Planning Your Sint Maarten Island Tour
Best Time of Year to Take an Island Tour
Island tours run year-round in Sint Maarten, and the weather is warm and sunny in every season, with daytime temperatures around 80–84°F. The dry season from December through April is the most reliable — the lightest rain, the calmest seas for the catamaran sails, and the busiest cruise traffic. May and November are sweet spots with warm weather and thinner crowds.
The official Atlantic hurricane season runs June through November; serious storms are uncommon on any given day, but it's the wetter, more humid stretch, and operators move or cancel boat trips around any passing weather. Whatever the month, morning departures tend to be the calmest and coolest time to be out sightseeing.
- December–April: driest, calmest seas, peak season
- May & November: warm weather, fewer crowds
- June–November: hurricane season — wetter, watch forecasts
- Mornings: coolest, calmest time for tours year-round
Island Tours for Cruise-Ship Passengers
Sint Maarten is one of the Caribbean's busiest cruise ports, and island tours are among the most-booked shore excursions. Ships dock at the A.C. Wathey Cruise Facility in Philipsburg, a short taxi or water-taxi from town and from the Simpson Bay tour marinas.
Half-day sightseeing and beach tours of four to five hours fit comfortably within a port day, and several offer pickup right at the cruise terminal. If your time ashore is tight, the short distillery tour or the Orient and Maho beaches half-day are the easiest to slot in. Always give the operator your ship name and all-aboard time so they get you back to the cruise port with margin to spare.
The Best Beaches to Build Into Your Tour
With 37 beaches on the island, most tours work at least one or two into the day. Maho Beach is the headline stop for the plane landings; Orient Bay on the French side is the big, lively white-sand beach with loungers and water sports; Mullet Bay near the airport is a calm Dutch-side favourite; and Grand Case pairs an easy beach with the island's best dining. The Orient and Maho half-day tour is built around two of these, while the full-island loop gives you shorter beach breaks between sightseeing stops.
If a long stretch of beach time is the priority, say so when you book — a private tour can be shaped around exactly the beaches you want.
Land Tour or Catamaran Sail — Which to Choose?
It comes down to whether you want to see the island or get out on the water around it. A land-based island tour — the full-island loop, the French-and-Dutch sightseeing trip or a private tour — is the way to tick off Maho, Marigot, the viewpoints, the distillery and a couple of beaches in one go. A catamaran or trimaran sail trades the sightseeing for swimming, snorkelling and sun on the deck, often with an open bar and a stop at a quiet beach or an offshore cay such as Prickly Pear off St Martin.
Sunset cruises are the short, scenic middle ground. Many visitors with a few days on the island do one of each: a sightseeing tour to get their bearings, then a day-sail to relax.
What to Bring on a Sint Maarten Island Tour
Island tours involve a fair bit of sun — on the beach, at viewpoints and on the boat — so come prepared. Wear light clothing and comfortable shoes for the walking stops, bring a swimsuit under your clothes for the beach and boat stops, and pack sunscreen, sunglasses and a hat. A little cash is handy for the Marigot market, tips and any drinks not included.
On the catamaran and trimaran sails, bring a towel and a waterproof phone case, and take a seasickness tablet beforehand if you're prone to it.
- Swimsuit under your clothes for beach and boat stops
- Sunscreen, sunglasses and a hat
- Comfortable shoes for walking stops
- Cash for the market, tips and extra drinks
- Towel and waterproof phone case for the sails
- Seasickness tablets if you're prone to it