — before returning to the lake. You miss the northern Kilala plains entirely. We discourage this for any visitor whose primary goal is wildlife.
16:30
Overnight guests onlyThe most coveted trip in the park. It adds to your day rather than taking from it — a perfect close to a full day’s safari. Ends at 18:00, leaving no time to drive to any exit. Only viable for guests spending a night inside the park. In rain, rescheduled to the 07:30 or 09:00 slot.
Day visitors and afternoon departures
The 15:00 and 16:30 trips both result in a game drive that skips the northern section. The Kilala plains offer the highest concentration of wildlife in the park — open savannah unlike the shrub-heavy south. Any boat trip that pushes your game drive past 10:00 significantly reduces your window to reach it. For day visitors, the 09:00 trip is the only boat option we recommend.
If birding is your primary goal
Any departure works well for birders and afternoon trips become entirely defensible. The lake and papyrus swamps host the majority of the park’s water bird species — sightings a game drive cannot offer. The 07:30 trip (overnight guests only) is the best single departure for birding, as wader activity peaks at first light.
Preparation
What to bring on the boat
Your guide provides a safety briefing before departure. Come prepared:
The sunset trip in detail
Why the 16:30 departure stands apart
The sunset boat safari is a distinct experience. The light changes dramatically over the 90 minutes — golden hour over the water, the park quieting around you, wildlife moving to the shoreline as the day cools. It is the most memorable single activity in the park, and at $45 per adult it costs $10 more than every other scheduled trip. That gap is accurate pricing, not a premium.
It works best as the final activity of Day 1 on a multi-night stay. After a full day’s drive north and back south, arriving at the dock at 16:30 with the day’s sightings behind you and 90 minutes on the water ahead is the right way to end it. In the event of rain, the sunset trip is rescheduled to the 07:30 or 09:00 departure the following morning — a clean logistical fallback for overnight guests.
Pricing
Rates at a glance
| Trip | Details | Adult (13+) | Child (6–12) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scheduled morning / day 07:30, 09:00 or 15:00 · 1 hour · max. 11 pax | Per person | $35 | $20 |
| Sunset trip 16:30 departure · 90 minutes · max. 11 pax | Per person | $45 | $30 |
| Private non-scheduled 10:30–13:30 start window · 1 hour · up to 11 pax | Per boat | $200 flat boat rate | — |
| Private non-scheduled 10:30–13:30 start window · 1 hour · up to 20 pax | Per boat | $360 flat boat rate | — |
Children 5 and under board free. Ages 6–12 pay child rates. Annual Pass holders receive 10% off all activities.
Seasons & availability
When to book ahead
Low season
October – May
Seats rarely fill. Last-minute bookings are generally possible across all departures.
High season
June – September
Seats — especially the sunset trip — sell out regularly. Book early. The 16:30 departure fills first.
* Private non-scheduled trips start between 10:30 and 13:30 and are charged per boat, not per person.
* All boat safaris operate on Lake Ihema, southern section only. No boats operate on other park lakes.
* In rain, the sunset trip is rescheduled to the 07:30 or 09:00 departure.

