⚡ Before You Go — Essentials
✈️ Getting There
Fly into San José (SJO). Most international flights arrive here. Liberia (LIR) is an alternative if you're starting from Guanacaste. Rent a 4x4 SUV — many roads are unpaved and steep, especially the Monteverde route.
🌤️ March Weather
Peak dry season. Expect sunny skies, 80-95°F at lower elevations, cooler 70s in Monteverde. Almost zero rain in La Fortuna and Manuel Antonio. March can bring heat waves on the coast — stay hydrated and carry sunscreen.
💵 Currency
Costa Rican colón (₡). ~500 CRC to $1 USD. US dollars widely accepted at tourist businesses, but you'll get change in colones. ATMs everywhere — use Banco Nacional or BAC for best rates.
🚗 Getting Around
Rent a 4x4 through Adobe Car Rental (reliable local company, free airport shuttle). Waze is the go-to GPS app here — Google Maps misses some roads. Driving times are longer than they look on the map.
📱 Connectivity
Buy a Kolbi SIM at the airport (~$10 for a week of data). Wi-Fi is solid at most hotels. Cell coverage drops in remote areas of Monteverde and some national parks.
🦥 Wildlife Tips
Hire guides for wildlife walks — they carry spotting scopes and know exactly where animals hide. Early morning (6-7 AM) is prime time. Night walks are incredible in March with zero rain interruption.
Arrive in San José → La Fortuna
Arrival day — scenic drive through the Central Valley to volcano country
Arrive at SJO & Drive to La Fortuna
Pick up your rental car at the airport (book Adobe Car Rental in advance for their free shuttle service). The drive to La Fortuna takes about 3 hours through gorgeous Central Valley scenery — coffee plantations, rolling green hills, and your first glimpse of Arenal Volcano rising in the distance.
Hot Springs Welcome
Check into your hotel and head straight to one of La Fortuna's famous hot springs to soak away the travel fatigue. Skip the pricey Tabacón and try Ecotermales or Paradise Hot Springs instead — fewer crowds, same volcanic-heated bliss.
Arenal Volcano & Waterfalls
Full adventure day — volcano trails, a 70-meter waterfall, and lava views
Arenal Volcano National Park
Start early for the best volcano views — March mornings in La Fortuna typically have clear skies before afternoon clouds roll in. Hike the main trail (3.4 km loop) through old lava flows and rainforest. The 1968 eruption trail passes through a surreal landscape of petrified lava rocks overtaken by jungle.
La Fortuna Waterfall
One of Costa Rica's most iconic waterfalls — a 70-meter cascade plunging into an emerald pool. The hike down is 500 steps (steep but doable), and you can swim in the pool at the base. The climb back up is the real workout.
Místico Arenal Hanging Bridges
Walk through the rainforest canopy on 16 bridges (6 are hanging bridges up to 98m long). This is one of the best spots for wildlife — look for toucans, howler monkeys, coatis, and snakes. Hire a guide at the entrance for the best wildlife spotting ($35/person guided, or $26 self-guided).
Adventure Day — Your Choice
Adrenaline or slow — pick your own adventure around the volcano
Option A: White-Water Rafting on Río Pacuare
Costa Rica's best rafting river — Class III-IV rapids through a pristine jungle canyon. Full-day trip with lunch included. This is world-class rafting, consistently ranked in the global top 5. You'll be picked up from La Fortuna around 6 AM.
Option B: Canyoning & Zip-Lining Combo
Rappel down 4 waterfalls (including a 60m free rappel), then fly across the forest canopy on zip lines. Desafío Adventure Company runs the best combo tour — half-day, high adrenaline.
Option C: Slow Morning — Coffee & Chocolate Tour
For a gentler pace, visit a working coffee and chocolate farm. Learn the seed-to-cup journey, roast your own beans, and taste some of the best chocolate in Central America. Don Olivo Coffee Tour is the local favorite.
Night Walk at Arenal
March's dry weather makes this the perfect time for a guided night walk. The jungle comes alive after dark — red-eyed tree frogs, sleeping toucans, tarantulas, vine snakes, and if you're lucky, a kinkajou. Book through Arenal Natura Ecological Park.
