Best things to do in Jamaica

When it comes to music, sports and culture, Jamaica has long been punching above its weight compared to other destinations around the world.

Set between the Caribbean Sea and the craggy ridges of the Blue Mountain range, Jamaica’s attractions range from hidden waterfalls, music festivals and white-sand beaches, to historical architecture, great food and unique ecosystems.

Here’s our list of the top things to do in Jamaica.

Cliff divers at Negril, Jamaica
Jamaica’s  limestone cliffs and impenetrable jungle give a glimpse into the island’s vast terrain  © madelinebh / Budget Travel

Splash about at Reach Falls

On Jamaica’s remote east coast, these falls are arguably the most spectacular on the island and receive a fraction of the visitors who flock to its more accessible brethren like Dunn’s River Falls.

Local guides will help you as you walk up the river, keeping your belongings safe and dry while pointing out the best places to snap photos as you splash in jade-colored pools shaded by jungle vegetation, climb up limestone crags and get pummelled by jets of water in the “washing machine.”  There’s the option of climbing up to the Bat Cave for the more adventurous.

Vibe with locals at Winnifred Beach

East of Port Antonio on Jamaica’s north coast, a steep road leads down to the public beach open to locals which is, as yet, mercifully undeveloped.

Winnifred Beach is a beautiful stretch of white sand, popular with Jamaicans, particularly on weekends, when the bass booms from competing sound systems. Elsewhere, food and drink stands supply nourishment in the form of curry goat, brown stew fish and jerk chicken.

Enjoy mellow vibes at Treasure Beach

The antithesis to the brash beach resorts of Montego Bay, Negril and Ocho Rios, Treasure Beach on Jamaica’s south coast is a timeless, offbeat village spread out across four coves – Billy’s Bay, Frenchman’s Bay, Calabash Bay and Great Bay – a community of fishermen, artists and other bohemians.

A mellow vibe prevails; there are no hustlers here, and largely deserted beaches greet you. Locally owned guesthouses are the norm.

For activities, the area is your oyster…er jerk lobster. Take a boat ride out to sea to the Pelican Bar, a drinking establishment housed in a thatched hut on a sandbar 1km (.62 miles) from shore. Dine on I-tal food (natural foods) at Rasta-owned cookshops. Go to nearby Alligator Pond for some of Jamaica’s best seafood. Take a walking tour with local historian Lilleth Lynch or partake in the biannual Calabash Festival, celebrating some of the brightest literary talents in Jamaica and beyond.


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Chef at the Boston Jerk centre, Portland parish, Jamaica
Enjoy one of Jamaica’s most iconic dishes, jerk pork, at roadside cookshops and high-end restaurants © Garey Lennox / Alamy Stock Photo

Fill your belly with jerk pork

One of Jamaica’s iconic dishes, jerk pork, is cooked in oil drum grills by street vendors in Kingston and elsewhere, smoked in roadside cookshops and even served at high-end restaurants. Every Jamaican has their own opinion regarding the best recipe and best place to sample it.

Jerk pork harkens back to the traditional Maroon way of preserving the meat: it’s marinated with Scotch bonnet chillies, allspice, garlic, thyme and spring onion and smoked slowly over pimento (allspice) wood fire for that unique taste.

It’s quite dry and smoky, with a spice and sweetness to it. The slabs of dark meat are precision-chopped by the cook and typically served with homemade hot sauce drizzled on top. Roadside grills in Boston Cay on the east coast serve up some of the best, most authentic jerk pork on the island.

Attend a reggae festival

Reggae Sumfest  – a week-long music festival –  is Jamaica’s music event of the year, and typically featuring some of the biggest names in reggae and dancehall. A beach party on Walter Fletcher Beach in Montego Bay kicks off the festival, with days of nonstop revelry at the Catherine Hall Entertainment Centre.

Imagine rocking out with the likes of Beenie Man, Damian “Jr Gong” Marley, The Mighty Diamonds, Capleton and Alicia Keys at night, then catching a nap on the sand at sunrise.

If you’re looking for pure, old-school roots reggae by the likes of Burning Spear and Toots and the Maytals, then don’t miss the two-day Rebel Salute festival, which takes place in mid-January near St Ann’s Bay, at Plantation Cove. Much of the action takes place at night, with the whole atmosphere wreathed in the fragrant smoke of “di herb.”

