The best hotels in Goroka
Goroka has over 8,000+ accommodation options across the Eastern Highlands, and most of them aren't worth your time or money. We reviewed the standouts. these 10 made the cut.
Our Top Picks in Goroka
Click any hotel to check availability and book at the best price.
Bird of Paradise Hotel
Town Centre, Goroka
Free cancellation & Pay later
Goroka Lodge
Highlands Highway, Goroka
Free cancellation & Pay later
Melanesian Hotel Goroka
Town Centre, Goroka
Free cancellation & Pay later
Sinouk Coffee Resort
Asaro Valley Outskirts, Goroka
Free cancellation & Pay later
Kainantu Lodge
Town Centre, Kainantu
Free cancellation & Pay later
Amalfi Lodge Goroka
Residential North, Goroka
Free cancellation & Pay later
Highlands Lodge and Retreat
Upper Goroka, Goroka
Free cancellation & Pay later
Papua New Guinea Highlander Hotel
Airport Road, Goroka
Free cancellation & Pay later
All Hotels Compared
Side-by-side comparison to help you pick the right hotel. Prices reflect shoulder season averages.
| # | Hotel | City & Area | Price/Night | Score | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Bird of Paradise Hotel | Town Centre, Goroka | $55–80/night | 6.8/10 | Budget Pick |
| 2 | Goroka Lodge | Highlands Highway, Goroka | $70–95/night | 7.1/10 | Best Value |
| 3 | Goroka Hotel | Town Centre, Goroka | $110–160/night | 7.6/10 | Most Popular |
| 4 | Melanesian Hotel Goroka | Town Centre, Goroka | $130–175/night | 7.8/10 | Business Pick |
| 5 | Sinouk Coffee Resort | Asaro Valley Outskirts, Goroka | $145–195/night | 8.2/10 | Hidden Gem |
| 6 | Kainantu Lodge | Town Centre, Kainantu | $155–200/night | 7.9/10 | Best Location |
| 7 | Amalfi Lodge Goroka | Residential North, Goroka | $165–210/night | 8/10 | Romantic Stay |
| 8 | Kofena Lodge | Kofena Hill, Goroka | $185–230/night | 8.5/10 | Top Rated |
| 9 | Highlands Lodge and Retreat | Upper Goroka, Goroka | $260–340/night | 8.7/10 | Luxury Pick |
| 10 | Papua New Guinea Highlander Hotel | Airport Road, Goroka | $290–380/night | 8.3/10 | Business Pick |
Why These Hotels Made Our List
Every hotel earned its spot. Here's exactly why we picked each one.
Bird of Paradise Hotel
This older property sits right in the middle of Goroka town, walking distance from the main market and bus station. Rooms are basic and showing their age, but they are clean and the beds are comfortable enough for a short stay. Staff are friendly and can arrange local transport. Do not expect much in the way of amenities, but the price reflects that honestly. A solid choice if you just need a roof over your head in central Goroka.
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Goroka Lodge
Goroka Lodge sits along the Highlands Highway on the eastern approach to town, making it convenient for early departures by PMV or hired vehicle. Rooms are simple but tidy, with reliable hot water and mosquito nets on the windows. The on-site canteen serves basic Papua New Guinean meals at very reasonable prices. Security is decent with a guarded perimeter, which matters in Goroka. A practical pick for budget travellers who prioritise safety and easy road access.
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Goroka Hotel
The Goroka Hotel is one of the longest-standing accommodation options in town and remains popular with NGO workers and regional business travellers. It is located centrally on Elizabeth Street, a short walk from the Eastern Highlands Provincial Government offices. Rooms are mid-sized with air conditioning and en-suite bathrooms, and the Wi-Fi is more reliable than at most competitors. The dining room serves a decent buffet breakfast included in the rate. A dependable, unfussy option in the heart of the highlands.
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Melanesian Hotel Goroka
The Melanesian Hotel is a well-known name in Goroka, catering primarily to business guests and government visitors passing through the Eastern Highlands. Rooms are clean and functional with decent desk space and consistent air conditioning. The restaurant on site does a reasonable job with both local and Western dishes. The hotel is within walking distance of the main commercial strip and banking facilities on Elizabeth Street. Conference facilities make it the go-to for small meetings and events in the region.
