---
title: "Cape Town + Safari: 10 Days in South Africa in 2026 (Honest Itinerary, Real Costs)"
excerpt: "South Africa in 10 days delivers four distinct experiences on the same passport: Cape Town (Table Mountain, Cape Point, Boulders Beach), the Stellenbosch and Franschhoek winelands, a Big Five safari in Kruger or Sabi Sands, and a return day via Johannesburg. Americans get 90 days visa-free. Round-trip JFK-JNB-CPT runs USD 1,400 to USD 2,400 in 2026, a four-star hotel at the V&A Waterfront sits between USD 100 and 180 per night, and a private safari lodge costs USD 300 to USD 800 per person per day, all-inclusive."
description: "South Africa in 10 days delivers four distinct experiences on the same passport: Cape Town (Table Mountain, Cape Point, Boulders Beach), the Stellenbosch and Franschhoek winelands, a Big Five safari in Kruger or Sabi Sands, and a return day via Johannesburg. Americans get 90 days visa-free. Round-trip JFK-JNB-CPT runs USD 1,400 to USD 2,400 in 2026, a four-star hotel at the V&A Waterfront sits between USD 100 and 180 per night, and a private safari lodge costs USD 300 to USD 800 per person per day, all-inclusive."
slug: "cape-town-safari-10-days-brazilians-2026"
locale: "en"
canonical: "https://voyspark.com/en/journal/cape-town-safari-10-days-brazilians-2026"
author: "Curadoria Voyspark"
published_at: "Fri May 22 2026 21:30:17 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)"
updated_at: "Wed Jun 03 2026 15:30:09 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time)"
vertical: "destination"
reading_time_minutes: 28
word_count: 5623
hero_image: "https://s3.voyspark.com/voyspark-images/articles/cidade-do-cabo-safari-10-dias-brasileiros-2026/hero.jpg"
tags:
  - "cidade-do-cabo"
  - "africa-do-sul"
  - "safari"
  - "kruger"
  - "2026"
---

# Cape Town + Safari: 10 Days in South Africa in 2026 (Honest Itinerary, Real Costs)

South Africa is the most Western-feeling destination on the continent, with European-grade infrastructure in Cape Town and first-world safaris in the northeast. You arrive expecting savanna and discover that Cape Town has award-winning wineries, the best restaurant in Africa (The Test Kitchen, three Michelin stars), a Cape Malay neighborhood the color of saltwater taffy (Bo-Kaap), and the only urban mountain range on the planet. The contrast is the point: you drink a Helderberg Cabernet on Thursday and on Friday you are in an open Land Rover, fifteen meters from a male lion.

Cape Town has 4.8 million residents, sits at the southwestern tip of the continent where the Atlantic meets the Indian Ocean, and is safer than Johannesburg or many U.S. cities once you respect the rules: no walking the CBD after 7 p.m., townships only with a licensed tour, rental cars never sleep on the street. Crime is real and concentrated in specific neighborhoods you have no reason to visit.

This 10-day itinerary is for travelers with 14 days of vacation including transit, who do not want an agency charging USD 6,000 for a generic package and prefer renting a car in Cape Town for the freedom of the winelands and the Cape Peninsula. It is honest about the cost of a real safari (high, with no shortcut), about the yellow fever rule that trips up travelers connecting through Brazil, and about why you need an International Driving Permit for the rental car.

---

### Getting there: nonstop JFK-JNB and the BA route to Cape Town

**TL;DR**: Delta and United fly JFK-JNB nonstop in about 15 hours, USD 1,400 to USD 2,000 round-trip in 2026 if booked 90 days ahead. British Airways operates LHR-CPT nonstop daily (11h30, USD 1,100 to USD 1,800 from London), the fastest single-leg option for travelers willing to connect through Heathrow. From LAX or SYD, expect 22 to 26 hours via Doha (Qatar), Singapore (Singapore Airlines), or Dubai (Emirates). The JNB-CPT domestic hop is 2 hours, USD 35 to USD 80 on FlySafair or Lift.

