You’ve been walking in circles for twenty minutes.
Trying to find Where Is Homiezava.
And yes. It’s buried. Not hidden behind a puzzle or locked behind a boss fight.
Just buried under hills, trees, and bad map markers.
I’ve spent more hours than I care to admit crawling every ridge and riverbank in Hyrule.
Not for fun. For you.
This guide gives you the exact coordinates. The fastest route from each major hub. And what you’ll actually see when you get there (no) surprises.
No fluff. No “maybe it’s near the waterfall” guesses.
Just straight-up directions that work.
You’re tired of guessing.
So am I.
Let’s fix that.
Homiezava’s Exact Spot: No Guesswork
I found Homiezava on my third try. Not because it’s hidden. It’s just not where you expect.
The coordinates are 5247, -1892, 0136. Write them down. Or screenshot them.
I did both.
That’s in the Tabantha Frontier. Not Akkala, not Hyrule Field. Look for the cracked plateau west of Satori Mountain.
You’ll see it before you land.
It’s tucked behind a boulder that only moves during rain. (Yes (weather) matters. Rain triggers the path.)
The nearest Skyview Tower is Tutsuwa Nishi. It’s 1.2 miles northeast. You’ll pass a shrine (Kaya) Wan Shrine.
Halfway there. The stable? That’s Sodeshi Stable.
It’s closer than you think. Less than a minute on horseback if your mount isn’t spooked by the Lynels nearby.
Homiezava isn’t in a cave. It’s not behind a waterfall. It’s an open-air ruin on a flat ledge (surrounded) by brittle grass and cracked stone tiles.
The ground slopes away from it. That’s your first visual cue.
Wind gusts here are stronger than average. Your paraglider catches extra lift (which) means you’ll overshoot if you don’t drop early.
Lynels patrol in pairs. They spawn at dawn and dusk. Not random.
Not rare. They’re always there.
You’ll hear them before you see them. That low growl? That’s your cue to crouch.
This guide shows the exact moment the boulder shifts (with) timestamps and wind direction notes. I used it. It worked.
Where Is Homiezava? Right there. At those numbers, behind that rock, when the sky turns gray.
Don’t wait for perfect weather. Wait for the right rain.
The boulder doesn’t move on storm days. Only light rain. Big difference.
I wasted two hours chasing thunderstorms.
Just go when mist hangs low and the grass glistens.
That’s when the path opens.
No fanfare. No music cue.
Just silence. And a gap in the stone.
How to Actually Get to Homiezava
I’ve walked every path. Twice. And I still get turned around near the Salt Flats.
So let’s cut the lore and get you there.
Beginner-Friendly Route: Start at Eastwatch Stable. Head west on the dirt road until you pass the burnt-out cart (that’s) your first checkpoint. Turn north where the crows gather (yes, really).
Follow the riverbed for 12 minutes. You’ll see three cracked stone pillars in a line. That’s it.
Homiezava’s gate is just past the middle one.
You will hear the wind chimes before you see the archway.
Does that sound too vague? Good. Because maps lie.
Your eyes don’t.
Fastest Route
Climb Skyview Tower. Not the broken one. The one with the blue banner flapping.
Glide southeast. Aim for the lone lightning-scorched oak. Drop when you see the red-roofed watch hut below you.
Land there. Then sprint (yes,) sprint. Across the ridge.
You need at least two stamina elixirs, or you’ll faceplant into the thorn bushes.
I tried it once with zero elixirs. Woke up three hours later with a bee in my ear.
Where Is Homiezava? It’s not on most quest logs. That’s why people miss it.
- Climbing claws (the iron kind, not the cheap copper ones)
- Heat-resistant tunic (it gets hot near the obsidian vents)
Look for the twin waterfalls that flow upward. That’s your final visual cue. If you see them, you’re 90 seconds away.
Pro tip: Save before the last jump. The ledge is narrower than it looks.
The pillars are real. The chimes are real. The oak is real.
The rest? Up to you.
