Winter is quietly one of the best seasons to travel in South Africa. The crowds thin out, prices drop, and the quality of light in most parts of the country has a particular golden clarity that summer cannot match. The trick is knowing where to go, because the country’s winter offering is far more varied than most people realise.
Some of these towns are known quantities that reward a return visit. Others are the kind of places South Africans discover and then keep to themselves. All of them are worth the drive.
Montagu, Western Cape
Montagu is one of the Winelands’ most underrated towns, and it becomes particularly compelling in winter. The appeal starts with Avalon Springs, the thermal hot spring resort where mineral-rich pools stay warm regardless of the cold air around them. There is something specifically satisfying about soaking in a heated natural pool while the winter sun is low and the mountains are sharp and clear above you.
Beyond the springs, Montagu offers good hiking through the Langeberg Mountains, historic Cape Dutch and Victorian architecture along a well-preserved main street, farm stalls selling the dried fruit and local muscadel the region is known for, and a quieter pace of life that genuinely slows you down. It is accessible from Cape Town in a little over two hours via the R60, and accommodation is good value in the off-season.
Clarens, Free State
Often called the Jewel of the Free State, Clarens sits at the foot of the Maluti Mountains with a village square that has become something of an arts and craft destination over the past decade. In winter, the surrounding peaks occasionally receive snow, and the town has an almost European atmosphere of gallery-hopping, coffee and fire that feels quite unlike anywhere else in South Africa.
The outdoor options are genuinely excellent: hiking, mountain biking and quad biking in the adjacent Golden Gate Highlands National Park cover a wide range of fitness levels and preferences. The town itself has developed a good selection of restaurants, craft beer venues and accommodation, from self-catering cottages to guesthouses.
Hogsback, Eastern Cape
Hogsback is the kind of place that people either know intimately or have barely heard of, and those who know it tend to be protective of it. Tucked in the Amathole Mountains, this misty village is said to have influenced Tolkien’s imagination, and the landscape does have a quality that is difficult to explain in purely geographic terms: ancient forest, cascading waterfalls, eccentric art installations and the pervasive sense of a world slightly set apart from the ordinary one.
In winter, the mist is heavier and the forests more dramatic. The hiking trails, including the popular 39 Steps waterfall route, are at their most atmospheric. Some years bring a dusting of snow on the peaks. The village has basic but comfortable accommodation, and the annual winter celebration in July draws visitors for fires, feasts and community. It is not a luxury destination, but it is one of the most distinctive in the country.
Prince Albert, Northern Cape
Prince Albert sits on the other side of the Swartberg Pass from Oudtshoorn, accessible via one of the most dramatic mountain passes in South Africa. The Karoo town itself is a perfectly preserved example of Cape Dutch and Victorian architecture, with a main street lined with fig trees, art galleries and small restaurants that punch well above the town’s size.
Winter in the Karoo is crisp and clear, with warm sunny days and genuinely cold nights that invite fireplaces and slow cooking. The town is small enough that a weekend covers it thoroughly, which makes it ideal as a quick escape rather than a long trip. The drive over the Swartberg Pass is itself part of the attraction.
Graskop, Mpumalanga
Graskop is the most useful base for exploring the Panorama Route, one of South Africa’s most spectacular scenic drives. Within easy reach are God’s Window, the Blyde River Canyon (one of the world’s largest green canyons), and Bourke’s Luck Potholes. Winter is excellent for this region: the air is dry and clear, game viewing in nearby reserves is at its best with the vegetation sparse, and the viewpoints are free of the atmospheric haze that can reduce summer visibility.
The town itself is known for its pancakes, a somewhat famous local tradition, and has a reasonable selection of accommodation and restaurants. It is a practical rather than pretty destination, but the surrounding landscape more than compensates.
Arniston, Western Cape
Arniston, also known by its Afrikaans name Waenhuiskrans, is a coastal village in the Overberg that operates at a pace best described as deliberate. White-washed, thatched-roof cottages, many of them national monuments line unpaved paths above the Atlantic, the fishing boats still go out in the mornings, and the whale coast lives up to its name in winter months when southern rights arrive along the shoreline.
It is not a destination with much to do in the conventional sense, which is precisely its appeal. The Arniston Hotel has one of the better seafood menus on the southern coast. The cave at the base of the cliffs, accessible at low tide, is worth timing your visit around. And the quality of the light over the ocean in winter, particularly in the late afternoon, is the kind of thing people come back for.
ALSO SEE:
Featured Image: Pexels