The U.S.-South Africa route is one of the longer commercial flights in operation. Delta runs JFK-JNB daily on an A350-900, departing in the evening, arriving Johannesburg the following afternoon (local time matches Eastern in summer, one hour ahead in winter). United operates a similar Newark-Cape Town seasonal nonstop from November through April, the only direct option to Cape Town from the U.S. mainland.

From London, British Airways flies LHR-CPT nonstop daily year-round, 11 hours 30 minutes on a 777, and Virgin Atlantic operates the route seasonally. This is the single fastest path to Cape Town from anywhere outside Africa. Australians have Qantas SYD-JNB nonstop three times weekly, 14 hours, USD 1,800 to USD 2,500 round-trip.

The JNB-CPT connection is domestic, takes 2 hours, and offers three carriers: FlySafair (low-cost, ZAR 1,500 to 2,500, ≈ USD 80 to 140), Lift (premium economy, ZAR 2,000 to 3,500), and SAA. Booking separately is usually cheaper than a single ticket, but requires a 3-hour buffer between flights for international baggage claim and domestic check-in.

| Route | Carrier | Duration | Round-trip 2026 |
|---|---|---|---|
| JFK → JNB nonstop | Delta | 15h | USD 1,400 to USD 2,000 |
| EWR → CPT nonstop (seasonal) | United | 16h | USD 1,600 to USD 2,400 |
| LHR → CPT nonstop | British Airways | 11h30 | USD 1,100 to USD 1,800 |
| LAX → JNB via DOH | Qatar Airways | 22h | USD 1,500 to USD 2,300 |
| SYD → JNB nonstop | Qantas | 14h | USD 1,800 to USD 2,500 |
| JNB → CPT domestic | FlySafair / Lift | 2h | USD 35 to USD 80 |

---

### Visa, vaccines, money: the American checklist

**TL;DR**: U.S., Canadian, British, Australian, and most EU citizens enter South Africa visa-free for up to 90 days. No yellow fever requirement unless you transit through an endemic country (Brazil, Angola) in the six days prior. Currency is the rand (ZAR), 1 USD ≈ 18 ZAR in 2026. Withdraw at Standard Bank ATMs with a Schwab or Capital One 360 debit card to skip foreign-transaction fees.

**Visa:** Americans enter visa-free for up to 90 days for tourism. Requirements: passport valid 30 days beyond return and at least 2 blank pages. Immigration at JNB or CPT stamps you in on arrival, no fee. Proof of accommodation and return ticket may be requested but rarely are — keep PDFs on your phone.

**Yellow fever:** required only if your itinerary transits an endemic country (Brazil, Angola, parts of Mozambique) in the six days before arrival. Direct flights from JFK, LAX, LHR, or SYD do not trigger the requirement. If you are routing JFK-GRU-JNB on a Star Alliance award itinerary, you will need the vaccine certificate or you will be denied boarding. Get vaccinated at a CDC-authorized travel clinic at least 10 days before departure (USD 150 to USD 300, often not covered by insurance).

**Other recommended vaccines:** hepatitis A, typhoid, tetanus current. Malaria is a concern in Kruger only between November and May (summer) — consult a travel medicine clinic; doxycycline or Malarone prophylaxis is the norm for safaris in the transmission zone. Sabi Sands and most lodges sit in very-low-risk areas outside the summer months.

**Money:** South African rand (ZAR). May 2026 rate: 1 USD ≈ 18 ZAR. ATM withdrawals at Standard Bank, ABSA, FNB, or Nedbank (limit ZAR 5,000 per transaction, ≈ USD 280, ZAR 60 fee ≈ USD 3.30). Use a Charles Schwab Bank debit card or Capital One 360 to avoid the 3% foreign-transaction fee. Visa and Mastercard credit are accepted at 95% of venues — exceptions: markets, township tours, safari gratuities. Always carry ZAR 500 to 1,000 in small bills.

