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Blyde River Canyon (Panorama Route), South Africa
Blyde River Canyon (Panorama Route)

Mpumalanga, South Africa

Blyde River Canyon (Panorama Route)

The scenic drive almost everyone tacks onto a Kruger trip: the Three Rondavels, God's Window and Bourke's Luck Potholes in a day or two, where to base, and why you do it before the park, not after.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026

In short

Blyde River Canyon (Panorama Route) at a glance

The Panorama Route is the loop of viewpoints along the rim of the Blyde River Canyon in Mpumalanga, and for most UK travellers it's the scenic warm-up to a Kruger safari rather than a destination in its own right. The headline stops โ€” the Three Rondavels, Bourke's Luck Potholes, God's Window, the Pinnacle and a string of waterfalls โ€” sit within about 60km of each other on the R532 and R534, so a hire car does it comfortably in a day, or two if you want to walk and not rush. Base in Graskop or Hazyview, drive the route on a clear morning, then drop down to the Kruger's Phabeni or Numbi gate the next day. The canyon itself is the world's largest green canyon, roughly 26km long and up to 800m deep.

Almost nobody flies to South Africa for the Blyde River Canyon alone, and thatโ€™s the right way to think about it: this is the half-day of jaw-dropping scenery you bolt onto a Kruger safari, not a trip in itself. The Panorama Route is really a self-drive loop of pull-offs along the canyon rim โ€” the Three Rondavels, Bourkeโ€™s Luck Potholes, Godโ€™s Window, the Pinnacle and a run of waterfalls โ€” and the whole thing fits inside a day if you start early and keep moving. Where first-timers go wrong is treating the short distances as quick: every stop is a gate, a little walk and a photo, and an hour vanishes before youโ€™ve noticed.

The other mistake is leaving it until after the park. The high viewpoints, Godโ€™s Window especially, cloud in by late morning through the summer, so you want clear early light โ€” far easier to manage on your first jet-lag-free day than after a week of pre-dawn game drives. Base in Graskop if the views are the point, or Hazyview if youโ€™re saving your legs for the Kruger gates a short drive south, drive the rim on a bright morning, and roll into the park the next day. Do that and the canyon delivers; rush it under cloud and youโ€™ll wonder what the fuss was about.

The route

A two-day plan that drives the Panorama Route in full on a clear morning, then drops into the southern Kruger the next day. Drive times are sealed-road estimates on the R532, R534 and R536; the whole viewpoint loop is short on distance but slow on stops, so allow far longer than the kilometres suggest.

  1. Day 1 (morning)

    The southern waterfalls and God's Window

    Start from Graskop and work north: the Pinnacle Rock and God's Window first thing (about 10 min apart, 5km north of Graskop) while the air is clearest, then Lisbon and Berlin Falls. Go early โ€” the high viewpoints cloud in by late morning in summer. R10โ€“R40 per person at the small gated stops; carry cash.

  2. Day 1 (afternoon)

    Bourke's Luck Potholes and the Three Rondavels

    Continue north on the R532 to Bourke's Luck Potholes (about 35 min from God's Window; ~R75pp), the swirled rock pools where the Treur meets the Blyde. Then the Three Rondavels viewpoint a further 20 min on (~R30pp) โ€” the postcard shot of the canyon. Back to Graskop is about an hour.

  3. Day 2 (morning)

    Graskop Gorge or the panorama town

    Either ride the Graskop Gorge Lift (about R295 for the glass lift down into the forest) or browse Graskop's pancake houses and craft stalls before checking out. This is the buffer morning if Day 1 was hazy and you want to re-drive a viewpoint in better light.

  4. Day 2 (afternoon)

    Drop down to the Kruger

    Drive from Graskop or Hazyview to the southern Kruger gates โ€” Phabeni is about 50 min from Hazyview, Numbi a little less. Time your gate arrival for opening (gates run roughly 06:00โ€“18:00 by season) and don't drive the rural R536/R538 after dark.

Where to base yourself

Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.

Graskop

ยฃ value

The closest base to the viewpoints โ€” God's Window and the Pinnacle are 10 minutes up the road, and it's a small, walkable town of pancake houses and guesthouses. Best if the Panorama Route is your priority and you'll do Kruger as a separate leg.

Best for: Driving the viewpoints, first night

Browse hotels Loop base

Hazyview

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Lower, warmer and only about 50 minutes from the Phabeni and Numbi Kruger gates, with lodges, river camps and the larger resorts. The smart base if you're pairing one Panorama day with several Kruger days, as it cuts the morning drive to the park.

Best for: Pairing with a Kruger safari

Browse hotels Kruger side

Sabie

ยฃ value

A forestry town in the pine plantations between Graskop and Hazyview, handy for the waterfall cluster (Sabie, Lone Creek, Mac Mac Falls) and a touch cheaper than Hazyview. A quiet, green alternative if you want walks and waterfalls over canyon views.

Best for: Waterfalls and a quieter base

Browse hotels Waterfall side

Getting around Blyde River Canyon (Panorama Route)

This is a self-drive region: there's no useful public transport between the viewpoints, so a hire car is essential and most people pick one up at Kruger Mpumalanga (MQP/Nelspruit) or Hoedspruit (HDS) airport. The roads on the route โ€” the R532, R534 and R536 โ€” are sealed and in reasonable shape, but they're mountain roads with potholes, slow trucks and the occasional washout in summer rains, so don't plan tight timings. UK drivers have it easy here: South Africa drives on the left like home and signs are in English. The cautions from the country guide apply: keep the tank above half (fuel stops are thin on the rim), petrol is full-service so carry small cash to tip the attendant, and never drive the rural connector roads after dark. Most viewpoints are small gated stops charging R10โ€“R75 per person in cash, so carry rand in small notes.

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Blyde River Canyon (Panorama Route) FAQs

How long do you need for the Panorama Route?
One full day drives all the headline stops โ€” the Three Rondavels, Bourke's Luck Potholes, God's Window, the Pinnacle and the waterfalls โ€” if you start early and don't linger. Two days is more relaxed and gives you a buffer morning to re-drive a viewpoint if Day 1 was hazy, plus time for the Graskop Gorge Lift. The stops are close together (most within 60km), but each one is a short walk and a photo stop, so the day fills up faster than the distances suggest.
Should you do the Panorama Route before or after Kruger?
Before. The viewpoints depend on clear light and God's Window and the high lookouts cloud over by late morning in summer, so you want a fresh, early start โ€” easier on arrival than after several pre-dawn game drives. Practically, you can base in Graskop or Hazyview, drive the route, then drop into the southern Kruger gates (Phabeni or Numbi, about 50 minutes from Hazyview) the next morning.
Do you need a car for the Blyde River Canyon?
Yes. The viewpoints are spread along rim roads with no public transport between them, so it's a self-drive region or a guided day tour from a Kruger lodge. Most travellers hire a car at Kruger Mpumalanga (MQP) or Hoedspruit (HDS) airport. South Africa drives on the left and the roads are signed in English, so it's straightforward for UK drivers โ€” just keep the tank above half, as fuel stops on the rim are sparse.

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