Sea turtle nesting on Costa Rica beach at night
Olive Ridley arribadas · Leatherback giants · Green turtle hatchlings · Timing is everything

Sea turtles have been coming here for 100 million years.

Costa Rica is home to four sea turtle species and some of the largest nesting events on Earth. Kevin knows the timing, the sites, and the right guides — so you witness it correctly.

The three experiences

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Olive Ridley Arribada — Ostional, Pacific

The largest sea turtle mass nesting event in the world. Thousands — sometimes hundreds of thousands — of Olive Ridley turtles arrive on the same moonlit nights during new moon periods, July through December. The sound, the scale, and the pure biological force of it is unlike anything else. The local community of Ostional manages the sanctuary and leads certified tours.

Timing: Peak: August–November. New moon nights bring the biggest arrivals.
Getting there: 2.5h from San José by car. Overnight stay in Nosara recommended.
Note: Ostional is one of the few places in the world where a limited egg harvest is legally permitted by the local community — the science behind it is fascinating.
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Leatherback Nesting — Playa Grande, Pacific

The Leatherback is the largest sea turtle alive — up to 2 metres long and 900kg. Watching one haul herself up the beach, dig a nest, and lay 100 eggs under a starlit sky is one of the most moving wildlife experiences Costa Rica offers. Las Baulas National Park protects the most important Leatherback nesting site on the Pacific coast of the Americas.

Timing: October through March. Peak: November–January.
Getting there: Near Tamarindo, Guanacaste. Night tours depart from the ranger station.
Note: Numbers have declined dramatically due to bycatch. Each sighting is a privilege — behave accordingly.
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Green Turtle Nesting & Hatching — Tortuguero, Caribbean

Tortuguero on the Caribbean coast is the most important Green turtle nesting site in the Atlantic. Thousands of females arrive July through October to nest; hatchlings emerge August through October. The park is only accessible by boat or small plane — no roads — which keeps crowds manageable and the experience extraordinary.

Timing: Nesting: July–October. Hatchlings: August–October.
Getting there: Boat from Caño Blanco dock (3h from San José) or domestic flight to Tortuguero airstrip.
Note: Group sizes on night tours are limited to 8 people with one guide. Book well ahead.

Timing is everything

Miss the new moon by two nights and you might see three turtles instead of three thousand. Kevin tracks the turtle seasons across all three sites and will tell you exactly which nights to plan around — before you book any travel.

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Ready to plan your turtle trip?

Tell Kevin your dates and which species interests you. He'll match the timing, book the guides, and build the rest of your Costa Rica trip around it.