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Sinouk Coffee Resort
Set on a working coffee plantation on the outskirts of Goroka near the Asaro Valley, this small resort offers a genuinely different experience from anything in the town centre. Bungalows are simple but charming, surrounded by coffee plants and mountain views on all sides. The coffee served here is grown and roasted on the property, and it is exceptional. Getting here requires a vehicle, but the drive through the valley is worth it. Ideal for travellers who want calm, clean highland air and authenticity.
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Kainantu Lodge
Kainantu Lodge is the best accommodation option in Kainantu, a town about 90 kilometres southeast of Goroka along the Highlands Highway. It sits close to the famous Kainantu Cultural Centre, which showcases traditional artefacts from across the Eastern Highlands. Rooms are comfortable and well maintained, with good hot showers and consistent power. The lodge dining room serves hearty meals and the staff are knowledgeable about local trekking routes. A great base for travellers exploring the southern end of the Eastern Highlands Province.
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Amalfi Lodge Goroka
Amalfi Lodge is a smaller, quieter property in the residential northern section of Goroka, away from the noise of the town centre. The rooms are well appointed with comfortable furnishings and proper blackout curtains, which is rare in the highlands. There is a pleasant garden area where guests can sit in the cool highland evenings. Meals are prepared fresh and can be arranged in advance with the small kitchen team. Couples and independent travellers who prefer a more private setting will appreciate this one.
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Kofena Lodge
Perched on Kofena Hill above Goroka, this lodge delivers some of the best views of the Goroka Valley and surrounding mountain ranges you will find from any accommodation in the province. The rooms are spacious and genuinely comfortable, with good attention to detail in the furnishings. Sunsets from the veranda here are remarkable. The kitchen team produces excellent food using fresh local ingredients, and the staff are attentive without being intrusive. This is consistently rated the best overall experience in the Goroka area by repeat visitors.
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Highlands Lodge and Retreat
Highlands Lodge and Retreat sits in the upper reaches above Goroka town, offering a genuinely upscale experience that is rare in the Eastern Highlands. Private bungalows come with polished timber interiors, proper hot showers with good pressure, and views across the valley that make waking up here genuinely enjoyable. The kitchen sources local highland vegetables and fresh coffee, and the meals are well above average for Papua New Guinea. Transfers from Goroka airport are included in the rate. This is the best address in the highlands for travellers willing to spend for comfort.
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Papua New Guinea Highlander Hotel
Located on Airport Road close to Goroka Airport, the Highlander Hotel is the most polished full-service hotel in the region and the preferred choice for senior government officials and corporate delegations. Rooms are genuinely international standard with proper air conditioning, reliable Wi-Fi, and large comfortable beds. The restaurant and bar are the best in Goroka, with a broad menu and a proper wine list. The pool and gym are unexpected bonuses at this altitude. If budget is not a concern, this is the most professional operation in the Eastern Highlands.
Check AvailabilityWhere to Stay in Goroka
The neighborhood you pick matters more than the hotel.
Town Centre vs. Kofena Hill: which base is right for you?
Town Centre wins on convenience. You're walking distance from the Goroka Market on Elizabeth Street, the J.K. McCarthy Museum, and the main PMV routes. Three of our vetted picks are here, ranging from $55/night at Bird of Paradise up to $175/night at Melanesian Hotel.
Kofena Hill is 15 minutes by taxi and a completely different pace. Kofena Lodge sits at the top with views over the entire Goroka valley, and at $185-230/night it's one of the best-value high-end stays in the Highlands. But you'll need transport for everything. If you're here for more than 3 nights, it's worth it.
The Goroka Show: what every visitor needs to know before booking
The Goroka Show runs annually in September at the Goroka Showgrounds, just off Highways Avenue. It's the largest sing-sing in Papua New Guinea. Over 100 tribes, full traditional dress, bilum weaving, and performances that run all weekend. Every decent hotel within 5km is full by mid-August.