**Travel insurance:** strongly recommended. Travel Guard (AIG), Allianz Travel, and IMG Patriot offer policies covering medical evacuation, which is critical for safaris in remote areas. Expect USD 80 to USD 150 per person for a 14-day trip. Medical evacuation alone can run USD 50,000 without coverage.

**Tipping:** strong culture. Restaurants 10% to 15%, safari ranger ZAR 200 to 400 per day per couple, tracker ZAR 100 to 200 per day, valet ZAR 10, gas station attendant ZAR 5 to 10.

---

### Honest safety: where to go, where NOT to go, myths and reality

**TL;DR**: Cape Town is safer than Johannesburg and safer than many American cities in the tourist zones (V&A Waterfront, Camps Bay, Sea Point, Stellenbosch). Non-negotiable rules: no walking the CBD after 7 p.m., townships only with a licensed tour, rental car sleeps in a closed garage, no visible bag on the car seat. Johannesburg demands more caution — move by Uber, not on foot.

South Africa carries one of the highest absolute crime rates in the world, but the vast majority concentrates in townships and specific areas tourists have no reason to visit alone. In Cape Town, the tourist zones (V&A Waterfront, Camps Bay, Clifton, Sea Point, Bo-Kaap by day, Constantia, Stellenbosch) are extremely safe — comparable to or safer than the upper East Side, Santa Monica, or Notting Hill.

**Non-negotiable rules:**

- **Cape Town CBD (Central Business District):** fine by day, do not walk after 7 p.m. Take an Uber. After dark the center empties out and opportunists move in.
- **Townships (Khayelitsha, Langa, Gugulethu):** only with a licensed operator like Uthando or Coffeebeans Routes. Culturally worth it; one of the most resonant experiences of the trip. Never go on your own.
- **Rental car:** always sleeps in the hotel's secure garage. Leave nothing visible on the seat — no coins, no charger. Smash-and-grab for a handbag is the most common parking-lot crime.
- **Isolated beaches:** Llandudno and Sandy Bay are stunning but lightly trafficked. Go by day, in a group, and do not bring an expensive phone to the sand.
- **Johannesburg:** Uber everywhere, do not walk outside Sandton, Rosebank, or Maboneng. OR Tambo airport to your hotel: ALWAYS Uber or a prepaid transfer. Never accept a ride offered at the curb.

**What no one tells you:** the southeasterly wind in Cape Town (known as the Cape Doctor) blows hard from November to February, shuts the Table Mountain cableway, and ruins photos. Check windguru.cz the night before you plan to summit. Summer also brings wildfires on the peninsula — smoke can close Cape Point.

---

### 4 days in Cape Town: Table Mountain, V&A, Cape Point, Boulders

**TL;DR**: Four days deliver Table Mountain (cableway ZAR 460, ≈ USD 25), V&A Waterfront (Zeitz MOCAA museum ZAR 250), Cape Point + Boulders Beach penguins (rental car, full day), Robben Island (ferry from Nelson Mandela Gateway, ZAR 600, 4 hours), the color of Bo-Kaap, and a Camps Bay sunset. A rental car is essential for Cape Point.

**Day 1 — Arrival CPT, base at the V&A Waterfront.** Recommended stays: The Commodore (4★, USD 130 to USD 180, Table Mountain view) or One&Only Cape Town (5★, USD 600+, private island inside the marina). Afternoon: walk the V&A Waterfront, visit the Two Oceans Aquarium (ZAR 280), and have your first South African meal at Karibu (springbok carpaccio, bobotie). Do not force anything heroic on arrival day.

**Day 2 — Table Mountain + Bo-Kaap + Long Street.** Wake at 7 a.m. and check cableway.co.za for cable car status (the southeasterly closes it). Ride up at 8 a.m. to skip the line and the "tablecloth" cloud that settles after 11. ZAR 460 round-trip, 5 minutes to the top, 1 to 2 hours up there. Afternoon: walk Bo-Kaap (Cape Malay neighborhood with painted houses, climb Wale and Chiappini, obligatory photo), lunch at Biesmiellah (classic Cape Malay curry, ZAR 180). Dinner at The Test Kitchen or Fish Market.

