Oceania · New Zealand
Queenstown
An alpine resort town on the Southern Lakes, where adventure and quiet luxury share the same shoreline.
- Suggested stay
- from 3 · 5 ideal · up to 8 nights
- Currency
- New Zealand dollar (NZD)
- Language
- English, Maori
- Best season
- Two distinct seasons reward a discerning visit. Late spring through early autumn (November to April) brings long days, warm lake afternoons, vivid Central Otago colour, and the full run of hiking, jet-boat, wine and water itineraries. The southern winter (June to August) is the season of The Remarkables, Coronet Peak and Cardrona, with heli-skiing on the surrounding ranges and snow-bound lodge evenings. March to April offers the best balance of weather, autumn colour and reduced crowds; the shoulder weeks either side of peak ski season suit those who prize quiet.
Queenstown sits on a glacial arm of Lake Wakatipu, ringed by the serrated wall of The Remarkables and the high country that runs north to Glenorchy and Mount Aspiring. It is New Zealand’s adventure capital and has been since the bungy was invented up the road, yet the version that matters to a discerning traveller is quieter than that reputation suggests: a small lake town that happens to be surrounded by some of the most cinematic alpine scenery on earth, with a handful of genuinely world-class lodges hidden along its shores. The appeal is the proximity of opposites. A morning’s heli-skiing or a jet-boat run into a UNESCO wilderness can be followed by an afternoon of Central Otago Pinot Noir and a fireside tasting menu, all within the same valley.
The town is best experienced from a lodge rather than a hotel block. The finest addresses, Rosewood Matakauri on the lake’s edge and Blanket Bay out toward Glenorchy, are deliberately set apart from the centre, trading walkability for absolute calm and uninterrupted views; Eichardt’s, on the waterfront, is the choice for those who want the restaurants and jetties at the door. From any of them the region opens up by helicopter, by launch and by chauffeured car: Milford Sound and Fiordland are a private flight away, the Dart Valley and the Routeburn a short drive, and the vineyards of Gibbston and Bannockburn an easy day’s grazing.
The rhythm of a good stay alternates exertion with ease. Days are spent outdoors, on the water, in the snow or among the vines, and evenings are given over to the table and the spa. Five nights is the sweet spot: enough for a Fiordland flight, a wine day, a wilderness excursion and a slow day or two by the lake, without the diminishing returns of a longer stretch. The food scene has matured markedly, and with the inaugural MICHELIN Guide New Zealand arriving in 2026, Queenstown’s restaurants are about to be judged on the world stage for the first time.
A note on logistics, which here are inseparable from the experience. Queenstown’s airport is one of the more scenically demanding approaches in the world and operates within a daylight-biased window, so private arrivals reward planning; the lodges and FBO handle customs, transfers and helicopter onward legs with practised discretion. Arrive with a loose itinerary and let the weather, which changes quickly in the mountains, dictate the order of things. The concierge’s standing advice holds: keep the flying days flexible, and the long lunches for when the cloud comes in.
Ideal for
Adventure-minded couples who want luxury without formality · Wine and culinary travellers exploring Central Otago · Honeymooners and milestone celebrations · Active families seeking lodge-based exploration
Where to stay
The Houses
Rosewood Matakauri
Rosewood Hotels & Resorts · Lakeside alpine lodge · Glenorchy Road, on the shore of Lake Wakatipu, roughly seven minutes from Queenstown
The most refined address in the region: an intimate lakeside lodge of around a dozen suites and multi-room villas set against the panorama of Walter Peak, Cecil Peak and The Remarkables. Every suite frames the lake through floor-to-ceiling glass and offers a private patio, fireside sitting room and deep bath. The mood is residential and unhurried rather than grand.
Why The benchmark for understated luxury in New Zealand's south, with a setting few properties on earth can rival.
Blanket Bay
Relais & Chateaux · Alpine country lodge · Near Glenorchy, at the northern head of Lake Wakatipu, about 45 minutes from Queenstown
A grand alpine lodge of reclaimed schist and native timber, much of it salvaged from old South Island railway bridges, set where the lake meets the Humboldt Mountains. Accommodation runs from main-lodge rooms and suites to standalone chalets and an exclusive four-bedroom villa. The remove from town is the point: this is a base for the Routeburn, the Dart Valley and Mount Aspiring National Park.
