14 June 2026 · 6 min read
Quick escapes under two hours from Cape Town with a wood-fired hot tub

The best last-minute escapes are the ones you can decide on at 4pm and be living by 7. You pack a bag, fill a flask, point the car at the mountains and let the city peel away behind you. The trick is matching the drive to the daylight: leave Cape Town after work on a Friday, keep the trip under two hours and you can still be in a wood-fired hot tub by dark, watching the last of the light go off the hills while the fire ticks the water up to heat. Here is how the closest soaks sort by drive time, from no drive at all to a gentle ninety minutes out.
No drive at all: stay in the city
Some Fridays the idea of even an hour on the road is a bridge too far, and that is exactly the night to stay put. Camps Bay Retreat puts a private suite within the city itself, with its own hot tub and a heated pool, so the whole escape is a short hop across town rather than a journey out of it. You finish work, drive the few minutes up the slopes and the change of scene does the rest: the noise of the week falls away against the green of the mountainside and you are in the water before you have properly registered that the weekend has started. It is the spontaneous soak in its purest form, no planning, no packing for the long haul, just a quick change of address for the night. For anyone who measures a getaway in how little effort it takes to begin, this is as frictionless as it gets while still feeling like a genuine break from the everyday.

About an hour out: the Winelands run
Give yourself roughly sixty minutes of road and the options open right up into the Cape Winelands. Gite Studio Franschhoek is a snug two-sleeper studio about an hour out, ideal when it is just the two of you and you want the village and the vineyards on the doorstep without a big house to rattle around in. A touch north, Hemingway Untether Luxury Pod sits in Wellington, also a two-sleeper and also about an hour from the city, a tucked-away pod built for unplugging rather than entertaining. Both reward the after-work departure: you make the easy run out as the light goes amber over the mountains, and the wood-fired tub is the first thing you tend to on arrival, feeding the fire while you unpack and letting the heat build into the evening. By the time the stars are properly out, the water is right and the week is already a long way behind you.
Towards the Overberg: an hour to ninety minutes
Swing the car south and east instead and you trade vineyards for the rolling, open country of the Overberg. The Farmhouse at Porcupine Hills is a cottage in Bot River, roughly an hour out and its draw is a large wood-fired hot tub set against the kind of big-sky farm quiet that makes a single night feel like three. A little further on, about ninety minutes from Cape Town, Western Cottage at Bokrivier is a farm cottage near Greyton, far enough to feel properly rural yet close enough to reach comfortably before dark on a Friday. Both lean into the slow business of a wood-fired soak: there is no switch to flick, just kindling, patience and the reward of easing into hot water as the dark settles over the fields. The drive is part of the unwinding, the dorps and farm gates slipping by, the city loosening its grip with every kilometre.

Picking the right distance for the night
The honest way to choose is to be ruthless about your energy on the day. If you are wrung out and want the soak now, stay in town at Camps Bay Retreat and skip the road entirely. If you have an hour of drive left in you and want vineyards out the window, point at Franschhoek or Wellington. If the whole point is to feel genuinely away, the extra half hour to Greyton or Bot River buys you a deeper quiet for very little more effort. Whichever you choose, treat the wood-fired tub as the first job rather than a nightcap: light it as soon as you arrive so the water is ready when you are. These are all real, hand-picked stays, so when a Friday opens up unexpectedly, check what is free, fill the flask and go. The mountains are an hour away and the water will be warm by dark.