Holiday Stays

Whale Season Accommodation in Plettenberg Bay – 88 Properties

Baviaanshoek

Self-catering
From R2,300

Forest Gate

Resort
From R400
Cape Robin

Cape Robin

Self-catering Brackenridge Private Residential Estate

Adventurer's Escape

Lodge
From R1,600

Greenhill Farm

Self-catering
From R1,780

Elephant View Cottage

Self-catering
From R2,163

Castella Estrella

Self-catering
From R2,782

Picnic Rock Seaside Accommodation

Self-catering
From R1,800

88 properties found · Showing 81–88

Southern right whales move into Plettenberg Bay's sheltered waters from June through November, using the bay to calve and nurse their young. With 16 properties available across Piesang Valley and central Plettenberg Bay, rates run from R1,200 to R3,100 per night (average R1,849), making whale season genuinely accessible. The summer crowds are gone, accommodation is easier to secure, and the whales are a daily spectacle that simply doesn't exist in any other season.

Where to Stay for the Best Whale Watching Access

Piesang Valley sits inland but is within a 10-minute drive of the main whale watching vantage points. Properties here tend to be quieter and better value — some of the R1,200/night options are in this area. Central Plettenberg Bay puts you closer to the beachfront, where Lookout Beach and the town headland offer direct views over the bay. In peak season (August to October), whales surface and breach regularly enough that you can watch from a cafe or your guesthouse deck with binoculars and not feel like you missed anything.

Land-Based vs Boat-Based Whale Watching

The Robberg Peninsula, a 10-minute drive from town, is the standout land-based option. The 4km circular trail takes you around a headland where southern right whales frequently pass within 200 metres of the rocks. Entry costs R220 through CapeNature. Kranshoek viewpoint on the Garden Route hiking trail is another reliable spot — far less visited and worth the short detour.

For boat-based viewing, Ocean Blue Adventures operates from Central Beach. Trips run approximately R1,000–R1,200 per person and are weather-dependent. Book a morning slot and keep a backup date available. You get close enough to see the barnacle-covered callosities on the whales' heads, which is something no cliff walk replicates.

What to Expect from the Weather

June to August temperatures hover around 12–18°C. A windproof layer is essential for cliff walks and boat trips. September and October warm to 16–22°C with longer daylight and more settled sea conditions — the best all-round month for combining whale watching with outdoor activity. Rain can move through in June and July, but extended grey stretches are uncommon on the Garden Route.

What Else to Do During Whale Season

Tsitsikamma National Park, 75km east, is significantly quieter than in summer — the suspension bridge trail and coastal hikes are accessible without December's queues. Monkeyland and Birds of Eden on the N2 operate year-round and are worth half a day. If you want to combine a visit to the Hermanus Whale Festival (typically the third week of September), it's a 4-hour drive west and fits well into a longer Garden Route loop.

How to Choose the Right Property

At R1,200/night you're typically looking at self-catering cottages or smaller guesthouses in Piesang Valley — comfortable and often with fireplaces, which matter in June and July. The R1,849 average gets you into well-equipped guesthouses closer to town, with sea views in some cases. At R3,100 you're looking at boutique properties with direct bay views. If whale watching is the main reason you're visiting, proximity to Robberg or Lookout Beach is worth paying for — being able to walk to a viewpoint at dusk without driving makes a real difference to how often you actually go.