Hotel in Cape Town, South Africa
One&Only Cape Town
1,375ptsWaterfront Urban Seclusion

About One&Only Cape Town
Positioned on the Victoria and Alfred Waterfront with unobstructed sightlines to Table Mountain, One&Only Cape Town operates across two distinct structures: the Marina Rise and a palm-lined island connected by private waterways. With 131 rooms, Africa's only Nobu restaurant, a 5,000-bottle Wine Loft, and the 2025 World Travel Awards' Africa's Leading Luxury Resort title, this is Cape Town's most comprehensively scaled urban resort property.
Where the Waterfront Meets the Mountain
Cape Town's luxury hotel market has always split between two competing logics: the historically rooted garden estates of De Waterkant and the Gardens bowl, and the waterfront-facing properties that trade on proximity to the V&A; precinct and direct Table Mountain sightlines. One&Only; Cape Town occupies the latter category with the most fully realised execution in the city. From the lobby, floor-to-ceiling windows frame Table Mountain at a scale that makes the view feel architectural rather than incidental. The mountain is not backdrop here; it organises the entire visual grammar of the resort.
The property divides across two zones: the Marina Rise, whose rooms and suites overlook a central lagoon, and the Island, a constructed landmass ringed by waterways and shaded by palms, where a more secluded set of suites sits at a remove from the city's noise. This bifurcation is one of the more considered spatial decisions in Cape Town hospitality. Guests who want proximity to the V&A;'s shops, restaurants, and marina energy can anchor in the Marina Rise; those seeking something closer to a retreat stay on the Island. Both zones share the same amenity infrastructure.
The Full Sequence: Dining Across the Property
Few urban resorts in Africa can sustain a multi-venue dining program without at least one outlet feeling like a concession to convenience. One&Only; Cape Town is the exception. The progression through its food and drink offering reads almost like a tasting menu in its own right, moving from light aperitif territory through to serious dinner, with a wine program substantial enough to constitute its own destination.
The sequence begins at Vista Bar Lounge, where the soaring windows that frame Table Mountain make it the most theatrically positioned bar in the building. The cocktail list works the mountain into its storytelling: the 'Watcher' series draws on the legends associated with Table Mountain, giving the drinks program a local narrative anchor that most hotel bars in the city lack.
From Vista, the logical progression moves to ROOI restaurant, where the menu engages directly with Cape Town's culinary identity. The Capetonian influences built into the ROOI menu reflect a broader trend in South African fine dining: the move away from Continental European framing toward menus that take the Cape's own pantry, coastline, and agricultural traditions as primary reference points. South Africa's Winelands produce some of the continent's most sophisticated whites and reds, and the Wine Loft gives that regional story its most dramatic setting in the city, a three-storey tower housing 5,000 bottles, with selections drawn from producers including Vergelegen Estate, Thelema Mountain Vineyards, and Eben Sadie.
The anchor tenant of the dining program, however, is Nobu. The One&Only; Cape Town location holds a specific distinction: it is Africa's only Nobu restaurant, and one of the few Nobu outposts globally to integrate local seafood into the kitchen's Japanese-inflected framework at this scale. The menu carries the format's signatures, black cod in miso among them, while the kitchen applies that same precision to South African seafood sourced from waters among the most productive on the continent. The Cape's cold Benguela Current produces exceptional crayfish, linefish, and abalone, and a kitchen trained in Nobu's discipline handles those ingredients with an exactness that a casual waterfront restaurant cannot replicate. Dinner at Nobu is the formal high point of the on-property dining sequence.
For guests spending time at the Island pool, Isola provides the poolside dining counterpoint, its Masa Mara prints setting a warmer visual register against the water. The full arc from Vista cocktails through ROOI and Wine Loft to Nobu is coherent enough that guests spending three or four nights need not leave the property for a single meal without the sequence feeling repetitive.
The Rooms: Scale as a Deliberate Position
One&Only; Cape Town's 131 rooms and suites occupy a different size category from most of Cape Town's boutique competitors. Room footprints run from 650 square feet upward, reaching just under 3,000 square feet in the larger penthouse configurations. Properties like 21 Nettleton or Camissa House compete on intimacy and address; One&Only; competes on scale and comprehensive amenity, a different proposition for a different kind of trip.
The design language across the rooms uses warm tones and South African contemporary art to ground the interiors in local cultural context rather than the generic international luxury register. Every room delivers a balcony view of either Table Mountain or the V&A; Marina waterways; there is no interior-facing room in the building. Among the Island Suites, the One-Bedroom Island Grand Suite includes an indoor fireplace, a dining table, and a kitchen with its own service entrance, making it functional for extended stays. At the leading of the range, the four-bedroom Lion's Head Penthouse spans two storeys with unobstructed sightlines to Table Mountain, Robben Island, Devil's Peak, Lion's Head, Cape Town Harbour, and the V&A; Waterfront simultaneously. At that scale, it competes against Cape Town's most extensive private villa accommodations rather than against standard hotel suites.
