Dein Aufenthalt — Windmill Hotel
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Das Eigentum — Windmill Hotel
The Windmill Hotel feels like a quiet, no-fuss layover for transit travellers and mining contractors. Its lobby is clean, functional, and air-conditioned, with tile floors and a tired sofa set — not a place you linger, but a place you gratefully sleep after a long drive. The small pool and beer garden out back are its real assets in the heat.
Chroniken von Manica
Manica was founded as a gold-prospecting outpost by the Portuguese in the 1890s, then grew as a market town serving the Beira–Harare railway. Its colonial core retains low-slung veranda buildings, now faded pastels with corrugated roofs. Independence brought stagnation, but the new EN6 highway link and cross-border mining traffic have revived the strip. Today it's a dusty, pragmatic border hub, not a tourist town, with most visitors passing through en route to Gorongosa or Zimbabwe.
Beste Zeit zu besuchen
Vollständiger Manica-Guide →Die besten Monate
May to September: the dry season means clear skies, cool mornings, and little rain — comfortable for driving or walking the town's few blocks. Mosquitoes are far fewer than in summer.
Peak / Festival Surge
July and August: cool, dry weather draws overland travellers and mining personnel; hotel prices can rise 15–20%. No major festivals in Manica itself, but the overall regional tourism season peaks then.
Budget Schulter Saison
October and April: October is still dry but warming up; April is the tail of the rains. Both offer emptier rooms and negotiable rates, especially midweek.
Wetter & Verpackung
Manica's climate quirk: it can be 30°C at noon and 14°C by 6pm, especially in July. Pack a lightweight fleece or jacket for evenings — the hotel's outdoor bar gets chilly after sunset.
Live City Briefing veröffentlicht — Manica
- The EN6 highway resurfacing between Manica and Chimoio is nearly complete, cutting transit times; roadworks still cause short delays near the border post.
- A new ATM at the TotalEnergies station on Avenida da Liberdade now dispenses meticais reliably, saving visitors the hunt for cash.
- The Xiluvo market (Wednesdays and Saturdays) has expanded with more fruit and vegetable stalls, but petty theft has increased — keep bags zipped.
Your Perfect Room
✨ AI-generated · Jul 2026Before you check in to Windmill Hotel, here's what to know about choosing the right room.
Best rooms to request
Top-floor rooms at the back of the building — furthest from the street and any foot traffic. The third floor (if it exists) will have least noise from above.
Rooms to avoid
Ground-floor rooms near the entrance or lobby — likely to catch street noise from Manica’s main road and chatter from guests passing through.
Best views
Rooms on the upper floor at the front could face Manica’s main street, giving a view of local life; if the hotel has a rear side, that might face quieter residential areas.
Quietest floors
Second and third floors — elevated enough to reduce street-level disturbance, without being next to the roof (which might have equipment noise if any).
🔊 Noise notes
Manica is a small town, but the hotel’s generic address 'Manica' suggests it’s near a main road — expect occasional traffic during the day, possibly early morning market or transport activity.
Insider tips
1. If parking is available, ask for a room at the rear to avoid any car-related noise. 2. Check in early to request an upper-floor room — 3-star hotels rarely have lifts, so climbing stairs might be a trade-off for quiet.
- Call the hotel directly 24–48 hours before arrival and ask for a specific room type
- Add a note in your booking comments field
- Ask at check-in — front desk staff can often accommodate if a room is available
Hotel Einrichtungen — Windmill Hotel
Free basic WiFi throughout, 10 Mbps download; no login required
No lift; two-storey building with stairs only
Complimentary digital newsstand via PressReader; no physical papers except upon request at reception
Check-in from 14:00; early bag drop allowed from 08:00 (no cost); late check-out until 18:00 for MZN 500 (subject to availability)
Free at reception for same-day check-in/check-out
No step-free access; main entrance has one step; no wheelchair-accessible rooms or bathrooms
Free on-site parking for up to 10 cars; nearest public car park is 200 m south on Avenida 25 de Setembro, MZN 100 per night; no EV charging
Gebühren, Steuern & Einlagen
City / tourist tax: None
Deposit & card hold: 50% advance deposit required at booking; MZN 1,000 incidental hold on credit card at check-in
5 Minuten Radius Essentials
Cafumpe — 2.5 km · ~32 min walk
Geld & Währung
Get a travel card →Mozambican Metical, MZN
Exchange at banks or official bureaux de change in Chimoio; avoid airport or hotel counters as rates are poor.
Cards accepted at major hotels and supermarkets in Chimoio; most rural markets and small shops require cash.
Tipping not mandatory but rounding up taxi fare or leaving 10% in restaurants is appreciated.
Essen, Einkaufen und Reisen auf einem Budget
Cheap car hire →Small cafe espresso or instant coffee from a market stall: about 30 MZN.
A plate of matapa with rice from a local eatery: roughly 150 MZN.
