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Drakensberg, South Africa
Drakensberg

KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa

Drakensberg

South Africa's highest mountains and a UNESCO wilderness of basalt cliffs, San rock art and the Amphitheatre โ€” which valley to base in, the drive from Durban or Joburg, and how to walk to the top of Tugela Falls.

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

In short

Drakensberg at a glance

The Drakensberg is the basalt mountain wall along the western edge of KwaZulu-Natal โ€” South Africa's highest range, topping out at 3,482m on Thabana Ntlenyana over the Lesotho border. The protected core is the uKhahlamba-Drakensberg Park, a mixed UNESCO World Heritage site listed for both its scenery and the largest concentration of San rock art in the country. For UK travellers it splits into named valleys rather than a single town: the Northern Berg around Royal Natal holds the Amphitheatre, a 5km curve of cliff with Tugela Falls (the world's second-highest at about 948m) dropping off the rim; the Central Berg around the Champagne Valley and Cathedral Peak is the busiest hiking and family base; and the Southern Berg around Underberg is the start of the Sani Pass, a 4x4-only mountain road that switchbacks up to Lesotho and the highest pub in Africa. It's a self-drive region โ€” Durban's King Shaka (DUR) is the natural gateway at roughly 2.5โ€“3 hours to the Central Berg, Johannesburg about 4 hours to the north.

The Drakensberg isnโ€™t a town you arrive in โ€” itโ€™s a 200km basalt wall along the western edge of KwaZulu-Natal, and the single biggest mistake UK first-timers make is trying to โ€œdo the Bergโ€ as one place. It splits into separate dead-end valleys, each its own road off the N3 with no public transport linking them, so the real planning question is which one. The Champagne Valley in the Central Berg, below Cathkin Peak and Champagne Castle, is the easy answer for a first trip: about 2.5โ€“3 hoursโ€™ drive from Durbanโ€™s King Shaka airport, the most lodges and family resorts, and the Monkโ€™s Cowl park gate (conservation fee around R60โ€“R65 a head) minutes away for gentle walks. Royal Natal in the Northern Berg is where the Amphitheatre and Tugela Falls are โ€” closer if youโ€™re driving down from Johannesburg, about 4 hours โ€” and Underberg in the south is the launch point for the Sani Pass. Pick one as your base, day-trip to a second, and donโ€™t try to sleep in all three.

This is hard self-drive country, but easier than people fear: South Africa drives on the left like home, and the N3, R74 and R600 are sealed and signed in English. The cautions are practical, not statutory โ€” keep the tank above half because petrol stops thin out past Winterton and Underberg, carry small rand notes for the full-service pump attendants and park fees, and donโ€™t drive the rural connector roads after dark. Two walks are worth structuring a trip around: the Tugela Gorge walk from Royal Natal, a full day there-and-back to the foot of the 948m falls (the worldโ€™s second-highest, though itโ€™s seasonal and can thin to a trickle in the dry winter), and the steeper Sentinel chain-ladder route from the Free State side that gains the plateau at the top. For the painted San rock-art shelters that earned the park its UNESCO listing, drive to Kambergโ€™s Game Pass Shelter or Giantโ€™s Castle and take a guide. Walk early whatever you choose โ€” by midday in summer the cloud is already building on the rim.

The route

A three-day plan that takes in the two halves most UK first-timers want โ€” the Amphitheatre in the Northern Berg and a Central Berg walking base โ€” without trying to drive the whole range. Times are sealed-road estimates; the last few kilometres into each valley are tar but narrow, and the Sani Pass is gravel and 4x4-only, so don't plan tight timings.

  1. Day 1

    Drive in and settle in the Central Berg

    Pick up a hire car at Durban King Shaka (DUR) and drive to the Champagne Valley near Winterton โ€” about 2.5โ€“3 hours on the N3 then the R74/R600. Settle into a resort or guesthouse below Cathkin Peak and Champagne Castle. If you arrive early, walk the easy Sterkspruit Falls or the contour paths from Monk's Cowl, the central park gate (conservation fee about R60โ€“R65 per adult).

  2. Day 2

    Cathedral Peak or a San rock-art walk

    Either hike from the Cathedral Peak hotel area โ€” the Rainbow Gorge and Doreen Falls are gentle, the full peak a serious all-day scramble โ€” or drive south to Kamberg or Giant's Castle to see the painted San shelters with a guide (Game Pass Shelter at Kamberg has some of the clearest figures). Carry rand in small notes for park fees and tips; petrol stations are sparse this far up the valleys.

  3. Day 3

    The Amphitheatre and Tugela Falls

    Drive north to Royal Natal National Park, about 1.5โ€“2 hours, for the Amphitheatre. The Tugela Gorge walk is a full-day there-and-back to the base of the falls; the harder Sentinel chain-ladder route reaches the top of Tugela Falls from the Free State side (a separate trailhead and a genuine mountain hike). Start early โ€” cloud builds on the rim by midday in summer โ€” and don't drive the rural connector roads after dark.

