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Easter in Cape Town falls during autumn, when temperatures sit between 18°C and 24°C and the summer crowds have thinned. With 94 properties listed across the city and surrounds — from Bloubergstrand on the Atlantic side to Camps Bay and Chapmans Peak on the southern peninsula — there is genuine choice across a range of budgets. Rates run from R800 to R18,800 per night, with an average of R2,383. The long weekend draws Capetonians home and brings visitors from Johannesburg and Durban looking for a shorter, cooler alternative to December.
Best Areas for Easter Stays in Cape Town
Camps Bay is the most in-demand spot over Easter — restaurants stay busy, the beach promenade fills up, and properties here sit at the higher end of the price range. If you want ocean access without the same foot traffic, Bakoven and Bantry Bay are immediately to the south and tend to have smaller self-catering apartments and guest houses with direct Atlantic views. Rates in these areas vary, with some properties coming in below the R2,383 citywide average.
Bloubergstrand and Bloubergrant on the northern Atlantic coast offer the classic Table Mountain-across-the-bay view. This side is well suited to families and groups who want more space, and draws surfers and kitesurfers throughout autumn. Bellville, further inland, is a practical base for winelands day trips to Stellenbosch and Paarl rather than beach-focused stays. Chapmans Peak properties put you close to one of the peninsula's most scenic coastal drives, with Hout Bay harbour and market a short trip away.
What Autumn Means for a Cape Town Stay
April is genuinely one of the better months to be in the city. The south-easter wind that dominates summer has eased, rainfall is light, and daytime temperatures are comfortable for hiking and outdoor activity. Lion's Head, Signal Hill, and the Constantia Nek trails are all accessible without the midday heat of January or February. The Two Oceans Marathon — one of the country's largest running events — typically takes place over the Easter weekend and draws tens of thousands of visitors, which means accommodation fills earlier than the dates alone might suggest.
Amenities and What to Expect
Most of the 94 Easter properties near Cape Town are self-catering apartments, cottages, or guest houses with full kitchens. For a long weekend stay, this is a practical choice — it keeps daily costs down and gives you flexibility around Good Friday, when many restaurants operate reduced hours or close entirely. Private pools are common across the Camps Bay and Bantry Bay corridor. Braai facilities are standard at almost all property types, across all price points.
How to Choose the Right Property
Start with area, then budget. If the beach is the priority, focus on Camps Bay, Bakoven, Bantry Bay, and Bloubergstrand — all have direct Atlantic access. If you are travelling with children or a large group, look at Bloubergrant and Bloubergstrand where properties tend to offer more floor space per rand. For couples or solo travellers on a tighter budget, Bellville and Barbarossa have options below R1,200 per night. At R800 per night on the low end, Cape Town Easter stays are accessible even if the premium Atlantic Seaboard properties push toward R18,800. Book at least four to six weeks out if you have a specific area in mind — the Two Oceans Marathon effect is real.