Rolling emerald-green Waikato hills and a winding river at golden hour

North Island · New Zealand

Holiday in the
Mighty Waikato

Rolling emerald hills, glowworm-lit caverns and the real-life Shire. This is your independent guide to New Zealand's green heartland — where to go, what to see, and why it stays with you.

1.5hrsSouth of Auckland
44Hobbit holes at the Shire
18Themed gardens in Hamilton
30M yrsOf glowworm limestone caves

Where to go in the Waikato

A round green hobbit-hole door in a flowering garden set into a grassy Waikato hillside Flagship experience

Hobbiton Movie Set

Just outside the dairy town of Matamata, a rolling 12-acre sheep farm doubles as the most famous fictional village on earth. This is the Shire, painstakingly rebuilt for Peter Jackson's The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit films and kept in permanent bloom ever since.

Forty-four hobbit holes dot the green hillsides, smoke curls from tiny chimneys, and the path winds down to the Green Dragon Inn for a pint by the millpond. Guided walking tours run daily — it is, by a distance, the Waikato's signature experience.

  • LocationMatamata
  • Tour~1.5-hour guided walk
  • OpenYear-round, bookings essential
  • AccessFamily-friendly, mostly flat
Explore Hobbiton
Glowworms lighting the ceiling of the Waitomo limestone caves above a dark underground river

Waitomo Glowworm Caves

Thirty million years in the making, the limestone labyrinth beneath Waitomo is lit by a creature found nowhere else on the planet — Arachnocampa luminosa, the New Zealand glowworm. Drift by boat through the silent Glowworm Grotto and the cave ceiling becomes a galaxy of tiny blue-green stars.

Above and below ground there's more: the Ruakuri and Aranui caves, and — for the brave — black-water rafting through underground rivers on an inner tube.

  • LocationWaitomo, ~1hr from Hamilton
  • TourBoat ride ~45 min
  • BringA warm layer — caves are cool
  • AlsoTubing & adventure caving
Explore Waitomo Caves
Symmetrical formal themed garden with hedges, a reflecting pond and a stone archway at Hamilton Gardens

Hamilton Gardens

Not your usual botanic garden. Hamilton Gardens is a journey through time and culture — eighteen fully enclosed themed gardens ranging from an Ancient Egyptian temple court and an Italian Renaissance garden to the Māori Te Parapara productive garden.

Ranked among the top three things to do in New Zealand, the grounds are free to wander, with a modest charge for the enclosed gardens for visitors from outside Hamilton.

  • LocationHamilton city
  • EntryFree to the grounds
  • Gardens18 themed enclosures
  • Allow2–3 hours
Explore Hamilton Gardens
A surfer riding a long left-hand wave along Raglan's black-sand coast with a volcanic cone in the distance

Raglan

An hour west of Hamilton, the road runs out at Raglan — a black-sand surf town with a creative streak and some of the best left-hand waves in the world. Manu Bay's point break is legendary among surfers; Ngarunui beach is the place to learn, or simply watch the sunset.

Off the water, it's all weatherboard cafés, galleries and the looming cone of Mount Karioi to climb.

  • Location~45 min from Hamilton
  • SurfWorld-class left-hand breaks
  • BeachesBlack sand, big sunsets
  • AlsoCafés, galleries, Mt Karioi
Explore Raglan
Bridal Veil Falls dropping in a single ribbon down a dark cliff into a forest plunge pool

Bridal Veil Falls / Waireinga

A short walk through native forest opens onto one of the North Island's most photogenic waterfalls. Known to Māori as Waireinga, Bridal Veil Falls drops a clean 55 metres in a single ribbon into the pool below.

Viewing platforms sit at the clifftop, midway and at the base — the bottom lookout, reached by a stairway, is where the spray and the rainbows are.

  • Locationnear Raglan / Te Mata
  • Drop55 metres, single fall
  • WalkEasy 10 min to top viewpoint
  • CostFree, open daily
Explore Bridal Veil Falls
A native tui bird perched among ferns in the ancient forest of Sanctuary Mountain Maungatautari

Sanctuary Mountain Maungatautari

Behind 47 kilometres of predator-proof fence, an entire mountain has been given back to the wild. Maungatautari is one of the largest fenced ecological "islands" on mainland New Zealand — a 3,400-hectare ark where takahē, kākā, kiwi, hihi and ancient tuatara live among towering native forest.

Guided and self-guided walks reveal birdsong most of the country lost a century ago.

  • Locationnear Cambridge & Te Awamutu
  • Size3,400 ha, predator-free
  • WalksSelf-guided & guided
  • WildlifeTakahē, kākā, tuatara
Explore Sanctuary Mountain

Beyond the highlights

More of the Waikato worth the detour

Te Aroha

An Edwardian spa town at the foot of its namesake mountain, home to the Mokena Geyser — the world's only hot soda-water geyser — and restored mineral bathhouses.

Karangahake Gorge

Gold-rush ghosts and a dramatic river gorge, threaded by the Hauraki Rail Trail through old mining tunnels and swing bridges.

Lake Karapiro

A mirror-flat hydro lake and New Zealand's premier rowing course — ideal for kayaking, paddling and a lakeside picnic.

Kawhia

A sleepy west-coast harbour where, at low tide, you can dig your own natural hot pool in the black sand of Ocean Beach.

Make it a trip

Planning your Waikato holiday

Base yourself

Hamilton, New Zealand's fourth-largest city, sits in the middle of everything. Most of the region's attractions are within a 90-minute drive, making it an easy hub for day trips.

Getting here

The Waikato is 1.5 hours south of Auckland by car or on the Te Huia passenger train. Hamilton Airport connects to domestic flights across New Zealand.

When to go

Green in every season. Summer (December–March) is best for surf and gardens, while the Shire and the caves are just as magical in the cooler, quieter months.