Boardwalk Lodge
Self-catering accommodation in Wilderness with simplex chalets, duplex chalets, and luxury studio suites. All feature Indian Ocean views and daily cleaning service.
129 properties found · Showing 41–60
Victoria Bay is a small coastal settlement on the Garden Route, tucked into a narrow valley where the Kaaimans River meets the Indian Ocean. The bay is known for its consistent surf break and a compact beach that draws visitors from across the Western Cape and beyond.
Self-catering accommodation in Wilderness with simplex chalets, duplex chalets, and luxury studio suites. All feature Indian Ocean views and daily cleaning service.
Luxury eco-resort accommodation on the Garden Route near Wilderness, blending treehouse luxury with forest beauty across a villa and Gypsy Vardos.
Self-catering accommodation in Wilderness, South Africa, bordering Garden Route National Park with Indian Ocean beaches 2 minutes away. Four cottages designed for two guests each.
A 4-suite accommodation in Wilderness overlooking Island Lake with spacious en-suite bedrooms, swimming pool, and mountain views. 2018 Booking.com Guest Review Awards winner.
Backpacker accommodation in the Garden Route near George, offering dorm beds and private en-suite doubles with locally-inspired décor and free Wi-Fi.
Stylish en-suite self-catering accommodation with four units in Wilderness, overlooking the Touw River between coastal mountains, near the scenic 500m Touw Rivers Boardwalk.
SEASENSE Boutique Beach Villa is a beachfront accommodation in Wilderness with direct beach access, sweeping ocean views, and recently restyled interiors. Guests enjoy rolling dunes and golden sunsets.
Backpackers and adventure centre on South Africa's Garden Route, bordering Wilderness National Park, offering private rooms, dorms, and camping accommodation.
Historic hotel on the Touws River in Wilderness, welcoming guests since 1924. Recently renovated, offering riverside accommodation as a base for the Garden Route, 20 minutes from George airport.
Dolphin Dunes is a 4-star guesthouse accommodation in Wilderness on the Garden Route comprising twelve suites with sea views and direct beachfront access.
Beachfront accommodation in Wilderness with 11 modern rooms, direct beach access, and Indian Ocean views. Includes breakfast and personal service.
Accommodation with six themed rooms and apartment in George, Western Cape, on the Garden Route. Guests praise the immaculate rooms and personal service.
Self-catering accommodation in the Garden Route, 7km from George CBD, offering chalets, backpacker units, camping stands, and dormitory options with pool and braai facilities.
Luxury eco-cabin accommodation 10 km from George Airport on the Garden Route, featuring private wood-fired hot tubs and scenic lake views.
Self-catering farm cottage accommodation in George, overlooking a dam in scenic farmland, offering peace and quiet for up to four guests.
Two modern self-catering cottages in George, Garden Route, surrounded by trees below the Outeniqua Mountains. Suitable for families and group gatherings.
Luxury accommodation in Wilderness offering six suite types with Indian Ocean views, swimming pool, and private walkway to Wilderness Beach on the Garden Route.
Il Gattopardo is a 3-room guesthouse in Wilderness on South Africa’s Garden Route providing accommodation with private balconies and mountain views.
Mountain Magic Self-Catering Accommodation is an eco-conscious retreat on a peaceful 6-hectare headland in Hoekwil, Wilderness, delivering panoramic views of the Indian Ocean, Touw River and Outeniqua Mountains.
Oceanfront accommodation on clifftop in Wilderness, Garden Route, overlooking the Indian Ocean. Features two penthouse suites, four standard bedrooms, plunge pool, and daily breakfast.
129 properties found · Showing 41–60
Victoria Bay is a small coastal settlement on the Garden Route, tucked into a narrow valley where the Kaaimans River meets the Indian Ocean. The bay is known for its consistent surf break and a compact beach that draws visitors from across the Western Cape and beyond.
Fourteen properties cover a wide spread, with nightly rates running from R850 to R8,600 and an average across the bay of around R2,106. That figure reflects a mid-range market shaped largely by scarcity. When a settlement has this few options, demand tends to push prices up rather than down, and Victoria Bay is no exception.
At the more accessible end of the range, bed and breakfast stays offer the lowest average rates and the most straightforward pricing. Breakfast is included, which removes one daily decision in a place with no restaurants nearby. The B&Bs here are small, often just a handful of rooms in a privately owned home, and the interaction with hosts tends to be direct and personal.
Guest houses form the largest share of available accommodation, with six listings spread across the settlement. They sit comfortably in the middle of the market and vary from compact rooms with shared access to more generous setups with private lounge areas. Self-catering options average slightly higher and suit visitors who prefer to cook their own meals and keep their own pace. Given that there are no cafes or takeaways in the bay, cooking for yourself is the norm here regardless of property type, and most visitors plan accordingly.
