Cape Town.
The mountain makes everything else seem reasonable.
A flat-topped mountain rising 1,086 metres directly above the city. Two oceans meeting at the bottom of the continent. African penguins on a beach an hour away. And wine country in every direction, producing some of the finest bottles on earth at prices that feel like an error.
One of the most beautiful cities in the world. With a safety situation that requires specific preparation.
Cape Town is regularly cited as the most beautiful city in the world and the claim holds up. The combination of Table Mountain rising directly above the city bowl, the Atlantic seaboard with its white sand beaches and cold clear water, the Cape Peninsula driving south to the point where the oceans meet, and the vineyards of Stellenbosch and Franschhoek spreading across the mountain valleys is genuinely singular. No other major city has this geographic drama at every turn.
The food and wine scene is world-class. The craft beer movement, the restaurant scene in Woodstock and the City Bowl, the wine estates doing extraordinary things with Pinotage and Chenin Blanc at prices that make French wine look absurdly overpriced — Cape Town has been one of the world's most exciting food and drink destinations for a decade.
The honest note: Cape Town has significant safety challenges that visitors must understand before arriving. South Africa has high rates of violent crime, and while the main tourist areas are generally safe with appropriate precautions, certain areas are genuinely dangerous and visitors occasionally have serious incidents. The safety section of this guide is not optional reading — it is part of the trip planning. With preparation, Cape Town is an extraordinary destination. Without it, risks are real.
City Bowl for the centre. Sea Point for the ocean. Woodstock for the food.
Cape Town's neighbourhoods are distinctive and geographically clear. The City Bowl sits between Table Mountain and the harbour. The Atlantic Seaboard runs south along the ocean. Woodstock and Salt River are the creative, food-focused inner suburbs. The choice of where to stay shapes your daily experience significantly.
The historic city centre between Table Mountain and the harbour. De Waterkant is the most gentrified and tourist-friendly part — cobblestoned streets, boutique hotels, excellent restaurants, and a 20-minute walk to both the V&A Waterfront and the Bo-Kaap. The best base for first-time visitors who want walkability and access to everything. The City Bowl has the best Table Mountain views from street level.
The Atlantic seaboard strip north of Camps Bay — a dense apartment neighbourhood with an extraordinary ocean promenade, excellent restaurants, and the most active outdoor lifestyle in Cape Town. The Sea Point promenade is used by runners, cyclists, and families from 6am daily. Good mid-range accommodation at lower prices than Camps Bay.
The most glamorous address on the Atlantic seaboard — palm-lined beach boulevard, the four Clifton beaches (arguably the most beautiful in Cape Town), luxury villas and hotels, and the most expensive restaurants on the seaboard. Cold Atlantic water despite the sunshine. The best base for beach-focused visitors with a higher budget.
The former industrial neighbourhood east of the City Bowl that has become Cape Town's most creative district — the Old Biscuit Mill Saturday market, excellent independent restaurants, art galleries, design studios, and the most interesting food scene in the city. Not suited for walking alone at night but excellent for eating and the market.
World-class hotels at excellent exchange rates. Book well ahead for December and January.
Cape Town offers extraordinary accommodation value for visitors paying in USD, EUR, or GBP due to the rand exchange rate. A luxury boutique hotel that would cost $400 in London costs $120–180 in Cape Town. The peak season (December–January) fills quickly — book 3–4 months ahead for Christmas and New Year.
The finest hotel in Cape Town — a 1912 Edwardian mansion on the cliffs above Bantry Bay with two infinity pools overlooking the Atlantic, an exceptional wine cellar (one of the best private collections in South Africa), and the most extraordinary ocean views of any hotel in the city. Only 13 rooms and suites.
Check availability →A converted grain silo at the V&A Waterfront, with bubbled glass windows, the Zeitz MOCAA contemporary African art museum below, and a rooftop pool facing Table Mountain. One of the most architecturally extraordinary hotels in Africa and a design landmark in its own right.
Check availability →A beautifully restored Victorian house in the Gardens suburb of the City Bowl — 12 rooms around a courtyard pool, excellent breakfast, and a genuinely residential neighbourhood feel without sacrificing central access. The best mid-range boutique option in the City Bowl.