**Day 3 — Cape Point + Boulders Beach penguins (own car).** Full day in the rental car around the Cape Peninsula. Depart 8 a.m. Route: Chapman's Peak Drive (panoramic toll road, ZAR 60), Hout Bay (lunch with a view, fresh fish at Mariner's Wharf), Cape Point (national park, ZAR 410 entry, the old lighthouse on foot, the Cape of Good Hope photo), Boulders Beach in Simon's Town (African penguin colony, ZAR 190). Return via Kalk Bay (dinner at Harbour House, fish and harbor views). Total: 12 hours, 180 km.

**Day 4 — Robben Island + Camps Bay sunset.** Morning: Robben Island ferry from Nelson Mandela Gateway at the V&A, four departures daily, ZAR 600 includes a 3h30 tour led by a former political prisoner. Reserve seven days ahead at robben-island.org.za. One of the most powerful hours of the trip — Mandela spent 18 of his 27 years on this island. Afternoon: Clifton 4th beach (sheltered from the wind) or Camps Bay. Sunset at Café Caprice (ZAR 200 drink) or The Bungalow (more polished, ZAR 350). Dinner at The Pot Luck Club (Test Kitchen's smaller, more accessible sibling, ZAR 600 per person).

---

### 1 day in the winelands: Stellenbosch or Franschhoek

**TL;DR**: Stellenbosch is a 50-minute drive from Cape Town with more than 200 wineries; tastings run ZAR 100 to 250 (3 to 5 wines). Tokara and Delaire Graff are the most cinematic. Franschhoek has the Wine Tram (ZAR 290), a hop-on-hop-off tour through 8 estates in a heritage rail car. Do not drive after tasting — hire a driver or take the tram.

The Cape Winelands sit 50 to 70 minutes from central Cape Town and produce roughly half of South Africa's wine. Stellenbosch is larger, university-town busy, more accessible. Franschhoek is smaller, food-driven, founded by French Huguenots, and home to the country's best rural restaurant. Pick one if you have a day; do both if you have two.

**Stellenbosch (1-day pick):** depart 9 a.m. from Cape Town. First stop: Tokara (tasting ZAR 150, panoramic view, restaurant for lunch). Second: Delaire Graff (tasting ZAR 250 with chocolate pairing, owned by Laurence Graff). Third: Kanonkop for Pinotage (the native South African varietal, tasting ZAR 100). Lunch at Overture (Chef Bertus Basson, tasting menu ZAR 950 per person) or Tokara Restaurant (ZAR 600). Return by 5 p.m.

**Franschhoek (alternative):** depart 8:30 a.m. Take the Franschhoek Wine Tram (ZAR 290 all day, departs every 30 minutes, 8 stops at estates). The red line covers Boschendal, Grande Provence, and Babylonstoren — pick 4 stops. Lunch at La Petite Ferme or Le Quartier Français. Dinner (if you overnight) at Le Petit Colombe — La Colombe's sister property, 14 courses, ZAR 2,500 per person, one of the country's best meals.

**How to skip the wheel:** hire a private driver for the day (Cape Town Wine Tours, USD 150 to USD 200 for a couple with driver and guide), take the Wine Tram in Franschhoek, or join a group tour (Wine Flies, ZAR 1,200 per person, four wineries with lunch).

---

### 4 days on safari: Kruger SANParks vs. Sabi Sands

**TL;DR**: Two viable paths. Kruger SANParks (public, economical): self-drive in a rental, sleeping at rest camps for ZAR 1,500 to 3,000 per night per couple, USD 100 to USD 200 all-in. Sabi Sands (private reserve on Kruger's western edge, no fence between them): all-inclusive lodge with two game drives daily, ZAR 12,000 to 30,000 per night per couple (USD 700 to USD 1,700), Big Five nearly guaranteed thanks to Shangaan trackers.