At the upper end, a hotel, a lodge, and a villa round out the supply. The villa is the most expensive option in the bay and books well in advance, particularly over summer. The hotel and lodge provide services that the guesthouse end of the market does not, including more structured check-in and some form of on-site assistance, though every property here shares the same small-settlement setting.
Availability across all tiers tightens sharply in December and January. The settlement is small enough that once the main properties are gone, there is genuinely nothing left, and late searches in peak season will regularly return zero results.
Summer, from November through February, brings the warmest water temperatures and the most activity in the bay. December and January are peak months, with school holidays driving demand from families across the Western Cape and beyond. Afternoons in summer can be affected by the south-easterly wind that sweeps along the Garden Route, which picks up heat as the day progresses and can make extended time on the beach less comfortable.
Autumn, March to May, is the most consistent season for surf. South to south-westerly swells from the Southern Ocean increase in frequency and size as the season deepens, the crowds thin after school resumes, and the weather remains mild. Serious surfers often target this period deliberately.
Winter months are cooler and wetter, with July bringing the most rainfall. That said, clear days between fronts are common, and the bay is quiet enough to feel genuinely peaceful. A wetsuit is needed in the water but the temperatures rarely deter committed swimmers. Spring, September and October, sees conditions warming again and humpback and southern right whales moving along the coast, occasionally visible from shore.
George Airport is the most practical entry point for most visitors, sitting roughly 15 kilometres from the bay by road. Domestic flights connect George to Johannesburg and Cape Town throughout the day, and car hire is available directly at the airport. There is no viable public transport to Victoria Bay itself, so a hire car or private vehicle is effectively required.
Driving from George takes around 15 minutes. The route follows the R404 south from the N2, descending through dense indigenous forest before the road narrows and reaches the bay. From Cape Town, the N2 east covers approximately 430 kilometres before the George turnoff. From Gqeberha (Port Elizabeth) to the east, the distance is roughly 300 kilometres along the same highway.
Once at the bay, there are no local transport options. No taxis, no buses, and no ride-hailing services operate in the settlement. The parking area at the beach fills quickly on busy summer days, so arriving before mid-morning tends to avoid the worst of it. The access road is sealed throughout but narrows in sections on the descent, and vehicles towing boats or large trailers should take it slowly. Most accommodation properties include a designated parking space, but this is worth confirming at the time of booking.
Wilderness, 3 kilometres east along the N2, is the closest town with meaningful services and the natural complement to a stay at the bay. The Wilderness National Park covers the lagoon system fed by five rivers, and the walking trails and canoe routes through it are among the more varied on the Garden Route. The town has restaurants, a small supermarket, and its own beach, and most visitors to Victoria Bay make at least one stop here over the course of a stay.
Hoekwil, 8 kilometres inland in the hills above the coast, is a small rural community known mainly among cyclists and hikers. The forest roads and the views back toward the ocean make it worth a half-day visit, though there is little formal tourism infrastructure. The contrast with the coastal character of the bay makes it a pleasant change of scene.
George, 9 kilometres north, provides everything the bay itself lacks. Supermarkets, hardware stores, pharmacies, restaurants, a shopping centre, and medical facilities are all here. Self-catering visitors typically make a grocery run to George on arrival. The town also sits at the foot of the Outeniqua Pass, which climbs into the Klein Karoo and is worth driving for the views alone.
Herolds Bay, 15 kilometres to the west, is a beach settlement similar in scale and atmosphere to Victoria Bay but with a broader beach and slightly more residential population. Its surf attracts a separate following, and it works well as a day-trip alternative rather than a direct substitute.
Herold, 20 kilometres away in the foothills, is a farming village associated with wine and fruit production. The drive up through the Outeniqua foothills passes through landscape that changes noticeably over a short distance, and the shift from coastal to inland agricultural countryside makes for an interesting excursion.
Glentana, 22 kilometres west, is a low-key holiday settlement used mainly by residents from George. It has a tidal pool and calmer water than Victoria Bay, which makes it a practical option for a day out with young children who are not ready for point-break surf.
For December and January, booking three to six months ahead is standard practice. Properties at the better-located end of the bay go first, and searching in November for a Christmas week stay will often return little or nothing. Easter and the June-July school holiday period fill quickly as well. Outside these windows, availability opens up considerably, and last-minute bookings become possible from mid-January through to roughly October.
Before confirming any booking, check a few specifics that are easy to miss. Confirm parking arrangements, as space at the bay is genuinely limited and not every property has guaranteed off-street parking. Ask about braai facilities if cooking outdoors is part of your plan. In summer, water and electricity availability in the Western Cape can be affected by demand, so asking whether the property has any backup capacity is a reasonable question.
The bay has no shops, no restaurants, and no food options of any kind on-site. A grocery run to Wilderness or George before settling in is not optional. If consistent mobile data matters, ask the host which networks get reliable signal from the property, as coverage varies across the settlement. Finally, compare listings across more than one platform before booking, as not every property appears on every site, and direct contact with owners outside peak season sometimes yields more flexibility on rate or availability.