Book by early July if you're coming for the Show. Rates go up 30-40% across Town Centre and Kofena Hill during that week. We've seen this mistake hundreds of times: travelers arrive thinking they'll find a room and end up in a guesthouse with no hot water on the Highlands Highway outskirts. Don't be that person.
Getting around Goroka: PMVs, taxis, and what actually works
PMVs are the backbone of local transport and cost $0.50-1 per trip. They run along Highlands Highway and through Town Centre regularly during daylight hours. The main PMV stop is near the Goroka Market on Elizabeth Street. After dark, don't count on them.
Taxis from Goroka Airport to Town Centre run about $10-15 and take 10 minutes. To Kofena Hill expect $15-20. For Upper Goroka or Asaro Valley, you're looking at $20-30 and it's worth arranging with your hotel in advance. Most of our vetted picks can sort this for you.
Coffee, culture, and the Asaro Valley: what's outside Goroka town
The Asaro Valley starts about 20 minutes drive west of Town Centre. It's the home of the famous Asaro Mudmen, and visiting the village near Komunive is one of the most memorable things you'll do in Papua New Guinea. Sinouk Coffee Resort sits right on the valley edge and runs tours of their working coffee farm.
Kainantu is 90 minutes east on the Highlands Highway and home to the Kainantu Cultural Centre, which has one of the best collections of Highlands artifacts in the country. Day-trip from Goroka rather than basing yourself there unless you specifically want the quiet. The road is sealed and straightforward.
What to eat in Goroka and where to find it
The Goroka Market on Elizabeth Street is the real food hub. Fresh kaukau (sweet potato), pit-pit, ripe banana, and greens every morning from 6am. It's also where local mumu (earth oven) vendors set up on weekends. Prices are dirt cheap and the food is genuine.
For sit-down meals, most Town Centre hotels have decent in-house restaurants. The Goroka Hotel dining room is reliable for a proper cooked meal. But the local kai bars near the market do better food for a fraction of the price. Ask your hotel staff where they eat. They'll point you somewhere good.
Goroka for business travelers: what you actually need to know
Most business visits to Goroka involve the Eastern Highlands Provincial Government offices on Elizabeth Street, or the agricultural and coffee industry operations out along Highlands Highway. Melanesian Hotel Goroka in Town Centre is the standard corporate choice: conference rooms, stable internet, and 5 minutes from the main government offices.
Papua New Guinea Highlander Hotel on Airport Road is the pick if you're catching early morning flights out of Goroka Airport. Check-in at Goroka Airport takes longer than you'd expect, and being 5 minutes away instead of 20 actually matters. Rates here run $290-380/night but the facilities match the price.
Goroka's best neighborhoods
Town Centre is where most visitors land, and it's the right call for first-timers. But if you can stretch the budget, Kofena Hill and Upper Goroka are in a different league entirely.
Town Centre 4 vetted hotels The practical base for most Goroka visits.
The practical base for most Goroka visits.
Town Centre is where most of Goroka's activity happens. The Goroka Market, J.K. McCarthy Museum, provincial government offices, and main PMV routes all sit within a 10-15 minute walk of each other on and around Elizabeth Street. Four of our 10 vetted picks are here.
You get the full range in Town Centre. Bird of Paradise Hotel starts at $55/night for solid budget rooms. Goroka Hotel sits in the mid-range at $110-160/night and is the most recognized name in town. Melanesian Hotel tops out at $175/night with proper business facilities.
Avoid the blocks immediately around the Goroka Bus Stop area after dark. It gets rowdy and petty theft is a known issue. Most of the Town Centre hotels are a short distance from that stretch, but worth knowing before you wander.
Kofena Hill 1 vetted hotel Elevated in every sense of the word.
Elevated in every sense of the word.
Kofena Hill sits above the Goroka valley and gives you a perspective on the town you won't get from anywhere in the centre. The air is cooler, it's quieter, and the views across the surrounding ridgelines are genuinely impressive. There's really one property up here worth talking about.
Kofena Lodge at $185-230/night is the top-rated hotel in our Goroka list. It's 15 minutes by taxi from the Goroka Market, which makes it slightly inconvenient for day-to-day exploring but completely worth it if you're after a proper highland retreat. The rating of 8.5 isn't an accident.