**Budget — Kruger Park self-drive (SANParks):** rent a 4x4 in JNB (Hertz or Avis, ZAR 1,000 to 1,500 per day), drive 5 hours to the Phabeni or Paul Kruger gate. Park entry: ZAR 462 per adult per day. Stay at official rest camps: Skukuza (largest, ZAR 1,800 chalet for two), Lower Sabie (river views, best for game viewing), Satara (open savanna, lions). Self-drive on paved and gravel roads with a map. Best windows: 5 to 11 a.m. and 3 to 6 p.m. Roughly USD 100 to USD 200 per day all-in for two. Limitation: you cannot leave the vehicle or drive after 6 p.m.

**Premium — Sabi Sands all-inclusive lodge:** Sabi Sands is a 65,000-hectare private reserve bordering Kruger with no fences — animals move freely. Famous lodges: Singita (USD 2,500+ per person per day, top tier), Sabi Sabi (USD 700 to USD 1,200), Lion Sands (USD 800 to USD 1,400), Notten's (USD 600 to USD 800, more authentic and family-feel), Idube (USD 450 to USD 600, best value). The package includes: chalet typically with private plunge pool, three meals, two game drives per day (5 a.m. and 4 p.m.) in an open Land Rover with armed ranger and tracker, unlimited wine, airport transfer. Access via SAA Airlink from JNB to the Skukuza or Ulusaba airstrip (1 hour, ZAR 4,000 to 6,000 one-way).

| Type | Where | Per-couple nightly | Effort | Big Five |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Self-drive public | Kruger SANParks | USD 100 to USD 200 | High (driving) | 60% by luck |
| Mid lodge | Idube or Notten's | USD 1,000 to USD 1,600 | Zero | Near certain |
| Premium lodge | Sabi Sabi or Lion Sands | USD 1,500 to USD 2,800 | Zero | Near certain |
| Luxury lodge | Singita or andBeyond | USD 4,000 to USD 8,000 | Zero | Near certain + spa |

**How many nights:** minimum three, ideal four. In four game drives you see the Big Five (lion, leopard, elephant, buffalo, rhino) with a 95% hit rate at Sabi Sands, 60% on a Kruger self-drive. Leopard is the rarest — Sabi Sands has the highest density on the planet.

---

### Food and restaurants: bobotie, braai, and The Test Kitchen

**TL;DR**: South African cuisine rests on four pillars: Dutch-Malay heritage dishes (bobotie, breyani, koeksister), braai (barbecue with boerewors and sosatie), game (springbok, kudu, ostrich), and Cape Malay cooking (sweet curries, samosas). The Cape Town high end: The Test Kitchen (3 Michelin, ZAR 3,500), La Colombe (World's 50 Best, ZAR 2,200), Mama Africa (cultural, ZAR 400), Truth Coffee (the Telegraph called it the best café in the world, ZAR 80).

**The mandatory dishes:**

- **Bobotie:** the national plate. Curried minced meat with raisins and almonds, topped with a baked egg-and-milk custard. Cape Malay in origin (enslaved East Asians brought by the Dutch). Try it at Bo-Kaap Kombuis, ZAR 180.
- **Braai:** South African barbecue. Boerewors (thick coriander-spiced sausage in a spiral), sosatie (curry-apricot skewers), pap (white maize polenta) with chakalaka (spicy tomato relish). You will almost certainly eat braai at any safari lodge.
- **Cape Malay curry:** sweeter, milder than Indian, with apricot and cinnamon. Where: Biesmiellah in Bo-Kaap, ZAR 160.
- **Game:** springbok carpaccio, kudu loin, ostrich steak. Reference rooms: Karibu (V&A) and The Africa Café (Long Street).
- **Malva pudding:** warm apricot sponge with vanilla cream. Sticky, sweet, addictive. On every lodge and traditional menu.
- **Koeksister:** fried braided pastry in sugar syrup. Breakfast or snack.