Check availability →A design-forward boutique hotel on the Camps Bay beachfront with a stunning pool deck, mountain views, and the best location on the Atlantic seaboard. Consistently praised for service and design. The most coveted mid-range beach hotel in Cape Town.
Check availability →One of the most praised hostels in Cape Town, in a De Waterkant Victorian house with a rooftop deck and Table Mountain views. Genuinely social atmosphere, excellent location, and helpful staff who know the city extremely well. Private rooms available.
Check availability →An intimate luxury hotel in the Cape Winelands town of Franschhoek — 8 suites in a Cape Dutch manor house surrounded by vineyards. For visitors who want to base themselves in the wine country rather than the city, Franschhoek is one of the most beautiful villages in South Africa.
Check availability →Find and compare hotels across Cape Town's neighbourhoods.
World-class wines at one-fifth the European price. And a food scene that has nothing to prove.
Cape Town's food scene draws on the Cape Malay culinary tradition (brought by slaves from Southeast Asia in the 17th century), the braai (barbecue) culture of South Africa, extraordinary Atlantic seafood, and a contemporary restaurant scene that has attracted serious international attention. The wine — Stellenbosch Cabernet Sauvignon, Swartland Syrah, Constantia Sauvignon Blanc — is at a world-class level at prices that make the same quality in France or California look absurd.
A mild, fragrant curry tradition brought by Malay and Indonesian slaves to the Cape in the 17th century — chicken or lamb slow-cooked with turmeric, cardamom, cinnamon, and dried apricots into something sweeter and more aromatic than Indian curries. Served with yellow rice, sliced banana, and chutney. The Bo-Kaap neighbourhood on the slopes of Signal Hill is the heartland of this tradition. Biesmiellah and The Noon Gun Tearoom are two of the most respected.
The South African barbecue — a social institution and national religion simultaneously. Boerewors (spiced beef sausage), sosaties (marinated skewers), lamb chops, and corn on the coals. The braai is not a meal, it is an event — it starts at 3pm and ends when it ends. Mzoli's in Gugulethu township (go on a Sunday with a guide) is the most celebrated braai experience in Cape Town. The Braai Hut in Woodstock is a more accessible starting point.
South African wine has quietly become one of the world's great wine traditions — the Cape's unique terroir (old granite soils, cooling Atlantic influence, dramatic temperature variation) produces Cabernet Sauvignon, Pinotage, Chenin Blanc, and Sauvignon Blanc of world-class quality. A cellar door tasting at Kanonkop (Pinotage), Haskell (Syrah), or Klein Constantia (Vin de Constance) costs what a glass of average wine costs in a London bar, and the wine is incomparably better.
A long, oily, flavourful fish from the cold Atlantic waters off the Cape — grilled over coals with apricot jam glaze and lemon, or smoked and spread on bread. A Cape Town specific that tastes nothing like any other fish in South African restaurants. The fishing boats at Kalk Bay harbour sell fresh snoek directly off the boat on good catch days. One of the most distinctive local food experiences on the Cape Peninsula.
The Neighbourgoods Market at the Old Biscuit Mill in Woodstock is consistently cited as one of the finest food markets in the world — an indoor-outdoor market of artisan producers, restaurant pop-ups, cheese makers, sourdough bakers, wine merchants, and street food from across the Cape. Every top Cape Town restaurant chef does something here. Saturdays only, 9am–2pm. Arrive before 10am for the best selection.
Table Mountain first. Cape Point and Boulders Beach on the same day. Winelands whenever possible.
Cape Town's activities are primarily outdoors and landscape-driven — the mountain, the peninsula, the beaches, the wine estates. The city rewards those who hire a car for at least one day and drive the Cape Peninsula circuit from the city to Cape Point and back via the Atlantic coast.
The defining feature of Cape Town — a 1,086-metre flat-topped sandstone massif rising directly above the city. Take the rotating cable car for the summit (book online, it sells out and closes in high winds). Or hike Platteklip Gorge (2 hours up, clearly marked). The 360-degree summit view — city, two oceans, peninsula, winelands — is one of the great panoramas on earth. Check cloud cover before going: the "tablecloth" cloud that pours over the top closes the cable car.