Tour the Bob Marley Museum

For Marley aficionados, no trip to Jamaica is complete without paying homage to Bob at his former home on Hope Rd in Uptown Kingston.

The spacious, creaky wooden house is largely as it was when Marley lived there from 1975 until his death in 1981.

You can see the gold and platinum records lining the walls, clippings from his last tour, his rather austere bedroom and his favorite stage shirt, as well as the bullet holes in the back wall from an assassination attempt in 1976.

Don’t miss the former recording studio turned into an exhibition hall, where a short video is played at the end of the visit. Fair warning, this is a big-time tourist spot so expect crowds and tourist prices.

Celebrate the Accompong Maroon Festival

Witness a unique slice of Jamaican history by celebrating the unofficial Maroon New Year in Accompong.

This village on the edge of the Cockpits – Jamaica’s no-man’s-land of sinkholes, limestone cliffs and impenetrable jungle – is populated by the proud descendants of runaway enslaved people who successfully waged a guerrilla war against the British.

January 6 marks the signing of the 1739 Peace Treaty in which the British committed to leaving the Maroons alone. The day is celebrated with a procession up the main street, chanting in Coromantee (a West African language), the beating of traditional goombeh drums and the blowing of abeng cow horns (like those once blown by runaway enslaved people as a call to arms).

Following the procession come the 21st-century festivities – sound systems blast out dancehall music till dawn and young people show off their best moves as the fragrant smoke from the jerk chicken and pork stalls entice hungry revelers.

Crowd enjoying reggae/dancehall music in Kingston
Leave your inhibition behind when you visit a reggae party in Kingston © peeterv / Getty Images

Hit the dance floor in Kingston

As befitting any capital worth its salt, Kingston never sleeps, and its nightlife is second to none. You can try out the latest moves on the dance floor alongside local guys and girls dressed in their best jeans and “batty riders” (short shorts) at uptown nightclubs such as Taboo, Fiction and Kingston Dub Club.

Look out for posters advertising all-night reggae music fests, taking place near Half Way Tree, featuring a dozen or so big-name performers who sometimes hang out with the audience after their set.

Climb Dunn’s River Falls

A nearly 3km (two-mile) taxi ride west of Ocho Rios takes you to one of Jamaica’s most famous attractions. Popular with Jamaicans, cruise ship crowds and everyone in between, Dunn’s RIver Falls (originally called Xayamaca – land of rivers and springs – by the Arawak) is a truly stunning sight.

Start at the bottom of the falls, flanked by the jungle on both sides, and work your way up numerous tiers of limestone, splashing in clear blue pools and clambering up slippery, rocky outcrops amidst pounding spray. The currents are quite strong in places, so it’s best to go with friends.

Avoid the falls on cruise ship days when day trippers clog the trails.

Marvel at the beauty of Negril

Love it or hate it, the west coast beach town of Negril is hard to ignore. It’s by no means the fishing village it was in the 1970s, yet it still manages to retain pockets of serenity in its southern half – West End – where boutique hotels sit atop precipitous limestone cliffs that plunge into the sea and local-run guesthouses nestle in the jungle.

The northern half of Negril – beach resorts and restaurants – is spread out along the misnamed, white-sand Seven Mile Beach (just over four miles long) and home to beach parties several nights a week.

Despite the commotion, there’s no denying the beauty of the setting. And whether you’re looking to jump off cliffs at Rick’s Café in the West End, try a plethora of water sports or watch the sunset while digging your toes in the sand at a beachside cookshop, Negril is all things to all people.

Admire the art at the National Gallery of Jamaica

This superb art gallery in Downtown Kingston is the definitive, unmissable collection of Jamaican art through the ages. Works run the gamut from centuries-old stone carvings by the Taino people – Jamaica’s earliest inhabitants – to bucolic Caribbean landscapes by 18th-century British artists and the abstract and surrealist art movements of the 20th century. Don’t miss the temporary exhibitions showcasing the best of contemporary Jamaican art.

Blue Mountains, Jamaica
Coffee plantations sprawling across the rugged Blue Mountains of Jamaica at sunset © by Marc Guitard / Getty Images

Climbing Blue Mountain Peak

A rite of passage for outdoorsy Kingstonians and a must for any hiker is the ascent of Blue Mountain Peak (7401ft/2256m), Jamaica’s highest mountain.

