Belize Liveaboard Diving

The Blue Hole, pristine barrier reef, and Caribbean's most unspoiled underwater paradise

Belize

About Belize

The Jewel of Central America

Tucked into the western Caribbean between Mexico and Guatemala, **Belize protects the second-longest barrier reef system in the world** — a 300-kilometer chain of reefs, atolls, and mangrove cayes that has been a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1996. What makes Belize unusual is the rare combination of a true barrier reef with three of only four atolls in the entire Atlantic Ocean, creating an underwater geography found nowhere else outside the Indo-Pacific. The **Great Blue Hole**, a near-perfect circular sinkhole 300 meters wide and 124 meters deep, is the country's most iconic dive site. Made famous by Jacques Cousteau in 1971, this collapsed cave system reveals massive stalactites at 40 meters — geological evidence that the entire structure was once a dry cave during the last Ice Age. Caribbean reef sharks and the occasional bull shark patrol the entrance. **Lighthouse Reef** and **Half Moon Caye** offer the country's healthiest coral cover and most consistent visibility, often above 30 meters. The vertical walls of **Half Moon Caye Wall** drop into the deep blue and host eagle rays, spotted moray eels, and dense schools of horse-eye jacks. The caye itself shelters one of the Caribbean's most important seabird colonies — over 4,000 red-footed boobies. **Turneffe Atoll**, the largest of Belize's three atolls, is renowned for **Elbow Point**, a current-swept channel where massive schools of permit, jacks, and snappers gather to spawn. The atoll's protected lagoons are nursery grounds for juvenile sharks and rays, and dolphins are routinely encountered on the descent. **Glover's Reef** sits 45 kilometers offshore and is the most remote of the atolls. Its untouched reef walls, healthy elkhorn coral stands, and consistent encounters with reef sharks make it a favorite among liveaboard itineraries. The reef is also one of the few places in the Caribbean where you can still find dense populations of Nassau grouper at their historic spawning aggregation sites. Beyond the wall dives, Belize's inner lagoon hosts the famous **Hol Chan Marine Reserve** and **Shark Ray Alley**, where southern stingrays and nurse sharks gather in the shallows — perfect for newer divers and snorkelers. Water temperatures range from 25°C in winter to 29°C in summer, and the country's small size means a single liveaboard can reach reef, atoll, and blue hole within a week.

Liveaboard Vessels in Belize

Top Dive Sites in Belize