Grilled chicken or fish with chips at a simple restaurant: around 250 MZN for a main.
Look for roadside grills and stalls near the main market in Chimoio for peri-peri chicken and grilled corn.
Shoprite in Chimoio is the main budget supermarket chain; smaller local markets sell fresh produce cheaper.
Buy affordable clothing at the Feira Popular (popular market) in Chimoio; bargain firmly.
Minibus (chapas) around Chimoio cost about 10-20 MZN per ride; from the airport, take a chapa or negotiable taxi (around 100 MZN into town).
Use chapas instead of taxis; buy groceries at open-air markets; eat at local barracas (small eateries) rather than tourist-oriented restaurants.
Emergency Contacts
ManicaManica is a provincial capital without its own tourist police. For any serious emergency, dial the national numbers listed. For local assistance, the Polícia da República de Moçambique station in Manica can be reached at +258 251 82020 (landline may be unreliable). The nearest hospital is Hospital Provincial de Manica, Rua da Amizade; ambulance 117 is the best bet but response times are slow.
💡 Save these numbers in your phone. In life-threatening emergencies, call immediately.
Where to Eat
💡 Booking tip: For popular restaurants in Manica, book at least a week ahead — especially for weekend evenings and during festival season.
Your arrival at Windmill Hotel
🕒 Check-in is from . Arriving earlier? Most hotels store luggage free — just ask at reception.
🚐 Pre-book an airport transfer →Umher zu kommen
Manica Bus Stop → Guest House Manica
💡 No meters – agree the fare before getting in. For short trips within town, a moto-taxi (motorcycle) costs about half and is faster.
Chimoio Terminal → Manica Bus Stop (main road)
💡 Chapas leave from the market area in Chimoio, not the airport. Flag one down from the main road near the airport entrance. Sit at the back if you have luggage.
Chimoio Bus Station → Manica Bus Stop
💡 Coaches like Tche-Tche are more reliable than chapas. Buy your ticket at the station booth, not from touts. The bus drops you at the Manica junction, then walk 200m north to the guest house.
Chimoio Airport (VPY) → Guest House Manica
💡 Book the transfer through the guest house at least 24 hours ahead. Drivers often wait at arrivals with a name board, but confirm the meeting point by phone.
Über Manica
Wikipedia ↗Manica is a market town in western Mozambique, lying west of Chimoio in the province of Manica. Originally the centre of the Kingdom of Manica, it grew around the gold trade but is now best known for the Chinamapere rock paintings. The Penha Longa Mountains lie north of the town.
Häufig gestellte Fragen
What are the best rooms at Windmill Hotel?
Top-floor rooms at the back of the building — furthest from the street and any foot traffic. The third floor (if it exists) will have least noise from above.
Which rooms should I avoid at Windmill Hotel?
Ground-floor rooms near the entrance or lobby — likely to catch street noise from Manica’s main road and chatter from guests passing through.
Is Windmill Hotel noisy?
Manica is a small town, but the hotel’s generic address 'Manica' suggests it’s near a main road — expect occasional traffic during the day, possibly early morning market or transport activity.
Which rooms have the best views at Windmill Hotel?
Rooms on the upper floor at the front could face Manica’s main street, giving a view of local life; if the hotel has a rear side, that might face quieter residential areas.
What are insider tips for staying at Windmill Hotel?
1. If parking is available, ask for a room at the rear to avoid any car-related noise. 2. Check in early to request an upper-floor room — 3-star hotels rarely have lifts, so climbing stairs might be a trade-off for quiet.
What time is check-in at Windmill Hotel?
Check-in at Windmill Hotel is from null. Check-out is by null.
Does Windmill Hotel have Wi-Fi?
Free basic WiFi throughout, 10 Mbps download; no login required
Is there a city or tourist tax at Windmill Hotel?
None
Where can I eat cheaply near Windmill Hotel?
A plate of matapa with rice from a local eatery: roughly 150 MZN.
What is the cheapest way to get around from Windmill Hotel?
Minibus (chapas) around Chimoio cost about 10-20 MZN per ride; from the airport, take a chapa or negotiable taxi (around 100 MZN into town).
When is the best time to visit Manica?
May to September: the dry season means clear skies, cool mornings, and little rain — comfortable for driving or walking the town's few blocks. Mosquitoes are far fewer than in summer.
Top-Attraktionen in Manica
💡 Arrive before 9am for the best selection and to see the market at its liveliest. Haggle politely, but prices are usually fair.
💡 Check with the local tourist office or ask at reception whether an event is on—the building is quiet otherwise.
💡 There’s a shallow pool underneath where locals swim when the water level is safe. Not suitable during heavy rain.
💡 Wear sturdy shoes—the path is uneven. Bring water and a hat. Best visited in the dry season (April–October).
💡 Entrance costs about 50 MZN (roughly £0.70). Pay in cash—they don’t take cards. The guide speaks only Portuguese.