This area doesn't have walkable restaurants or shops. You're staying here for the experience, not the location convenience. Book a property that includes breakfast, and ask them to arrange transport to Town Centre when you need it.
Asaro Valley Outskirts & Residential North 2 vetted hotels Coffee farms, quiet roads, and a slower pace.
Coffee farms, quiet roads, and a slower pace.
The Asaro Valley outskirts and the quieter Residential North part of Goroka are where you go when you want space. Sinouk Coffee Resort is 20 minutes from Town Centre and surrounded by working coffee plantations. Amalfi Lodge Goroka sits in Residential North, a leafy part of town about 10 minutes from Elizabeth Street.
Sinouk runs at $145-195/night and is one of our most distinctive picks. The coffee farm tours are real, the terrace views are serious, and it feels nothing like a typical business hotel. Amalfi Lodge at $165-210/night earns its Romantic Stay badge: smaller, more personal, and better suited to couples than large groups.
Getting into Town Centre from either property requires a taxi or your own vehicle. Budget $15-20 per trip. It's a fair trade for the peace and quiet, but if you're here for work or need to be somewhere early every morning, Town Centre is a more practical base.
Upper Goroka & Airport Road 2 vetted hotels The luxury end of the spectrum. and it shows.
The luxury end of the spectrum. and it shows.
Upper Goroka and Airport Road are where Goroka's top-end properties sit. Highlands Lodge and Retreat in Upper Goroka is the single best hotel in this guide at $260-340/night, with a rating of 8.7. Papua New Guinea Highlander Hotel on Airport Road runs $290-380/night and targets the business and conference market specifically.
Highlands Lodge doesn't need to apologize for its price. The setting in Upper Goroka is beautiful, service is properly attentive, and the food is the best in-house dining you'll find in the Eastern Highlands. It's 15-20 minutes from Town Centre but the hotel handles transport cleanly.
Papua New Guinea Highlander Hotel on Airport Road is 10 minutes from Goroka Airport. If you're flying in and out on a tight schedule, or running a corporate event, this is the most operationally sensible luxury option in Goroka. Both properties are far better than anything else at their price point in this part of the Highlands.
Kainantu 1 vetted hotel A separate highland town 90 minutes east.
A separate highland town 90 minutes east.
Kainantu isn't part of Goroka proper. It's a highland town on the Highlands Highway, about 90 minutes east of Goroka Town Centre. It has its own identity, its own market, and the excellent Kainantu Cultural Centre with artifacts from across the Eastern Highlands and Markham Valley regions.
Kainantu Lodge in the town centre runs $155-200/night and is the only quality accommodation option in the area. It earns a Best Location badge and a rating of 7.9, which is solid. Most travelers use it as a base to visit the Cultural Centre and nearby villages rather than as an alternative to Goroka.
The drive on the Highlands Highway between Goroka and Kainantu is sealed and takes 90 minutes in good conditions. If your itinerary includes both, staying one night in Kainantu and the rest in Goroka is a clean approach.
Best Areas by Vibe
Tell us how you travel and we'll point you to the right part of Goroka.
Romantic
Residential North is the pick. Amalfi Lodge Goroka has the right mix of privacy, greenery, and personal service that makes a couples trip actually feel different from a business trip.
Cultural Immersion
Base yourself in Town Centre, within 10 minutes walk of the J.K. McCarthy Museum and the Goroka Market. September is peak season for the Goroka Show. the biggest cultural event in Papua New Guinea.
Family
Goroka Hotel in Town Centre is the most family-friendly option, with space, reliable staff, and easy access to the Goroka Showgrounds and market. It's the most recognized name in town for good reason.
Budget
Bird of Paradise Hotel near Town Centre does rooms from $55/night. It's not glamorous, but it's clean, secure, and 10 minutes walk from everything you need on Elizabeth Street.
Nature & Outdoors
Kofena Hill is the spot. Kofena Lodge at the top gives you highland forest, clean air, and views across the Goroka valley that you won't find from any Town Centre window.
Foodie
The Asaro Valley outskirts are the sleeper pick. Sinouk Coffee Resort runs proper farm-to-cup coffee experiences, and the fresh highland produce at the Goroka Market on Elizabeth Street is exceptional.