For families, the Two-Bedroom Family Suites connect to an adjoined living space, and the KidsOnly clubhouse runs a supervised activity program covering everything from crafts to cooking. The property's rate structure, starting around $1,135 per night at the lower end, positions it clearly in Cape Town's leading price tier, above Cape Grace, A Fairmont Managed Hotel and the Cape Heritage Hotel, and in a direct conversation with Mount Nelson, A Belmond Hotel, Cape Town for the city's most fully resourced urban resort stay.
Spa, Activity, and the City Beyond
The One&Only; Spa occupies the Island, positioned deliberately away from the main hotel activity. Treatments incorporate South African botanical ingredients including sweet orange and baobab oil, alongside established protocols from ESPA and Biologique Recherche. The spa's waterway and infinity pool outlook reinforces the Island's function as the property's decompression zone.
On the activity side, the property's curated excursion program engages with what Cape Town actually offers at the adventurous end of the spectrum. Sunrise hikes to Lion's Head, yoga sessions on Table Mountain, wine estate tasting and blending sessions in the Winelands, and cage-diving with great white sharks all feature. These are not hotel-branded reframings of generic tourist activities; cage-diving in Cape Town's waters operates in one of the few locations globally where it remains a substantively different experience from shallow-water encounters, given the population density of great whites in the waters around the Cape.
The V&A; Waterfront itself, directly accessible on foot, functions as an extension of the property's broader offer for guests who want to move between the resort's contained world and the city's commercial energy. For those extending their South Africa trip into the bush, Singita in Kruger National Park and andBeyond Kirkman's Kamp in Skukuza represent the safari tier that pairs naturally with a Cape Town base of this calibre. For Winelands extensions, Clouds Estate in Stellenbosch and Akademie Street Boutique Hotel in Franschhoek sit within direct driving range of the city.
Recognition and Competitive Position
The property holds the 2025 World Travel Awards title for Africa's Leading Luxury Resort, and a La Liste Leading Hotels score of 94.5 points for 2026. Google reviewers have rated it 4.7 across 3,451 responses, a volume that gives the score reasonable statistical weight. In the Cape Town market, that combination of award recognition, scale, and multi-venue dining depth places it in a different category from the city's smaller design-led properties. The Cape Cadogan Boutique Hotel, Cape Royale Luxury Suites, and even the storied Mount Nelson each offer something distinctly different in format and atmosphere. One&Only;'s case is built on comprehensiveness: the full arc of dining, the dual-zone spatial layout, the spa island, and the excursion depth make it the city's most self-contained luxury proposition. See our full Cape Town restaurants guide for context on how the city's dining scene extends beyond the waterfront.
Planning Your Stay
Arriving by luxury airport transfer, a service the property provides via Mercedes vehicle from Cape Town International Airport, the resort entry through the V&A; Waterfront is direct. The property's address at 0C Dock Road puts it at the western edge of the Waterfront precinct. Bookings for the Island Suites and the Lion's Head Penthouse warrant advance planning given limited inventory in those categories. The fitness centre runs classes including Pilates and boxing alongside standard cardio and weight equipment. For guests approaching Cape Town as a gateway to a broader South Africa itinerary, properties like Makanyane Safari Lodge in Thabazimbi and Abelana River Lodge in Phalaborwa represent the bush complement to this urban anchor.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which room offers the leading experience at One&Only; Cape Town?
The answer depends on the kind of stay. The Island Grand Suite, priced within the One&Only;'s upper tier and awarded the resort's 2025 World Travel Awards recognition for Africa's Leading Luxury Resort, delivers the most complete balance of privacy and amenity: waterway views, an indoor fireplace, and kitchen facilities without the operational complexity of the full penthouse. For guests who want the most expansive configuration and are willing to pay at the leading of the range, the four-bedroom Lion's Head Penthouse is the most comprehensively appointed option in the building, with simultaneous sightlines to Table Mountain, Robben Island, and the harbour. For those prioritising the Vista Bar and Nobu dining proximity, the Marina Rise suites keep all activity on one side of the waterway.
What is One&Only; Cape Town leading at?
The property's most defensible claim is its dining depth. Africa's only Nobu, a 5,000-bottle Wine Loft with Winelands producers, and a Cape-inflected main restaurant give it a food-and-drink program that no comparable city hotel on the continent currently matches at the same address. The La Liste score of 94.5 for 2026 and the World Travel Awards Africa's Leading Luxury Resort title for 2025 confirm the property's position at the leading of Cape Town's urban luxury tier. For guests beginning or ending a South Africa trip in the city and wanting a single property that covers dining, spa, excursions, and scale without requiring movement around the city, One&Only; Cape Town is the most complete single-property solution in the market.
Recognized By
Related editorial
- Best Fine Dining Restaurants in ParisFrom three-Michelin-star icons to the next generation of Parisian chefs pushing boundaries, these are the restaurants that define fine dining in the world's culinary capital.
- Best Luxury Hotels in RomeFrom rooftop terraces overlooking ancient ruins to Michelin-starred hotel dining, these are the luxury hotels that make Rome unforgettable.
- Best Cocktail Bars in KyotoFrom sleek lounges to hidden speakeasies, Kyoto's cocktail scene blends Japanese precision with global influence in ways you won't find anywhere else.
Save or rate One&Only Cape Town on Pearl
Keep this venue in your Pearl passport, rate it after you visit, and track it alongside every other place you collect.











