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15 Most Interesting Places in South Africa (2026 Travel Guide)
South Africa is Africa’s most developed and most diverse travel destination — a country of extraordinary landscape range (desert, fynbos, highveld savanna, subtropical coast, Drakensberg mountains), world-class wine regions, the Big Five in accessible safari parks, and two of the southern hemisphere’s finest cities. These are its 15 most interesting places.

1. Cape Town
Cape Town is Africa’s most beautiful city and one of the world’s finest. The combination of Table Mountain (a flat-topped massif rising 1,085 metres directly above the city, accessible by cable car or hiking trail), the Cape Peninsula (Cape Point, Boulder’s Beach penguins, Chapman’s Peak), the V&A Waterfront (the best-developed harbour precinct in Africa), and the Bo-Kaap neighbourhood (pastel-painted houses of the Cape Malay community) gives the city an extraordinary diversity of experiences within a single compact destination. Allow at least five days; a car is essential for exploring the peninsula.
2. Kruger National Park
Kruger is Africa’s most accessible Big Five safari destination — 20,000 square kilometres bordering Mozambique, with an extensive self-drive network that makes game viewing achievable without a guide. The southern Kruger (around Skukuza and Lower Sabie) has the highest game density. The private reserves bordering the western boundary — Sabi Sands (the Rattray reserve, Lion Sands, Singita), Timbavati, and Klaserie — offer the most intensive guiding experience in Africa, with off-road driving and the most reliable leopard sightings in the world.

3. The Winelands
The Cape Winelands — centred on Stellenbosch, Franschhoek, and Paarl — produce South Africa’s finest wines in a landscape of oak-lined streets, Cape Dutch manor houses, and mountain-framed valley vineyards. Stellenbosch has the best concentration of restaurants and tasting rooms in the region; Franschhoek (the Huguenot Valley) offers the most scenic drive and the finest dining. The Cape Winelands are 45 minutes from Cape Town and essential for any visit longer than three days.

4-15. The Complete South Africa
The Garden Route (the coastal drive from Mossel Bay to Storms River — Knysna Lagoon, the Tsitsikamma forest, Plettenberg Bay, and the Bloukrans bungee jump). The Drakensberg (the escarpment that forms the border between South Africa and Lesotho — world-class hiking, San rock art, and the highest peaks in southern Africa). Johannesburg (South Africa’s economic capital — the Apartheid Museum, Constitution Hill, the Soweto township tour, and the world-class Zeitz MOCAA contemporary art museum). iSimangaliso Wetland Park (UNESCO World Heritage Site — hippo and crocodile boat safaris, whale sharks, leatherback turtles nesting on the beach). Robben Island (the island where Nelson Mandela was imprisoned for 18 years — the most significant historical site in post-apartheid South Africa, accessible by ferry from Cape Town). Addo Elephant Park (the Eastern Cape’s accessible Big Five park — the highest elephant density in Africa and easy access from Port Elizabeth/Gqeberha). Cape Point (the southwestern tip of the Cape Peninsula — the most dramatic coastal scenery in southern Africa). Hermanus (the best land-based whale watching in the world — southern right whales in Walker Bay from July to November). The Wild Coast (one of South Africa’s least-visited and most beautiful coastlines — the Nelson Mandela birthplace region, the Hole in the Wall, and the Coffee Bay surf break). Sun City and Pilanesberg (a family-friendly safari park adjacent to the Sun City resort complex — 2 hours from Johannesburg, malaria-free, Big Five). Oudtshoorn and the Karoo (ostrich farms, the Cango Caves, and the semi-desert landscape of the Little Karoo).