First you’ll overnight at Whitfield Hall, a hamlet in the foothills of the Blue Mountain range, where you’re fed a home-cooked dinner of curry goat, oxtail and beans. That night, attempt to grab a few hours’ sleep before being woken up by the hiking guide at around 2am to reach the peak in time for sunrise.

As you climb higher, jungle vegetation gives way to pine trees, “old man’s beard” lichen, ferns and evergreens, and you’ll see sparks flying all around you – fireflies, locally known as “kittyboo” or “peenie-wallies.”

The ascent takes around four hours. There’s something otherworldly about watching the sun rise above the mist-shrouded Blue Mountains.

On a particularly clear day, you can see the faint outline of Cuba in the distance. Returning to Whitfield Hall means you’ve earned the breakfast of champions: Jamaican staples such as ackee and saltfish, or mackerel rundown accompanied by Blue Mountain coffee (of course).

Get a history lesson at Port Royal

The buccaneer capital of the Caribbean was the “wickedest city on earth” for much of the 17th century, with brothels, free-flowing rum and frequent pirate raids on merchant ships and Spanish territories, until the great earthquake of 1692 wrecked the place.

Today, it’s a small village with a tremendous history, easily reachable from Kingston by bus.

You can tour historic buildings like Fort Charles, the Old Naval Hospital and the Old Gaol or get a local fisherman to give you a boat ride to the nearby bucolic white-sand sliver of Lime Cay, or come for Sunday lunch at Gloria’s – a seafood establishment much loved by Kingstonians.

Rafting Martha Brae and Rio Grande

Floating downriver at a sedate pace on rafts made of bamboo was made popular by actor Errol Flynn in the 1950s and is still one of most popular experiences on Jamaica’s north coast – both on the Rio Grande and the Martha Brae.

The rafts accommodate two passengers and a “captain” who propels the raft through green tunnels of verdant vegetation using a long pole. Along the way, floaters stop at popular swimming spots, or slip off the raft to float alongside it.

The water is refreshingly cold and whether the experience is romantic or boisterous rather depends on how crowded the river is at any given time.

Crocodile-spotting on the Black River Great Morass

Small boats departing from the former 19th-century port of Black River on the south coast take you deep into the salt marsh and mangrove maze of the Great Morass, home to several hundred American crocodiles.

Crocs aside, this unique ecosystem is home to over 100 bird species, from herons to whistling ducks. Tours depart from the bridge and last an hour or longer, with the boat guides pointing out the best swimming holes where you can splash without being eaten by crocs. You might even see locals tending to their bamboo crayfish traps, the way they’ve done for centuries.

Sample rum at the Hampden Great House Estate

The sweet smell of molasses greets you as you set foot on the palm-fringed, landscaped grounds of the centuries-old Hampden Great House estate, complete with wandering peacocks.

Reachable via back roads from Falmouth towards the village of Wakefield, the estate introduces visitors to the world of rum distillation. Guides take you inside the rum factory and fermentation house and explain the distillation process. Tours include Jamaican standards for lunch and rum tastings.

Explore the history of Falmouth

It’s hard to believe that between 1769 and the 1840s, this north coast town was Jamaica’s busiest port. The Tropical-Georgian architecture lining the grid of quiet streets was paid for with wealth amassed from the labor of enslaved people through the sugar plantation.

A rather soporific town today, somewhat marred by the massive, brash cruise ship pier, Falmouth nevertheless makes for essential visiting for visitors with an interest in history and architecture.

Run by a local historian, Falmouth Heritage Walks run engaging walking tours of the town, telling you about various historic landmarks, such as the church where the abolitionist William Knibb used to preach or the wharf where enslaved Africans were brought to the Americas. There’s also an early-19th-century British fort and a Jewish cemetery, where some of Jamaica’s earliest Jewish inhabitants are buried.

Cool off at Mayfield Falls

Popular with locals as well as visitors and tricky to reach (via potholed minor road either from Savannah-la-Mar or Lucea Harbour) Mayfield Falls is a wonderful water playground.

Thickets of bamboo frame the cool, clear river, and as your guide leads you upstream, you plunge from outcrops into natural pools, traverse an underwater tunnel (if you’re feeling brave), and splash around in the foam churned up by a natural “jacuzzi.”

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