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When filling up costs this much, the best trips are the shortest ones: Why the fuel price is reshaping local travel

When filling up costs this much, the best trips are the shortest ones: Why the fuel price is reshaping local travel
The Capital Boardwalk

There has always been a certain kind of traveller who understood something alluring about wanderlust: that distance is not the same thing as experience.

This is the person who has spent a long weekend in their own city and come home genuinely rested. The person who has checked into a hotel twenty minutes from home and felt, inexplicably, like they have been somewhere. Who has never confused kilometres covered with quality of time spent. For years, this traveller was considered the exception, a little unconventional, perhaps even contrarian. Right now, they look like a genius.

South Africa’s travel landscape is shifting, and the numbers tell a clear story. Petrol has climbed by more than R7 per litre between January and June 2026, with 95 unleaded reaching a record R28.06, a figure that makes filling up before a long road trip a rather sobering calculation. Airfares have moved in step: domestic ticket prices jumped by 24.5% in April alone, the steepest single-month increase since 2008. Together, these forces are reshaping what a holiday looks like for South African travellers.

The reflexive read of rising travel costs is that South Africans are being pushed into compromise. The more accurate read is that they are being nudged into a reappraisal and finding that their dream destinations are closer than they think.

Urban staycations are rising. One- and two-night escapes within or near major cities are replacing the annual pilgrimage to somewhere distant. Weekend breaks in the kind of hotel you’d cheerfully recommend to a visiting colleague, except this time, you’re the one checking in, are becoming a legitimate leisure category in their own right. From Johannesburg and Pretoria to Umhlanga, Mpumalanga, Cape Town and Gqeberha, the definition of going on holiday is expanding to include staying close.

Travellers making this shift aren’t settling. They’re investing in flexibility: the ability to extend a stay without drama, a self-catering option that doesn’t require unpacking a full kitchen, proximity to the restaurants and lifestyle hubs they would have sought out in a foreign city anyway. Accessibility, it turns out, is as much a feature of a great travel experience as the thread count or the view.

South Africa’s coastal cities have long offered more than they’ve been given credit for. Gqeberha, for example, is asserting itself as a destination worth the attention. The Capital Boardwalk, which opened in May 2026 as the city’s first aparthotel, brings 145 fully serviced rooms and apartments to the iconic Boardwalk precinct, steps from the beach, integrated with shopping, dining, entertainment and the casino. It is the kind of development that says something about the maturity of domestic travel infrastructure: that the investment is following the traveller, not waiting for them to arrive. South Africans have always known, in theory, that their country is extraordinary. What the current moment is providing is the practical incentive to act on that knowledge. The smartest travellers right now may not be the ones clocking the most kilometres. They are the ones who have worked out that a great trip is defined by what you experience, not how far you travelled to find it.

The best journey you take this year might begin closer to home than you ever expected. That is not a consolation prize. That is an invitation.