Why A Relais & Chateaux wilderness lodge for travellers who want the Southern Alps at the door and town at arm's length.
Eichardt's Private Hotel
Historic lakefront townhouse hotel · Marine Parade, on the Lake Wakatipu waterfront in the heart of Queenstown
A heritage building turned intimate hotel on the most coveted stretch of the Queenstown waterfront, blending antique character with contemporary comfort across a small collection of suites, a penthouse and a residence. The location places the town's restaurants, bars and lake jetties at the threshold. A member of Small Luxury Hotels of the World.
Why The in-town counterpoint to the out-of-town lodges: heritage, walkability and a private yacht.
Azur Lodge
Private villa lodge · Sunshine Bay, above Lake Wakatipu, a few minutes west of Queenstown
Nine free-standing one-bedroom villas stepped into the hillside above the lake, each with floor-to-ceiling glazing and a private deck angled at the water and the mountains beyond. Service is quiet and personal, with breakfast and pre-dinner refreshments included and a focus on absolute privacy.
Why Standalone-villa privacy with a postcard outlook, for couples who want the view to themselves.
The Rees Hotel
Lakeside hotel and residences · Frankton Road, on the Lake Wakatipu shore between Queenstown and Frankton
A lakefront hotel pairing hotel rooms and apartment-style suites with a collection of larger lakeside residences suited to families and longer stays. Its dining room and wine cellar are well regarded, and the position offers lake-and-mountain views with an easy run into town.
Why The most flexible luxury option for families and longer stays, with residences and a strong cellar.
Where to dine
The Tables
Amisfield Restaurant & Cellar Door
Modern New Zealand, foraged and produce-driven · Destination winery restaurant
The region's defining tasting-menu pilgrimage, set among the vines a short drive from town, paired with its own Central Otago wines.
Rata
Modern New Zealand · Fine dining
The most polished in-town fine-dining room, showcasing South Island producers in a calm, garden-set space.
The Bunker
Contemporary rustic, fire and game · Intimate fine dining and late bar
A candlelit, hard-to-find room for a long, unhurried dinner and a nightcap by the fire.
Botswana Butchery
Modern grill and seafood · Waterfront grill
Queenstown's grand waterfront grill, the place for prime cuts, fresh fish and a serious wine list.
The Sherwood
Seasonal, garden-to-table · Hilltop hotel restaurant and bar
A relaxed hilltop room built around its own gardens, with a low-intervention wine list and long lake views.
Kinross Bistro
Central Otago bistro and wine · Cellar-door bistro
The natural lunch stop on a Gibbston wine day, pouring five small Central Otago labels under one roof.
What to do
Experiences
Private heli-flight to Milford Sound with remote landings
Private charter onlyHelicopter / scenic
A private helicopter crosses the Southern Alps and Fiordland to Milford Sound, with multiple alpine and glacier landings and a gourmet picnic, returning over peaks and hanging valleys inaccessible by road. The ultimate version of the flight is offered exclusively as a private booking.
Why The single most spectacular day in the region, compressing a full Fiordland expedition into a few private hours.
Heli-skiing the Southern Alps backcountry
Guided private and small-group chartersWinter / adventure
In the southern winter, helicopters access untracked terrain across the ranges around Queenstown and Wanaka for guided descents far beyond the lift-served fields, tailored to ability and snow conditions.
Why Private powder on terrain no chairlift reaches, with a guide and a machine at your disposal.
Dart River wilderness jet and Mount Aspiring National Park
Small-group with private optionsWilderness / river
From Glenorchy, jet boats run deep up the braided Dart River into Mount Aspiring National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage area, on the region's longest river journey, combining the thrill of the boat with the silence of the beech forest.
Why The most immersive way into the Glenorchy wilderness and its Middle-earth landscapes.
Private Central Otago wine day with chauffeur
Private guide and vehicleWine / culinary
A chauffeured day through Gibbston, Bannockburn and Cromwell with private cellar-door tastings at boutique Pinot Noir producers, a vineyard lunch and an itinerary shaped to personal taste, away from the coach circuit.
Why Central Otago is one of the world's great Pinot Noir regions; a private day unlocks the cellar doors that matter.