Where to base yourself

Pick one or two bases rather than moving every night.

Champagne Valley (Central Berg)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

The busiest and easiest base, a strip of resorts, golf estates and family-friendly lodges below Champagne Castle and Cathkin Peak, near Winterton. Best for first-timers who want walking on tap, dinner laid on and a short drive from Durban; the Monk's Cowl park gate is minutes away.

Best for: First trip, families, day hikes

Browse hotels ~2.5โ€“3 hrs from Durban (DUR)

Cathedral Peak (Central Berg)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

A quieter cul-de-sac valley reached on a longer dirt-edged road, centred on one large hotel and a few guesthouses, with trails straight from the door into the high Berg. The pick if hiking is the whole point and you don't mind being further from shops and services.

Best for: Serious walkers, scenery over convenience

Browse hotels ~3 hrs from Durban

Underberg & Himeville (Southern Berg)

ยฃ value

The southern gateway and the launch point for the Sani Pass 4x4 to Lesotho, with trout farms, small-town pubs and self-catering cottages. Choose it for the Sani Pass and the gentler southern foothills; it's the furthest base from both airports.

Best for: Sani Pass, fishing, quiet valleys

Browse hotels ~3.5 hrs from Durban

Northern Berg (Royal Natal / Bergville)

ยฃยฃ mid-range

Closest to the Amphitheatre and Tugela Falls, with lodges and farm stays around Bergville and the park. Worth a night if the Amphitheatre is your priority, and the more logical base if you're driving down from Johannesburg rather than up from Durban.

Best for: The Amphitheatre, arriving from Joburg

Browse hotels ~4 hrs from Johannesburg (JNB)

Getting around Drakensberg

This is a self-drive region โ€” there's no useful public transport between the Drakensberg valleys, and each one is a separate dead-end road off the N3, so a hire car is essential. Most UK travellers pick one up at Durban King Shaka (DUR), about 2.5โ€“3 hours from the Central Berg, or fly into Johannesburg (JNB) and drive roughly 4 hours to the Northern Berg. UK drivers have it easy here: South Africa drives on the left like home and the main roads (the N3, R74 and R600) are sealed and signed in English, though the last stretch into each valley narrows and the verges can be rough. The cautions from the country guide apply โ€” keep the tank above half (fuel stops thin out past Winterton and Underberg), petrol is full-service so carry small rand to tip the attendant, and don't drive the rural connector roads after dark. The Sani Pass is the exception: it's gravel, steep and 4x4-only, crosses into Lesotho and back, so either hire a suitable vehicle the rental firm has cleared for the border or take a guided day tour from Underberg.

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Drakensberg FAQs

How do you get to the Drakensberg from the UK?
There's no direct UK flight; you connect through Johannesburg or fly into Durban King Shaka (DUR), then drive. Durban is the closer gateway โ€” about 2.5โ€“3 hours up the N3 and R74/R600 to the Champagne Valley in the Central Berg. From Johannesburg it's roughly 4 hours to the Northern Berg and Royal Natal. Either way you need a hire car: the valleys are separate dead-end roads with no public transport linking them.
Which part of the Drakensberg should you base in?
For a first trip, the Champagne Valley in the Central Berg โ€” it's the easiest drive from Durban, has the most lodges and family resorts, and puts gentle walks from Monk's Cowl and the harder Cathedral Peak trails within reach. Choose the Northern Berg (Royal Natal) if the Amphitheatre and Tugela Falls are your priority, especially driving down from Johannesburg, or Underberg in the Southern Berg if you want to do the Sani Pass 4x4 into Lesotho.
Can you walk to Tugela Falls?
Yes, two ways. The Tugela Gorge walk from Royal Natal National Park is a full-day there-and-back to the base of the Amphitheatre, mostly gentle with a boulder scramble and a chain ladder near the end. To reach the top of the falls you take the separate Sentinel Peak route from the Free State side, a steeper mountain hike with two chain ladders that gains the plateau. Tugela Falls is about 948m and the second-highest waterfall in the world, but it's seasonal โ€” it's most impressive after summer rain and can be a trickle in the dry winter.
When is the best time to visit the Drakensberg?
April to September for hiking โ€” the dry winter brings clear, settled days and big views, though nights drop below freezing at altitude and snow can dust the high peaks. Summer (Novemberโ€“March) is green and warm but afternoons bring violent thunderstorms and the high viewpoints cloud over, so walk early. Spring (Septemberโ€“October) is a good compromise of milder days and fewer storms.
Do you need a 4x4 for the Sani Pass?
Yes. The Sani Pass from Underberg up to the Lesotho border is unsealed, steep and switchbacked, and the South African authorities require a 4x4 for the upper section. It also crosses an international border into Lesotho and back, so the hire car has to be one the rental company has cleared for the crossing. Most UK visitors skip the hassle and take a guided 4x4 day tour from Underberg, which handles the vehicle, the border and the drive to the highest pub in Africa at the top.

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