The choice at Entebbe airport comes down to negotiating on the spot or having everything arranged before you land. Both work, but they suit different travelers.
Airport taxis
Taxis at Entebbe are not metered, so you agree a price before departing and drivers will open high. But it is not true that there is no official figure at all: Uganda's Civil Aviation Authority publishes the airport-to-Kampala taxi fare as USD 40, or UGX 100,000 (about 40 minutes). That is the airport authority's own published rate — a fair figure to quote back to a driver who opens higher. Agree the fare before you get in, and use a taxi carrying the yellow Airport Taxi label. The vehicles range from worn sedans to decent SUVs.
The advantage is flexibility. You do not need to plan anything in advance, and if you are a seasoned traveler in East Africa, the process is familiar. The disadvantage is inconsistency. You do not know the vehicle quality, the driver's professionalism, or whether the quoted price is fair until you are already committed.
Pre-booked transfers
A pre-booked transfer is priced at booking and does not move: you pay the figure you saw, the driver meets you in arrivals with your name, and the vehicle is typically newer and better maintained than the average taxi. Compare the quote against the CAA's published USD 40 taxi rate to see what the convenience is costing you.
The advantage is predictability. You know the cost, the vehicle type, and someone is accountable if something goes wrong. The disadvantage is that you need to arrange it before you arrive, and you lose the chance of getting a lower price through skilled negotiation.
What actually matters
Price: Pre-booked transfers are often cheaper than what most visitors end up paying at the taxi rank, because bargaining in an unfamiliar country while tired puts you at a disadvantage.
Vehicle quality: Transfer services generally maintain their fleets to a higher standard. Taxi quality is unpredictable.
Accountability: If a transfer driver overcharges or takes a detour, you have a company to complain to. With a random taxi, you have no recourse.
Convenience: Walking out of arrivals and getting straight into a waiting car, versus spending 15-20 minutes negotiating in a parking lot.
Common taxi issues at Entebbe
Some drivers will claim the quoted price was per person, not per car. Clarify this before you get in. Others may suggest taking a longer route or stopping for fuel. Agree on the destination and route upfront. These are not scams unique to Uganda; they happen at airports worldwide. But if you would rather skip the hassle entirely, a pre-booked transfer is the simpler choice.
The bottom line
Experienced East Africa travelers who enjoy the negotiation may prefer taxis. Everyone else, especially first-time visitors, families, or anyone arriving late, will likely find a pre-booked transfer more practical and sometimes cheaper.