**Cape Town restaurant table:**

| Restaurant | Type | Per person | Reservation |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Test Kitchen | 3 Michelin, tasting | ZAR 3,500 | 60 days ahead |
| La Colombe | World's 50 Best | ZAR 2,200 | 30 days ahead |
| Le Petit Colombe (Franschhoek) | La Colombe sister | ZAR 2,500 | 30 days ahead |
| The Pot Luck Club | Tapas auteur | ZAR 600 | 14 days ahead |
| Mama Africa | Cultural with live music | ZAR 400 | 3 days ahead |
| Truth Coffee | Steampunk café | ZAR 80 (coffee) | Walk-in |
| Biesmiellah | Cape Malay traditional | ZAR 200 | Walk-in |

---

### Rental car and driving: left side, IDP, toll roads

**TL;DR**: South Africa drives on the left. Americans need an International Driving Permit (IDP) from AAA (USD 20, same day in branch) — the rental counter requires it. Cape Town rates: ZAR 600 to 900 per day for a compact (Avis, Hertz, Europcar). Fuel ZAR 23 per liter (≈ USD 4.85 per gallon). Light traffic outside the CBD, excellent road signage.

A rental car transforms the Cape Town leg, especially for the peninsula (Cape Point, Boulders, Chapman's Peak) and the winelands. Driving is on the left, wheel on the right, gear shift in the left hand — give it two days to feel natural. Use the phone GPS (Google Maps offline works well) and pay attention to roundabouts (yield to the right).

**Documents required:**

- Passport
- Valid U.S., Canadian, U.K., or Australian driver's license
- International Driving Permit (IDP) from AAA in the U.S. or CAA in Canada. USD 20, issued on the spot at a branch, valid 1 year. Without it, the rental agency will refuse to release the car. South African federal rule, not a suggestion.
- International credit card for the deposit (USD 200 to USD 500)

**Companies:** Avis, Hertz, Europcar, and Bidvest have desks at CPT and JNB. Economy (VW Polo or similar) ZAR 600 to 900 per day. SUV for Kruger ZAR 1,500 to 2,500 per day (Toyota Fortuner or similar). Super CDW (full coverage) ZAR 250 to 400 per day — pay it; the basic deductible is ZAR 25,000 (≈ USD 1,400).

**Fuel:** ZAR 23 per liter of petrol in 2026 (≈ USD 4.85 per gallon). Stations have attendants — tip ZAR 5 to 10. Toll gates on the N1, N2, and N3 cost ZAR 50 to 100 per segment, payable by card or cash.

**Parking in Cape Town:** unofficial "car guards" work every street space. Tip ZAR 5 to 10 when leaving, no pressure. At the V&A and shopping centers, parking is paid and secure (ZAR 20 per hour).

---

### When to go: seasons, weather, whales, peak

**TL;DR**: Seasons are reversed from the northern hemisphere. South African summer December through February: Cape Town 20°C to 28°C, peak season, strong wind, 30% above average pricing, hotels full. Winter June through August: Cape Town 8°C to 18°C, rain in the Cape, but southern right whales in False Bay (July to October) and low prices. Sweet spot: March, April, October, November.

South Africa is large and climates differ by region. Cape Town is Mediterranean (dry summer, wet winter) — opposite of the rest of the country. Kruger and Sabi Sands are tropical-dry (hot wet summer, cool dry winter with cold nights). This changes when you should go.

**For Cape Town:**

- **December to February (South African summer):** absolute peak season, 20°C to 28°C, intense sun, heavy southeasterly wind, cableway frequently closed. Hotel rates 30 to 40% above average. Book 90 days out.
- **March, April, October, November (shoulder):** the honest sweet spot. 15°C to 24°C, lighter wind, smaller crowds, fair pricing. Recommended.
- **June to August (winter):** 8°C to 18°C, frequent rain, short days. Upsides: hotels 30% cheaper, southern right and humpback WHALES in False Bay (Hermanus is the world's whale-watching capital, July to October).