Location Quality
Is the neighborhood walkable? Are restaurants, shops, and attractions within 10 minutes on foot? How does it feel after dark? We evaluate safety, public transport access, and whether the area has genuine local character or just tourist traps. A hotel in the wrong neighborhood ruins a trip. That's why location carries the most weight.
Value for Money
We compare what you pay against what you get. A €150 hotel with a great location, clean rooms, and helpful staff can outscore a €500 hotel with fancy amenities in a bad area. We factor in seasonal pricing, cancellation policies, and hidden costs like tourist tax and breakfast surcharges. The goal is finding the best ratio, not the lowest price.
Guest Experience
We analyze thousands of verified guest reviews across multiple platforms, looking for patterns rather than individual complaints. Consistent praise for cleanliness, staff, and room quality counts. We also assess the intangibles: does the hotel have character? Would you recommend it to a friend? A soul-less chain hotel with perfect facilities still loses to a well-run boutique with personality.
When to Visit Goroka
When to visit Goroka and what to pay.
Dry Season (May-October)
This is when Goroka is at its best. Clear skies over the highlands, cooler temperatures, and the September Goroka Show make this the most popular window. Book 6-8 weeks ahead for September specifically, when rates jump 30-40% across Town Centre and Kofena Hill. The rest of the dry season is busy but manageable.
Wet Season (November-April)
The wet season brings daily afternoon rain across the Eastern Highlands, and the Highlands Highway can get rough in heavy downpours. Rates drop noticeably. you can find rooms at Goroka Hotel for under $120/night and even Kofena Lodge softens to the lower end of its range. If your plans are mostly indoor or town-based, the savings are real.
Shoulder Season (March-April)
Late March and April see the rain starting to ease off. Crowds are still thin, rates are lower than peak, and the Goroka valley is lush and green. A solid time to visit if you want value without the full wet season hassle. Sinouk Coffee Resort in the Asaro Valley is especially good in this period.
Goroka Show Week (September)
One week a year, Goroka transforms. The Goroka Showgrounds fill with over 100 tribes in full traditional dress, and the town's accommodation fills up completely. Rates are 30-40% higher than normal dry season. If the Show is your reason for coming, it's absolutely worth it. But if it's not, avoid this week entirely.
Booking Tips for Goroka
Insider tips for booking hotels in Goroka.
Book September rooms by July
The Goroka Show in September is Papua New Guinea's biggest cultural event. Every decent room within 5km of the Goroka Showgrounds fills up. Rates go up 30-40% and availability collapses fast. Kofena Lodge and Highlands Lodge and Retreat sell out first. Set a reminder and book by July at the latest.
Check what's included at upper-end hotels
Properties like Highlands Lodge and Retreat ($260-340/night) and Kofena Lodge ($185-230/night) are in areas with limited outside restaurant options. Full board or at least breakfast inclusion makes a real difference. Always confirm what's in the rate before booking, not after you arrive.
Use Town Centre as your default base if it's your first trip
Goroka Town Centre puts you within 10 minutes walk of the Goroka Market, J.K. McCarthy Museum, and all main PMV routes on Elizabeth Street. Taxis into Town Centre from the airport run $10-15. Don't try to optimize your first Goroka trip from a remote lodge. Get the lay of the land first.
Arrange airport transfers in advance
Goroka Airport is small and taxis aren't always waiting. Your hotel can arrange a pickup for $10-20 depending on where you're staying. Papua New Guinea Highlander Hotel on Airport Road is the only property close enough to walk, but nobody actually walks with luggage on Airport Road. Confirm your transfer when you make your booking.
Ask your hotel about Asaro Valley day trips
The Asaro Mudmen village near Komunive is 20-30 minutes from Town Centre and one of the most culturally significant experiences in the Eastern Highlands. Not every hotel can arrange it, but Sinouk Coffee Resort and Highlands Lodge and Retreat both have good connections. A guided visit costs roughly $30-60 per person depending on group size.
