Country mountain directory

Republic of the Congo mountains

Start with area-specific mountain pages, then explore collections and mountain cards for route-level planning.

Areas in Republic of the Congo

Republic of the Congo mountain map

Published mountain coordinates across Republic of the Congo, rendered with the same lightweight overview style used on the global directory.

Mountain markers are rendered as lightweight overview points. Use the directory links below to open mountain pages.

Mountain collections

Mountain Ranges

Congo Highlands Peaks

Republic of the Congo's principal uplands and escarpment summits.

6 mountains in this collection

National Mountain Lists

Republic of the Congo Major Peaks

Broad summit region covering Republic of the Congo's major mountains and national high-point objectives.

1 mountain in this collection

Mountains by Elevation

1000-1999m Peaks

Peaks from 1000 to 1999 metres.

178 mountains in this collection

Mountains

Highest mountain in country Save

Mont Nabemba

1020 m in Republic of the Congo

Mont Nabemba is the highest mountain in Republic of the Congo and forms the baseline peak page for this country.

Full mountain guide is still being expanded.

Monts Avima

949 m in Republic of the Congo

Significant summit in Congo Highlands, imported from Wikidata and area-based mountain research to close live coverage gaps.

Mounts Badondo

934 m in Republic of the Congo

Significant summit in Congo Highlands, imported from Wikidata and area-based mountain research to close live coverage gaps.

Bouloukombo

810 m in Republic of the Congo

Significant summit in Congo Highlands, imported from Wikidata and area-based mountain research to close live coverage gaps.

Bombo

751 m in Republic of the Congo

Significant summit in Congo Highlands, imported from Wikidata and area-based mountain research to close live coverage gaps.

Pic Kiama

747 m in Republic of the Congo

Significant summit in Congo Highlands, imported from Wikidata and area-based mountain research to close live coverage gaps.