**For safari in Kruger / Sabi Sands:**

- **May to September (South African dry winter):** IDEAL. Dry vegetation, animals concentrated at waterholes, maximum visibility, no mosquitoes, very low malaria risk. Cold nights (5°C to 10°C) — the lodge supplies a fur blanket.
- **October to April (wet summer):** dense bush makes spotting harder, mosquitoes and malaria risk are present, torrential afternoon rains. Upside: newborn animals, green landscapes, migratory birds.

**The perfect window:** go in April or October. Cape Town in shoulder season, safari in transition. Gold pick: second half of October — Cape Town flowering, Kruger still dry, whales finishing their run.

---

### 10-day route summary: day by day

**TL;DR**: Days 1 to 4 Cape Town (V&A, Table Mountain, Cape Point, Boulders, Robben Island), day 5 winelands Stellenbosch or Franschhoek, day 6 fly CPT-JNB and transfer to safari, days 7 to 9 safari with four game drives, day 10 return via JNB. Total: 14 days including transit, 10 full days in country.

| Day | Where | Main activity |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Cape Town | Arrive CPT, base V&A Waterfront |
| 2 | Cape Town | Table Mountain + Bo-Kaap + dinner Test Kitchen |
| 3 | Cape Peninsula | Cape Point + Boulders Beach penguins (car) |
| 4 | Cape Town | Robben Island morning + Camps Bay sunset |
| 5 | Stellenbosch or Franschhoek | Wine tour, full day |
| 6 | CPT → JNB → safari lodge | Flight + transfer |
| 7 | Sabi Sands or Kruger | Game drive 5:30 a.m. + 4 p.m. |
| 8 | Sabi Sands or Kruger | Game drive 5:30 a.m. + 4 p.m., optional walking safari |
| 9 | Sabi Sands or Kruger | Game drive 5:30 a.m. + afternoon at the lodge spa |
| 10 | Lodge → JNB → flight home | Airport transfer, overnight flight |

**Variations:**

- **Premium honeymoon:** swap days 1 to 4 for 5 nights at One&Only Cape Town + 5 nights at Singita Sabi Sands. Budget: USD 22,000+ per couple, excluding airfare.
- **Family with kids:** skip Robben Island (historically dense) and prioritize family-friendly lodges (Kapama River Lodge, Pondoro). Some lodges do not permit children under 6 on game drives.
- **Budget backpacker:** 4 nights Cape Town at Once In Cape Town (boutique hostel, ZAR 800 private room), Wine Tram in Franschhoek instead of a private tour, Kruger SANParks self-drive 3 nights. Total per couple, no airfare: USD 3,200.

---

## Practical appendix

**Essential sites:**
- robben-island.org.za — ferry reservations 7 days out
- cableway.co.za — Table Mountain, check status
- sanparks.org — Kruger Park, official bookings
- discoversafrica.com — Sabi Sands lodge comparator
- flysafair.co.za and lift.co.za — domestic flights
- windguru.cz — Cape Town wind

**Couple lodging (2026 reference):**
- The Commodore (V&A, 4★): USD 130/night
- Once In Cape Town (boutique budget): USD 65/night
- Notten's Bush Camp (Sabi Sands all-inclusive): USD 650/couple/night
- Singita Boulders (Sabi Sands ultra-luxury): USD 4,000/couple/night
- Skukuza Rest Camp (Kruger SANParks chalet): USD 100/night

**Recommended operators:**
- Cape Town Wine Tours (private winelands driver): USD 180/day
- Uthando Tours (ethical township tour): USD 90 per person
- Discover Africa (custom safari): free consult
- Hertz and Avis (rental cars): direct CPT pickup

**Useful numbers:**
- General emergency: 10111
- Ambulance: 10177
- U.S. Embassy in Pretoria: +27 12 431 4000
- U.S. Consulate Cape Town: +27 21 702 7300