Book cable car →A colony of 3,000 African penguins on a sheltered granite boulder beach at Simon's Town on the False Bay side of the Peninsula. The penguins are remarkably unafraid of people and walk within metres of the boardwalks. The beach itself is beautiful and swimmable (False Bay water is warmer than the Atlantic side). Combine with Cape Point on the same day — they are 30 minutes apart.
Cape Peninsula tours →The Cape Peninsula circuit is one of the great road trips in Africa — Chapman's Peak Drive (a cliff road cut into the Atlantic mountain face), Hout Bay, Noordhoek Beach, Cape Point at the tip of the Peninsula, Boulders Beach penguins, and Kalk Bay back to the city. Allow a full day. The road is free from the Muizenberg side; Chapman's Peak Drive charges a toll of R60 each way.
Book a guided tour →The wine regions of Stellenbosch, Franschhoek, and Constantia are within an hour of Cape Town — Cape Dutch manor houses on mountain-backed valleys, cellar door tastings of extraordinary quality at minimal cost, and the finest winery restaurants in South Africa. The Franschhoek Wine Tram (a hop-on hop-off tram between estates) is one of the more pleasurable ways to spend an afternoon in South Africa without driving.
Book Winelands tours →The most photogenic neighbourhood in Cape Town — steep cobblestoned streets of brightly painted Cape Dutch and Georgian houses that form the heartland of the Cape Malay community. The colours (turquoise, yellow, pink, red) are extraordinary against the mountain backdrop. A guided tour with a Bo-Kaap resident provides the historical and cultural context that transforms a pretty street into something genuinely meaningful. The Bo-Kaap Museum is small but excellent.
Bo-Kaap tours →The island prison where Nelson Mandela was held for 18 of his 27 years in captivity — now a UNESCO World Heritage Site and museum. The tours are led by former political prisoners. The emotional weight of the experience is significant. Book well in advance online — the tours sell out weeks ahead. Weather can cancel the ferry; have a backup day in your itinerary.
Book Robben Island →Uber for the city. Rental car for the Peninsula and Winelands.
Cape Town's public transport is limited in tourist areas. Uber is reliable, affordable, and the safest option for getting around the city. A rental car is essential or very useful for the Cape Peninsula and the Winelands. Never hail an unofficial taxi on the street.
The safest and most reliable option for getting around Cape Town. Available across the main tourist areas 24 hours. Prices are very affordable in rand terms. Always use Uber rather than hailing taxis on the street — metered taxis exist but informal taxis carry safety risks. Bolt also operates in Cape Town at slightly lower prices.
R50–200 most journeysEssential for the Cape Peninsula circuit (Cape Point, Boulders Beach, Chapman's Peak) and the Winelands. International driving licence required. Drive on the left. Most major agencies at the airport. Fuel is significantly cheaper than Europe. A GPS or downloaded maps are recommended for navigation.
R600–1,200/dayA modern BRT bus network covering the City Bowl, V&A Waterfront, Sea Point, Camps Bay, and the airport. Requires a myconnect card (R35 from stations). Runs every 10–20 minutes on main routes. The most affordable public transport option and perfectly safe on the main tourist routes.
R10–25 per journeyCape Town International Airport (CPT) is 20km from the City Bowl. A metered taxi from the official taxi rank costs R300–400. An Uber costs R180–250. The MyCiTi airport bus to the City Bowl costs R80 and takes 45–60 minutes with traffic. Book an Uber before exiting — do not accept offers from drivers inside the arrivals hall.
R80 (bus) / R200 (Uber) / R350 (metered taxi)Shared airport shuttle services operate to most accommodation from R120–180 per person. Slower than Uber but cheaper for solo travellers. Operators like Backpacker Bus and Cape Shuttle run reliable services. Book online in advance for early morning or late night arrivals.
R120–180 per personVodacom, MTN, and Telkom SA SIMs are available at the airport. A tourist SIM with data costs R100–200. An Airalo eSIM for South Africa also works well. Coverage is good across the City Bowl, Atlantic seaboard, Peninsula, and Winelands.
SIM from R100 / eSIM from $5Outstanding value for foreign currency holders. Strong rand equivalent quality at weak rand prices.