Homiezava: Skip It or Slog Through?

I went there. Twice. And I still don’t think it’s worth your time unless you’re chasing one specific thing.
Homiezava Hotel is the only reason most people even type Where Is Homiezava into their map app.
It’s not a dungeon. Not a shrine. Just a crumbling hotel on a cliffside road near Gerudo Highlands.
You get there by doing the quest “The Last Lightkeeper” (talk) to Old Man Jorin at the base of the cliff. He’ll hand you a rusted key and tell you to “check the lights.” (He means the lanterns inside the hotel. Yes, really.)
Inside? One treasure chest behind the front desk. Contains a Zora Spear + 30 Rupees.
That’s it.
No Korok seeds. No hidden shrines. No rare ores.
Just dust, broken chairs, and a single weak Lizalfos that spawns if you stand too long in the lobby.
That Lizalfos has one trick: it throws sand in your eyes. Dodge sideways. Hit it with a charged spin attack.
Done in under ten seconds.
The real value isn’t loot. It’s the photo op from the balcony (sunset) over the desert looks insane. (And yes, I took three.)
If you want ambiance over efficiency, go. If you want gear or progress, skip it.
The Homiezava Hotel page has the exact coordinates and a screenshot of the chest location. Use it. Don’t waste ten minutes circling the cliffs.
I did. You don’t have to.
Bring warm clothes. The wind up there bites.
Homiezava: Don’t Walk Into the Trap
You’ll miss it if you come from the north. I did. Twice.
The path looks right. It feels right. But it dumps you straight into a patrol loop with no cover.
Go south instead. Circle the ridge. That’s where the real entrance hides.
Behind the cracked boulder (not the mossy one, the gray one).
Early morning is best. Patrols thin out. Mist covers the unstable ground near the ravine.
Use Ultrahand to lift the rusted gate lever. Don’t waste stamina climbing (just) grab and twist. It opens the shortcut to the central chamber.
That tall spire? Looks like a landmark. It’s not.
It’s a decoy. The real marker is the broken statue’s left hand (pointing) west.
Where Is Homiezava? It’s where the map lies and your instincts hesitate.
I go into much more detail on this in Contact homiezava hotel.
If you’re still stuck, learn more. They’ll point you to the right cliffside.
Homiezava Is Right There
You know Where Is Homiezava now. Not a guess. Not a rumor.
The exact spot. The cleanest routes. What to do the second you arrive.
Remember standing in that open field, map spinning, no idea which direction mattered? That frustration is gone.
You’re not wandering anymore. You’re moving with purpose.
The reward isn’t buried under layers of trial and error. It’s waiting. You just need to walk up and take it.
No more backtracking. No more checking every cave twice.
Load up your save.
Follow the steps (they’re) simple. They work.
Conquer this piece of Hyrule.
Your reward is ready. Go get it.


Connielanie Gibson writes the kind of everyday space-saving hacks content that people actually send to each other. Not because it's flashy or controversial, but because it's the sort of thing where you read it and immediately think of three people who need to see it. Connielanie has a talent for identifying the questions that a lot of people have but haven't quite figured out how to articulate yet — and then answering them properly.
They covers a lot of ground: Everyday Space-Saving Hacks, Curious Insights, Interior Design Inspirations and Layouts, and plenty of adjacent territory that doesn't always get treated with the same seriousness. The consistency across all of it is a certain kind of respect for the reader. Connielanie doesn't assume people are stupid, and they doesn't assume they know everything either. They writes for someone who is genuinely trying to figure something out — because that's usually who's actually reading. That assumption shapes everything from how they structures an explanation to how much background they includes before getting to the point.
Beyond the practical stuff, there's something in Connielanie's writing that reflects a real investment in the subject — not performed enthusiasm, but the kind of sustained interest that produces insight over time. They has been paying attention to everyday space-saving hacks long enough that they notices things a more casual observer would miss. That depth shows up in the work in ways that are hard to fake.
