Rolling vineyard landscape in the Stellenbosch wine valley, South Africa, with a conical mountain peak and golden fields under a wide sky

The 350-Year-Old Town That Taught South Africa How to Make Wine

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Drive 45 minutes east of Cape Town and the landscape changes. The mountains close in. The vineyards begin. And suddenly you are in a town that has been making wine for longer than most countries have had a name.

Rolling vineyard landscape in the Stellenbosch wine valley, South Africa, with a conical mountain peak and golden fields under a wide sky
Photo by Ben on Unsplash

South Africa’s Oldest Wine Capital

Stellenbosch was founded in 1679 by Simon van der Stel, the Dutch colonial governor who decided the fertile valley between mountain ranges was too good to waste. He was right.

Within decades, the first wine estates were producing bottles shipped to Europe. The town grew slowly, planting oak trees along every street — a tradition that gave Stellenbosch its Afrikaans nickname: Eikestad. The Town of Oaks.

Those original oaks still stand. In autumn, the streets turn red and gold, and the town looks exactly as it has for three centuries.

Walking the Cape Dutch Architecture

Stellenbosch is one of the best-preserved examples of Cape Dutch architecture in the world. White-washed walls, curved gables, thick thatched roofs — the buildings along Dorp Street look much as they did in the early 18th century.

The Stellenbosch Village Museum brings four of these homes back to life, furnished as they would have appeared across different eras. It is a quiet, unhurried walk through 250 years of domestic history.

Not far away, the Dorp Street galleries and antique shops occupy buildings that once housed colonial merchants. The architecture is not staged for visitors. It is simply still there.

The Wine Estates Worth Knowing

Stellenbosch has over 150 wine estates within easy reach of the town centre. But three have become landmarks in their own right.

Rustenberg Wines is one of the oldest continuously farmed estates in South Africa, dating to 1682. Its manor house and parklands feel closer to an English country estate than a winery — until you taste the Bordeaux-style reds.

Tokara Wine Estate sits high on the Helshoogte Pass with views that sweep across the entire Winelands valley. The restaurant here is exceptional. The olive oil is worth taking home.

Delheim Wine Estate runs one of the Winelands’ most welcoming tasting experiences — laid back, family-friendly, and honest about its wines in a way that makes you trust every glass.

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The Student Town Beneath the Vineyards

Stellenbosch is also home to one of South Africa’s oldest and most prestigious universities, established in 1918. Forty thousand students give the town an energy that wine estates alone could not provide.

The result is an unusual combination: world-class restaurants and cellar-door tastings alongside coffee shops, live music, and a lively energy in the old town square on Friday nights.

Stellenbosch does not feel preserved under glass. It feels genuinely alive — a town with deep roots that has not stopped growing.

The Grape That Almost Never Existed

South Africa’s signature red grape — Pinotage — was created not far from Stellenbosch in 1925, by winemaker Abraham Perold at what is now Stellenbosch University. He crossed Pinot Noir with Cinsault, planted four seedlings in his garden, and nearly abandoned the experiment before moving house.

A colleague saved the seedlings. The grape survived. By the 1960s it was winning international competitions. Today, Pinotage appears on wine lists in 40 countries.

The Pinotage Association hosts its annual Top Ten competition each year, drawing winemakers from across the Cape — a celebration of a grape that nearly never made it.

Getting There and Getting Around

Stellenbosch is 45 minutes from Cape Town by car, or just over an hour on the Metrorail Winelands line from Cape Town station — one of the most scenic short train journeys in the Western Cape.

Once there, the town centre is walkable. For the estates beyond, a cycle hire from one of several shops on Dorp Street works well for the flat valley farms. For the mountain passes, a driver or guided Stellenbosch wine tour is worth the cost.

The Winelands are busiest in January and February — harvest season, when the estates open their doors and the air smells of fermentation. Autumn, from March to May, brings the best colour and cooler tasting rooms. For a broader Winelands itinerary, the Franschhoek travel guide pairs well — the two towns are just 30 minutes apart.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Stellenbosch known for in South Africa?

Stellenbosch is South Africa’s oldest wine town, founded in 1679. It is famous for its Cape Dutch architecture, oak-lined streets, and over 150 wine estates producing some of the country’s finest Cabernet Sauvignon and Pinotage.

How far is Stellenbosch from Cape Town?

Stellenbosch is approximately 45 minutes by car from Cape Town, or just over an hour on the Metrorail Winelands train. It makes an ideal day trip from the city, or a two-night stay for serious wine lovers.

When is the best time to visit Stellenbosch?

Harvest season (January to February) is the most vibrant time, with estates opening their doors and a festive atmosphere across the valley. Autumn (March to May) offers cooler temperatures, beautiful foliage, and quieter tasting rooms.

What wine is Stellenbosch most famous for?

Stellenbosch produces excellent Cabernet Sauvignon and Shiraz, and it is the spiritual home of Pinotage — South Africa’s only indigenous grape variety, created at Stellenbosch University in 1925 by crossing Pinot Noir with Cinsault.

Stellenbosch does not announce itself. It simply waits — under the oaks, between the mountains — for the people who take the road east of Cape Town and give themselves time to stay.

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Plan Your South Africa Trip

Use our Cape Town travel guide to plan your base, then build outward into the Winelands — Stellenbosch and Franschhoek make a perfect two-day loop from the city.

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