Onsen Hot Pools private cedar baths and spa
Exclusive-use private roomsWellness
Private cedar-lined hot pools with retractable roofs at Arthur's Point, each suite opening to mountain and river views, paired with spa treatments. Every pool is booked for exclusive use.
Why A genuinely private alpine soak at dusk, ideally after a day on the slopes or the trails.
TSS Earnslaw and Walter Peak high-country station
Charter and private-dining optionsLake / heritage
The vintage 1912 coal-fired steamship TSS Earnslaw crosses Lake Wakatipu to the Walter Peak high-country farm, where private dining and farm experiences can be arranged in the gardens overlooking the lake.
Why A century-old steamer and a working high-country station make the most characterful afternoon on the water.
Shopping
The Maisons
The Mall, Beach Street and Rees Street
Queenstown's pedestrian core, where New Zealand fashion, merino and possum-merino knitwear, homewares and artisan craft cluster within an easy stroll of the waterfront. Boutiques such as Angel Divine carry curated local and international designers including Karen Walker and Zambesi.
O'Connells / T Galleria precinct
The refurbished O'Connells centre houses T Galleria by DFS, the closest the town comes to a luxury-label mall, with international houses alongside duty-free.
Beach Street and Shotover Street jewellers
A tight run of jewellers and watch dealers around the CBD, dealing in gold, pearls, greenstone (pounamu) and Swiss watches, with bespoke commissions available.
By appointment
Bespoke pounamu (greenstone) commissions through local ateliers · Private watch and jewellery viewings at Partridge Jewellers
Arrival & departure
Coming & Going
Airports
At Frankton. Scenically demanding terrain approach; operates roughly 07:00-22:00 with only a few certified carriers cleared after dark. International private charters clear customs and biosecurity on arrival. Domestic links to Auckland, Wellington and Christchurch; trans-Tasman links to Australia.
The main South Island long-haul and wide-body gateway; often used to connect onto Queenstown or as the entry point for those routing by private aircraft or scenic drive.
Private terminals
- Dedicated FBO and corporate-jet handling at Queenstown Airport via ground-handling operators (e.g. Queenstown Corporate Jet Services), covering customs/immigration clearance, crew handling and catering
Meet & greet · gate escort
- FBO meet-and-greet with expedited customs and biosecurity for private arrivals
- Lodge and hotel concierge greeters at the terminal
First-class & arrivals lounges
- Manaia Lounge (premium pay-in / airline lounge) at Queenstown Airport
- Air New Zealand domestic lounge for eligible passengers
Private transfers
- Chauffeured luxury car and SUV transfers to town and the outlying lodges
- Helicopter transfer from the airport to remote lodges and high-country locations
- Private launch and yacht transfers on Lake Wakatipu (including Eichardt's Pacific Jemm)
Private aviation
- Queenstown Airport (NZQN) handles business jets and turboprops via ground handlers; aircraft at or above 5,700 kg MCTOW require a handler
- FBO services include CIQ clearance, crew hotel rates, catering and secure car transfers
- Terrain and daylight-biased operating window make slot and crew planning essential; Christchurch is the common alternate and long-haul relay
Immigration fast-track
Expedited customs and biosecurity clearance arranged through the FBO for private charter arrivals; concierge fast-track and porterage for commercial arrivals via the lodges.
Curator’s notes — pending verification
- NO New Zealand restaurant holds a Michelin star yet: the inaugural MICHELIN Guide New Zealand (Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch, Queenstown) is not unveiled until 30 June 2026. All michelinStars values remain 0 and must be revisited after the ceremony.
- Amisfield is editorially sensitive: executive chef Vaughan Mabee departed in early 2026 following workplace-conduct allegations (and the restaurant was dropped from Cuisine's 2025 Good Food Guide at that time). The kitchen is now led by Chef Sun Peng with Aaron Jacobson; the 'Cuisine Good Food Awards top ranking' accolade and current leadership should be re-verified before publishing.
- Rosewood Matakauri room count still varies by source (cited as ~11 to 13 suites/villas); confirm exact inventory with the property.
- Botswana Butchery canonical URL is ambiguous: both botswanabutchery.co.nz (used here) and botswanabutchery.nz resolve to the brand; confirm the preferred domain.
- Coordinates are for central Queenstown and approximate.
- Best-time and seasonal ski-field/heli-skiing claims are general; confirm current season operators and dates.