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South Africa's Best Attractions

Table Mountain, Cape Point, and Robben Island — what's worth the ticket price.

Cape Town's headline attractions are Table Mountain (cableway, roughly $27 return online), Robben Island (ferry plus museum tour, roughly $38, book well ahead), and the Cape of Good Hope / Cape Point nature reserve (roughly $31 entry). All three are genuinely worth it and can theoretically be combined in one long day, though two days lets you actually enjoy them instead of racing the clock.

Cape Town doesn't have a shortage of postcard attractions, and unlike some destinations, the famous ones here mostly deserve the hype. The catch is booking logistics — Table Mountain closes for wind more often than guides admit, and Robben Island tours sell out days ahead in peak season. Here's the honest version: current prices, when to actually go, and what to book first.

Questions people actually ask

Do I need to book Table Mountain and Robben Island in advance?
Yes, both — Robben Island especially, since it runs on fixed ferry departures and regularly sells out 2-5 days ahead in the December-February peak. Table Mountain's cableway is walk-up-friendly most of the year, but book online anyway to skip the ticket line and lock in a time before a possible wind closure.
What if Table Mountain is closed for wind?
The cableway shuts down in high wind (locally called the 'Cape Doctor') without much notice — it happens more often than most guides mention, especially in summer. Build a spare afternoon into your itinerary if the view matters to you, and check the live status on the cableway's own site the morning of.
Can I see penguins in Cape Town?
Yes — Boulders Beach, near Simon's Town on the way to Cape Point, has a colony of African penguins you can view up close from boardwalks for a small entry fee (a few dollars). It's an easy add-on to a Cape Point day and one of the best free-feeling wildlife moments in the city.