La Fortuna → Monteverde
Scenic transfer day with a stunning lake crossing and cloud forest arrival
Jeep-Boat-Jeep Transfer to Monteverde
The iconic way to get between La Fortuna and Monteverde. A van takes you to Lake Arenal, you cruise across the lake with stunning volcano views, then another van climbs the mountain to Monteverde. Way more scenic than driving (and avoids the brutal unpaved mountain road).
Explore Santa Elena Town
Arrive in Monteverde and settle into your hotel. Walk around the charming mountain town of Santa Elena — browse artisan shops, visit the Monteverde Cheese Factory (founded by Quakers in the 1950s), and enjoy the dramatically cooler temperatures after the lowland heat.
Monteverde Cloud Forest
Misty jungle magic — the most biodiverse forest on the planet
Monteverde Cloud Forest Reserve — Guided Walk
This is THE reason to visit Monteverde. The cloud forest is home to over 2,500 plant species, 400+ bird species, and 100+ mammal species. A guided walk is essential — the dense vegetation makes self-spotting nearly impossible. Your guide will find quetzals, hummingbirds, glass frogs, and sleeping pit vipers.
Selvatura Park — Hanging Bridges & Butterfly Garden
After the cloud forest, head to Selvatura Park for a different canopy perspective. Walk 3 km of hanging bridges through the treetops, then visit one of Costa Rica's best butterfly gardens. The hummingbird garden is free and mesmerizing — dozens of species feed from handheld feeders.
Zip-Lining & Nocturnal Wildlife
Adrenaline above the canopy, then creatures of the night
100% Aventura Park — Longest Zip Line in Latin America
Monteverde's most famous adrenaline experience. The Superman cable stretches 1.5 km across a valley — you fly face-down over the cloud forest canopy. The full tour includes 10 cables, a Tarzan swing, and a rappel. This is the zip line that put Costa Rica on the adventure map.
Santa Elena Cloud Forest Reserve
Less famous than Monteverde's reserve but equally beautiful and far less crowded. The trails are well-maintained and the observation tower gives panoramic views of the Arenal Volcano on clear days. March afternoons in the cloud forest have a magical mist-and-sun interplay.
Guided Night Walk — Frog Pond or Selvatura
Monteverde's night walks are legendary. The Frog Pond of Monteverde specializes in amphibians — red-eyed tree frogs, glass frogs, and poison dart frogs are almost guaranteed in March. Alternatively, Selvatura runs excellent general night tours with snake and tarantula sightings.
Monteverde → Manuel Antonio
From misty mountains to tropical Pacific coast — beach mode activated
Drive to Manuel Antonio
Leave Monteverde early for the 4-5 hour drive to Manuel Antonio. The road descends from cloud forest to coastal lowland — dramatic scenery change. Stop in Puntarenas for a quick stretch, or detour through the Carara National Park area for scarlet macaw sightings at the Tárcoles River Bridge.
Settle In & Beach Time
Check into your hotel and hit Playa Espadilla — the public beach right next to Manuel Antonio National Park. It's a gorgeous stretch of sand with warm Pacific water, perfect for swimming. Watch the sunset with a beer from one of the beachfront bars.
Manuel Antonio National Park
Where the rainforest meets the beach — Costa Rica's most iconic park
Manuel Antonio National Park — Guided Wildlife Walk
Costa Rica's most visited national park for good reason. Hire a guide at the entrance for a 2-3 hour wildlife walk — they carry spotting scopes and know every sloth sleeping spot, every monkey troop's territory. You'll see three-toed sloths, white-faced capuchins, squirrel monkeys, iguanas, and dozens of bird species. After the walk, hit Playa Manuel Antonio inside the park — one of the most beautiful beaches in Central America.
Beach & Pool Time
After a full morning in the park, spend the afternoon decompressing. Swim at Playa Espadilla, lounge by the hotel pool, or grab a frozen cocktail at one of the beachfront bars. March heat in Manuel Antonio hits 90-95°F, so siesta time is real.
