Kaá¹Âpi is an Aboriginal community in the Aá¹Âangu Pitjantjatjara Yankunytjatjara Lands in South Australia. It is located about south of the Northern Territory border at the base of the Mann Ranges. The nearby town of Nyapari is to the east.
Kaá¹Âpi is part of the Murputja Homelands, which also includes the family outstations Angatja and Umpukulu. The residents are mostly Pitjantjatjara people with their traditional country nearby. Kaá¹Âpi originated as an outstation for the Baker family, who relocated from other parts of the APY Lands to be closer to their ancestral country.
Due to the small population of Kaá¹Âpi and nearby Nyapaá¹Âi, essential services are limited and largely shared between the two communities. In Kaá¹Âpi there is a workshop, a garage, a day care centre and an art centre. It also has a community store, built in 1996, which has a pump for petrol. Food and supplies are delivered once every two weeks. The store services both Kaá¹Âpi and Nyapaá¹Âi, as well as nearby outstations. Local health services are based at the clinic in Nyapaá¹Âi. Kaá¹Âpi and Nyapaá¹Âi each had separate schools from 1987 until 1993, when they consolidated into the Murputja Education Centre, situated between the two communities.
Due to its links with the Northern Territory and proximity to the border, the APY Lands do not observe daylight savings unlike the rest of South Australia. The time zone observed throughout the year is Australian Central Standard Time (), in line with Darwin rather than Adelaide.
As of 2021, the population of Kaá¹Âpi is 53.