Image: DOC
A small hut is perched on a small hill jutting out amongst long grassy hills.
Mataketake Hut

Located in Haast, Paringa and Moeraki rivers area in the West Coast region

Mataketake Hut is an 8-bunk hut located on Mataketake Tops Route. On a weekend trip to the hut visitors can experience the backcountry from the mountains to the sea.

This is a serviced hut – you need to bring your own cooking tools such as a gas cooker.

History

Mataketake Hut opened in February 2021. It was built by the Andy Dennis Trust, and will be owned and maintained by the Backcountry Trust. Andy Dennis, a renowned New Zealand conservationist and author and a long-time member of Federated Mountain Clubs and Forest & Bird, died in 2016 leaving a bequest to build a new hut in the mountains of the South Island.

This hut site was chosen for its stunning surroundings, link with the historic pack track and plentiful birdlife. 

Fees

Adult: $25 per night 
Youth (11–17 years): $12.50 per night
Child/infant (10 years and under): free

Backcountry Hut Passes and Backcountry Hut Tickets cannot be used at this hut.

Bookings

Bookings are open for stays up to 30 June 2025.

All bookings are first-come first-served. We do not have waiting lists for bookings for future seasons or facilities that are already booked-out.

Bookings are required all year.

Book Mataketake Hut online.

A $10 service fee applies to phone and in-person booking. This is a limited service – book online first. An in-person booking is dependent on there being space available.

Your hut booking is for any bunk bed, not for a specific bunk bed – select your bunk bed on arrival.

Mataketake Hut can be reached via Māori Saddle Route and Mica Mine Route. We recommend going up to the hut via the Māori Saddle Route. This will give you the best opportunity to judge the weather conditions on the tops and enable easy retreat if needed.

Tracks to this hut

Location

NZTopo50 map sheet: BY13
Grid/NZTM2000 coordinates: E1301412, N5141230

Travel to the hut along the Mica Mine Tops Route should only be attempted in clear weather – above the bush line, cloud can obscure the route making navigation difficult. If you are unsure about the conditions you should wait for better weather.

Only those with suitable backcountry route finding/navigation skills, safety equipment (including personal locator beacon) and warm, weatherproof clothing should attempt this route.

The lower sections of track crosses numerous small streams which flood quickly during rainfall. Trampers should wait until water levels have dropped before proceeding.