Cape Town is exceptional value for visitors paying in USD, EUR, or GBP. The rand's sustained weakness means world-class restaurants, wine, and accommodation cost a fraction of equivalent quality elsewhere. A bottle of exceptional Stellenbosch Cabernet at a restaurant costs $15–25 USD. A Michelin-equivalent tasting menu costs $60–80 USD. A luxury boutique hotel costs $100–200 USD. This value equation is the primary reason Cape Town has attracted such a strong international visitor base.
| Category | Budget (R800–1,200/day) | Mid-range (R2,000–4,000/day) | Comfortable (R6,000+/day) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Accommodation | R300–600 Hostel or budget guesthouse |
R1,500–3,000 Boutique hotel, De Waterkant or Sea Point |
R5,000+ Ellerman House, Silo Hotel, Camps Bay villas |
| Food | R150–300 Old Biscuit Mill, local restaurants |
R400–800 Restaurant dinner + wine |
R1,200+ Fine dining, winery lunches |
| Transport | R80–200 Uber + MyCiTi bus |
R300–600 Uber + car rental day |
R800+ Private car hire, airport transfers |
| Activities | R150–400 Table Mountain hike, Bo-Kaap, beaches |
R500–1,000 Cable car + Boulders + Robben Island |
R1,500+ Winelands, private tours, shark cage diving |
November to April for the beach. February to April for the Winelands harvest.
Cape Town has a Mediterranean climate — warm, dry summers and cool, wet winters. The summer season (November–April) is peak tourist time with the best beach weather and the Winelands harvest in February–April. Winter (June–August) is cooler and wetter but Table Mountain is often dramatically cloud-draped and prices drop significantly. The Cape is notorious for changeable weather — "four seasons in one day" is a local cliché that is entirely accurate.
Specific preparation is essential. Not as a reason not to come, but as a condition of coming well.
Overall safety score — Medium Risk
Cape Town is a city of extreme contrasts — some areas are as safe as anywhere in the world; others have very high crime rates. Understanding the distinction is the key to a safe visit.
Do not walk in the CBD after dark. Do not walk anywhere unfamiliar after sunset. Avoid the Cape Flats, certain parts of Woodstock and Salt River, and any area not explicitly recommended by your accommodation. The contrast between safe tourist areas and genuinely dangerous peripheral areas is real and sharp. Your accommodation will be the best source of current, specific area advice.
Do not display phones, cameras, or jewellery on the street, particularly in the CBD. Keep bags on your lap in restaurants rather than on chairs. Smash-and-grab car break-ins at traffic lights are common — keep valuables out of sight and windows up at red lights. ATMs inside shopping centres are safer than standalone street ATMs.
Keep windows up and doors locked while driving. Do not leave anything visible in a parked car — not a bag, not a jacket, not a charger cable. Smash-and-grab theft from parked cars is frequent. Park in attended car parks where possible. The Atlantic Seaboard and Winelands areas are significantly safer than the CBD and township areas for parking.
Cape Town is manageable for solo female travellers in the specific safe areas with specific precautions. De Waterkant, Sea Point, Camps Bay, and the V&A Waterfront are all comfortable. Do not walk alone after dark anywhere. Use Uber exclusively for night transport. The safety rules apply more strictly here than in most European or Southeast Asian cities, but they are learnable and the reward is extraordinary.
What Capetonians never think to tell tourists.
Stellenbosch is 45 minutes. The Cape Peninsula is a full day. Both are mandatory.
Chapman's Peak Drive, Cape Point at the tip of Africa, Boulders Beach penguins at Simon's Town, and Kalk Bay on the return. One of the great road trips in Africa. Rent a car or book a tour. Allow a full day — there is too much to rush.
The two most accessible Winelands towns — Stellenbosch has the most estates and the best university-town atmosphere; Franschhoek is more upmarket with the finest winery restaurants. The Franschhoek Wine Tram is the easiest way to visit multiple estates without driving.
The small coastal town of Hermanus is considered the world's best land-based whale watching destination. Southern right whales come into Walker Bay between June and November — visible from the coastal cliff path at close range. The season peaks in September and October. Free to watch from the cliffs; boat tours available from R800.
The coastal Garden Route east of Cape Town — Wilderness, Knysna Lagoon, the Tsitsikamma forest, the Bloukrans Bridge bungee jump (highest commercial bungee in the world at 216m). Too much for a day trip but one of the great South African road trips as an extension of a Cape Town visit.
