Tropical bird in Costa Rica rainforest

Birdwatching in Costa Rica

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900+ species · Built for independent travelers · No tour group

Your Costa Rica birdwatching trip. Planned by Kevin from Puriscal.

Costa Rica has more bird species than all of North America combined. I build independent travelers a custom birdwatching itinerary — the right spots, the right timing, every transfer sorted. No tour group. Just you and the birds.

Get a Custom Birdwatching Itinerary — $249

Or grab the $29 guide and plan it yourself.

What you'll see

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Resplendent Quetzal
Monteverde · Feb–Apr
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Scarlet Macaw
Carara · year-round
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Keel-billed Toucan
Caribbean lowlands
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Harpy Eagle
Corcovado (rare)
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Three-wattled Bellbird
Monteverde
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Sunbittern
Riverside lowlands
Violet Sabrewing
Cloud forest
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Boat-billed Heron
Mangroves & coasts

Best birdwatching spots — with independent travel logistics

Monteverde Cloud Forest

Resplendent Quetzal, Three-wattled Bellbird, 400+ species

When: Best: Feb–Apr (Quetzal nesting)
Getting there: Shuttle from San José (4h). No 4x4 needed from main road.
Kevin's tip: Enter at 6am when it opens — birds most active, crowds minimal.

Carara National Park

Scarlet Macaw (year-round), 400+ species, riverside birds

When: Good year-round. Best: Dec–Apr.
Getting there: 2.5h by bus from San José. Easy self-guided trails.
Kevin's tip: Tarcoles River bridge nearby — American Crocodiles AND Boat-billed Herons.

Rancho Naturalista

500+ species recorded from the property alone

When: Best: dry season. Antbirds year-round.
Getting there: Rental car or private transfer — 3h from San José via Turrialba.
Kevin's tip: The one spot where hiring a resident guide is worth every cent.

Corcovado National Park

Harpy Eagle (rare), forest raptors, endemic species

When: Best: Dec–Apr. Advance booking essential.
Getting there: Domestic flight to Puerto Jiménez or boat from Sierpe. Guided entry required.
Kevin's tip: Multi-day stay inside the park is dramatically better than a day trip.

Common questions

When is the best time for birdwatching in Costa Rica?

December through April is the dry season and generally the best time. The Resplendent Quetzal is most visible February–April during nesting season.

How many bird species are in Costa Rica?

Over 900 recorded species — more than the entire continental United States and Canada combined. Around 600 are year-round residents.

Do I need a guide for every spot?

Not for every spot. Monteverde, Carara, and Arenal are easy to self-guide with good preparation. For Rancho Naturalista and Corcovado, a local guide dramatically increases rare sightings.

What gear do I need?

8x42 binoculars are the standard. A field guide (Garrigues & Dean) helps enormously. Early mornings and patience are the real keys.

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Ready to plan your birdwatching trip?

I build a custom day-by-day birdwatching itinerary for independent travelers. Right spots, right season, every transfer sorted. No tour group required.

Pura vida. The birds will be worth it.