
Cape Town's Best Attractions
The three essentials: Table Mountain via cableway (roughly $27 return online), Robben Island's ferry-and-museum tour (roughly $38, book several days ahead), and the Cape of Good Hope / Cape Point nature reserve (roughly $31 entry). Add Boulders Beach's penguin colony as a cheap, easy extra on the Cape Point route. All are genuinely worth it, but book Robben Island first — it sells out fastest.
Cape Town's big three attractions all deliver on the hype, which isn't something you can say about every famous sight worldwide. The real skill here is logistics, not deciding what to see — here's exactly what to book, when, and for how much.
Table Mountain
A flat-topped mountain looming directly over the city, reachable by a rotating cable car (the whole cabin turns slowly for a 360-degree view on the way up) in about 5 minutes, or via a strenuous 2-3 hour hike (Platteklip Gorge is the classic route) for those who want to earn the view. Cableway return tickets run roughly R450 (about $27) online, more at the gate.
The cableway closes for high wind (the locally famous 'Cape Doctor' southeaster) without much advance notice, and this happens more often than casual mentions in most guides suggest — sometimes for a whole afternoon, occasionally for a full day. Check the live status the morning of, and don't schedule it for your very last hour in the city.
Cape of Good Hope and Cape Point
A dramatic nature reserve at the tip of the Cape Peninsula, roughly 1-1.5 hours south of the city, with rugged cliffs, a lighthouse funicular (the Flying Dutchman, a small extra fee), and — despite the popular myth — not actually the geographic point where the Atlantic and Indian Oceans officially meet (that's further east at Cape Agulhas). Entry runs roughly R515 (about $31) for international visitors.
Robben Island
The former prison island where Nelson Mandela spent 18 of his 27 years of incarceration, now a UNESCO World Heritage museum. The standard tour (roughly R620, about $38, for adults) includes the ferry both ways, a 2.5-hour guided bus tour of the island, and a walk through the maximum-security prison — often guided by a former political prisoner, which is as powerful as it sounds.
Book Robben Island several days ahead, especially in the December-February peak — ferries run on fixed departures and regularly sell out. It's also weather-dependent; rough seas occasionally cancel crossings, so avoid scheduling it for your final full day in the city.
Boulders Beach — the penguins
A short detour on the way to or from Cape Point, near Simon's Town: a colony of African penguins viewable up close from wooden boardwalks, for a small entry fee (a few dollars). It's an easy, low-effort highlight most visitors don't expect to love as much as they do.
How to fit it all in
| Attraction | Time needed | Approx. price (adult) |
|---|---|---|
| Table Mountain (cableway) | Half-day including travel | ~$27 return |
| Cape Point / Cape of Good Hope | Half-day, often combined with Boulders Beach | ~$31 entry |
| Boulders Beach penguins | 45-60 minutes | ~$3-4 entry |
| Robben Island | Half-day (ferry + tour) | ~$38 |
What to skip
- Overpriced 'skip-the-line' resellers for Table Mountain tickets outside the official site — book directly, it's the same price and the official queue usually isn't long if you've pre-booked a time slot.
- Trying to cram Table Mountain, Cape Point, and Robben Island into one single day — it's technically possible but leaves zero buffer for weather delays or a sold-out ferry slot; spread them across two days if you can.












































