The Best Scuba and Diving Spots in Belize

Hol Chan Marine Reserve is a premier dive spot in Belize
Hol Chan Marine Reserve is a premier dive spot in Belize | © Minden Pictures / Alamy Stock Photo
Tamara Hinson

Contributor

Belize is home to some of the best scuba diving and snorkeling spots in Central America, if not the entire world. With more than 400 islands, you can see why it’s such a popular destination to explore by yacht. Year-round diving conditions in the clear warm waters draws novices and more advanced divers keen to explore.

Discover the best dives sites in Belize on a day trip aboard a yacht from SamBoat. Or, take a little longer and charter a boat with Dream Yacht Charter.

The Blue Hole

Natural Feature

Scuba diver swims through tunnel in Blue Hole Caribbean Sea Belize
© Belize / Alamy Stock Photo

Part of Lighthouse Reef Atoll, the Blue Hole is one of the best scuba diving spots in Belize, but it’s also popular with snorkelers. It’s the perfect destination for anyone exploring Belize by yacht, and numerous companies offer guided tours. Dive here to see supersized species such as nurse sharks and eagle rays, along with more unusual marine creatures such as toadfish. Look out for the underwater rock formations, too, including beautiful stalactites and stalagmites formed during the Pleistocene period.

Spanish Bay

Natural Feature

Spanish Bay, otherwise known as Spanish Lookout Caye, is a reef dive site just 8mi (13km) south of Belize City, which has several marinas, including one at the Radisson Fort George Hotel. Spanish Cay is great for beginners due to its location – the nearby Turneffe Islands provide much-needed shelter, helping keep the waters calm. Although there’s plenty of wildlife to spot – including turtles, moray eels, nurse sharks and stingrays – it’s the coral most people come to see, and varieties you’ll spot include brain coral and corallimorpharia, which bears an uncanny resemblance to mushrooms.

Turneffe Atoll

Natural Feature, Architectural Landmark

Tourists snorkeling in the Belize Barrier Reef, Belize
© Keith Levit / Alamy Stock Photo

This archipelago of islands to the south of the legendary Ambergris Caye is one of the most biodiverse dive sites in Belize. It’s also one of the top sailing destinations in Central America. A national marine reserve since 2012, the area is home to a staggering range of fish species and beautiful meadows of seagrass, which attract large marine creatures such as rays, sea turtles, lobsters, dolphins and manatees. Scuba divers should make a beeline for the Elbow, near the southern tip of the atoll. Steep coral walls and a wide range of larger species, such as goliath groupers, make this a popular spot for underwater photographers.

Lighthouse Reef atoll

Natural Feature

A common Sea Fan in the Lighthouse Reef, Belize
© Danita Delimont / Alamy Stock Photo

Located 50mi (80km) east of Belize City, Lighthouse Reef is a long, wide atoll, regarded as one of the top dive sites in Belize. It’s home to the famous Blue Hole, but we’re dedicating an entire section to this atoll as it’s a particularly great spot for divers or snorkelers exploring the area by yacht. Sailing makes it easy to nip between the numerous islands and dive sites spotting larger species such as groupers and rays in the underwater tunnels the atoll is famous for.

Hol Chan Marine Reserve

Natural Feature

Nurse sharks and boats in Shark Ray Alley, Hol Chan Marine Reserve near Ambergris Caye in Belize
© Danita Delimont / Alamy Stock Photo

A marine reserve established in 1987, Hol Chan covers 3sqmi (8sqkm) and is located south of Ambergris Caye. It’s one of Belize’s most diverse dive sites – scuba divers can explore the wreck of a sunken barge, while there are plenty of shallower areas ideal for snorkelers. The marine life here is famously friendly, so don’t be surprised if entire schools of curious fish encircle you. Larger species to look out for include rays and barracudas, and there’s a wide range of sharks, too.

Caye Caulker

Natural Feature

Sunbathers and swimmers enjoying the sun and water at the Split on Caye Caulker in Belize
© Christine Wehrmeier / Alamy Stock Photo

Caye Caulker is the second-largest caye in Belize and over time it has transformed from a sleepy fishing village into a popular tourist spot, with lively nightlife and hotels for all budgets. It’s still an amazing snorkelling and scuba diving spot, the departure point for numerous guided dive tours, and the perfect base for anyone exploring Belize by boat due to its proximity to both the barrier reef and the Caye Caulker marine reserve

Mexico Rocks

Natural Feature

A cluster of underwater boulders near the northern tip of Ambergris Caye, Mexico Rocks is a brilliant snorkeling and scuba diving site if you’re keen to spot smaller species. The rocks’ crevices are home to brightly coloured starfish and lobsters, and you’ll see plenty of elkhorn and staghorn coral, too. The fantastic visibility and shallower depths make it one of Belize’s best destinations for snorkelers and beginner scuba divers.

Glovers Reef

Natural Feature

Nassau groupers, Epinephelus striatus, at the spawning aggregation at Glovers Reef, Belize
© Images & Stories / Alamy Stock Photo

Although it’s not the most accessible dive site – scuba divers typically visit Glovers Reef on guided tours that depart from nearby Placencia or by yacht – we guarantee Glovers Reef is worth the effort. Its remote location means other divers are few and far between, and it’s suitable for snorkelers of all abilities, ranging from steep underwater coral walls to calm saltwater flats. It’s been a protected marine reserve since 1993, which has allowed species to thrive.

Seek out the top dives sites in Belize on a day trip with boat hire from SamBoat. Alternatively, charter a boat for longer with Dream Yacht Charter.

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