Don't assume hot water is standard
In budget and some mid-range hotels, hot water can be unreliable. Bird of Paradise Hotel and Goroka Lodge are generally fine, but it's worth confirming for any property under $100/night. Power outages happen in Goroka, especially during wet season storms. Our vetted picks all have backup generators, but smaller guesthouses off our list often don't.
Hotels in Goroka — FAQ
Everything you need to know before booking hotels in Goroka.
What's the best area to stay in Goroka?
Town Centre is the most practical base. You're within 10 minutes walk of the Goroka Market, J.K. McCarthy Museum, and the main PMV stops on Elizabeth Street. If you want quiet and better views, Kofena Hill adds 15 minutes travel time but is worth it for longer stays.
How much do hotels in Goroka cost?
Budget rooms start around $55-80/night at places like Bird of Paradise Hotel near the Town Centre. Mid-range sits at $100-175/night. The top-end properties, including Highlands Lodge and Retreat up in Upper Goroka, run $260-380/night and genuinely earn it.
Is Goroka safe for tourists?
Goroka is one of the safer highland towns in Papua New Guinea, but you still need common sense. Stick to Town Centre and Residential North after dark, avoid the bus stop area on Highlands Highway past 8pm, and your hotel will arrange transport if needed. Most of our vetted picks have 24-hour security.
When is the best time to visit Goroka?
July-September is the sweet spot. Temperatures hold between 18-24°C, it's drier, and the famous Goroka Show runs in September. Book at least 6 weeks ahead for September. the show fills every decent room in town, and prices jump 30-40% during that week.
How do I get around Goroka?
PMVs (Public Motor Vehicles) run along Highlands Highway and into Town Centre for about $0.50-1 per trip. Taxis from Goroka Airport to Town Centre cost around $10-15 and take 10 minutes. For Kofena Hill or Upper Goroka, expect to pay $15-20 by taxi since PMVs don't always make that run.
What's the Goroka Show and how does it affect hotel prices?
The Goroka Show is Papua New Guinea's biggest cultural sing-sing, held at the Goroka Showgrounds in September every year. Hundreds of tribes in full traditional dress. It draws thousands of visitors and doubles hotel demand in a town that isn't huge. If you're coming for the Show, lock in rooms by July.
Are there good budget hotels in Goroka?
Yes, and they're better than you'd expect. Bird of Paradise Hotel on the edge of Town Centre does rooms from $55/night with reliable wifi and clean bathrooms. Goroka Lodge on Highlands Highway is a step up at $70-95/night and has more parking space if you're driving in from Kainantu or Lae.
Which Goroka hotels are best for business travelers?
Melanesian Hotel Goroka in Town Centre is the go-to for meetings and corporate stays. It's got proper conference facilities and is 5 minutes walk from the main provincial government offices on Elizabeth Street. Papua New Guinea Highlander Hotel on Airport Road is the other strong option if you need quick access to Goroka Airport.
Is Kainantu worth staying in instead of Goroka?
Kainantu is 90 minutes east of Goroka on the Highlands Highway and has its own appeal, especially the Kainantu Cultural Centre. Kainantu Lodge runs $155-200/night and is the only quality option there. Most visitors base themselves in Goroka and do a day trip to Kainantu rather than staying overnight.
What's the deal with the Asaro Valley hotels?
Sinouk Coffee Resort sits on the Asaro Valley outskirts, about 20 minutes drive from Goroka Town Centre. It's quiet, surrounded by working coffee farms, and a completely different experience from staying in town. Rates run $145-195/night, and the sunrise over the valley from the terrace is genuinely one of the best starts to a day in the Highlands.
Do Goroka hotels include meals?
Most mid-range and upper hotels include breakfast, but check before booking. The top-end spots like Highlands Lodge and Retreat and Kofena Lodge both offer full board options worth considering, since restaurant choices in Upper Goroka and Kofena Hill are limited. In Town Centre you've got more flexibility with local warungs near the Goroka Market.
What should I avoid when booking a hotel in Goroka?
Don't book anything that lists "Highlands Highway" as its address without checking the specific stretch. The section near the Goroka Bus Stop area gets noisy and has security issues after dark. Also skip any guesthouse that can't confirm 24-hour reception. In a town where power outages happen, you need staff available.