Kayaking, Snorkeling & Farewell Beach Day
One last adventure — mangroves, marine life, and golden-hour memories
Option A: Kayak & Snorkel Tour
Paddle through mangrove channels on the Damas Island estuary, spotting caimans, herons, and monkeys from water level. Then snorkel off the coast near Biesanz Beach — clear March waters mean excellent visibility for tropical fish and maybe a sea turtle.
Option B: Catamaran Sailing Tour
Half-day sailing along the coast with stops for snorkeling, a coastal lunch, and open bar. The catamaran tours cruise past secluded beaches and often encounter dolphins. Planet Dolphin and Ocean King run the most popular trips.
Biesanz Beach — Hidden Gem
Your last afternoon beach in Costa Rica should be a special one. Biesanz Beach is a short hike from the road — a tiny cove with calm turquoise water, great snorkeling right off shore, and far fewer people than Espadilla. Perfect for a final tropical swim.
Manuel Antonio → San José → Home
Final drive through coffee country, last-minute shopping, and departure
Drive to San José Area
Head back to San José for your flight. The drive takes about 3-3.5 hours. If your flight is in the evening, detour through the Central Valley for a quick coffee farm tour — Doka Estate or Hacienda Alsacia (Starbucks' own Costa Rica farm) are both near the airport route.
Last-Minute Shopping & Departure
Pick up souvenirs at the Mercado Central in San José (authentic and cheap) or at the airport duty-free. Costa Rican coffee (Café Britt or Doka Estate) makes the perfect gift. Drop off the rental car, grab a final gallo pinto at the airport soda, and head home with a camera full of sloths, volcanoes, and sunsets.
💰 Budget Breakdown
| Category | Low | Mid | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Flights | $300 | $500 | $800+ | SJO from major US cities — book 2-3 months ahead for March |
| Rental Car (10 days) | $500 | $750 | $1,000+ | 4x4 SUV essential — includes mandatory insurance |
| Accommodation (9 nights) | $500 | $900 | $2,000+ | Mix of B&Bs ($55/night) to boutique hotels ($200+/night) |
| Activities & Tours | $200 | $400 | $700+ | Guided walks, zip-lining, rafting, park entries |
| Food & Drinks | $250 | $450 | $800+ | Sodas: $5-8/meal · Mid-range: $15-25 · Fine dining: $40+ |
| Fuel & Transport | $80 | $120 | $150 | Fuel is ~$5.50/gallon — small country, reasonable distances |
| TOTAL (per person) | $1,830 | $3,120 | $5,450+ | Based on two travelers sharing costs |
🛂 Visa & Entry
- US, Canadian, EU, UK, and Australian citizens can enter visa-free for up to 90 days
- Passport must be valid for 6+ months with proof of onward travel (return flight)
- Costa Rica charges a $29 departure tax (usually included in your ticket)
🏥 Health & Safety
- No mandatory vaccinations, but hepatitis A and typhoid are recommended
- Tap water is safe to drink in most tourist areas
- Bring reef-safe sunscreen — regular sunscreen damages coral reefs
- Mosquito repellent is essential — dengue exists in coastal lowlands
- Costa Rica is one of the safest countries in Central America, but lock your car and don't leave valuables visible
⚡ Power & Plugs
- 110V, same plugs as the US and Canada (Type A/B) — no adapter needed
💳 Money Tips
- Credit cards accepted at most hotels and restaurants
- Carry cash (colones) for sodas, small shops, parking attendants, and tips
- ATMs everywhere — Banco Nacional and BAC have the lowest fees
- Tip 10% at restaurants (sometimes auto-included as 'servicio')
🗣️ Language
- Spanish is the official language — English widely spoken in tourist areas
- Learn 'pura vida' — it means 'pure life' and is used as hello, goodbye, thank you, and 'everything is great'
- Ticos (Costa Ricans) are incredibly friendly and patient with language barriers
📅 March-Specific Tips
- Peak dry season and US/Canadian spring break month — book 2-3 months ahead
- If Holy Week (Semana Santa) falls in March, prices double and roads get packed
- National parks may hit capacity — buy entrance tickets online in advance
- Expect 85-95°F at lower elevations and possible heat waves on the coast
- Best month for clear Arenal Volcano views and zero-rain night walks