Cayman Islands Liveaboard Diving
Crystal clear waters, dramatic wall diving, and the legendary Stingray City
About Cayman Islands
Crystal clear waters, legendary wall diving, and the world-famous Stingray City
The **Cayman Islands** — Grand Cayman, Cayman Brac, and Little Cayman — sit on the **Cayman Ridge**, an underwater mountain chain that rises from the 7,000-meter-deep Cayman Trench. This dramatic geology produces the country's signature feature: vertical walls that drop from 12 meters straight into the abyss, often within 100 meters of the shoreline. The result is some of the most consistent and accessible wall diving in the entire Caribbean.
**Bloody Bay Wall** off Little Cayman is widely considered the best wall dive in the Caribbean. Starting at just 5 meters and falling vertically beyond 600 meters, the wall is encrusted with sponges, sea fans, and black coral. Caribbean reef sharks, turtles, and Nassau groupers patrol the edge, while juveniles shelter in the shallow reef plate above.
**Stingray City**, in Grand Cayman's North Sound, has become one of the world's most famous shallow-water encounters. Dozens of southern stingrays glide through waist-deep water, descended from animals that once gathered to feed on fish scraps from local boats. The site is suitable for snorkelers and brand-new divers alike, while the deeper Stingray Sandbar offers the same encounter without crowds.
**Cayman Brac** is renowned for the **MV Captain Keith Tibbetts** — the only diveable Russian frigate in the Western Hemisphere. Sunk as an artificial reef in 1996, the 100-meter warship now sits broken across a sand bottom from 18 to 30 meters and has been completely colonized by reef life. Nearby reefs and walls offer some of the country's most pristine diving.
**Little Cayman**'s **Marine Park** protects almost the entire coastline of the island, and the population of just 200 residents means dive sites see remarkably little pressure. Outside Bloody Bay, sites like **Mixing Bowl** and **Donna's Delight** combine wall diving with shallow patch reefs hosting healthy populations of Nassau grouper — a species that has collapsed almost everywhere else in the Caribbean.
**Grand Cayman**'s **Kittiwake** wreck — a former US Navy submarine rescue vessel — sits upright at 18 meters and is one of the most accessible large wrecks anywhere. The island also offers night dives at Sunset Reef where bioluminescence and tarpon hunts create an unforgettable experience. With water temperatures of 26–29°C, visibility frequently above 30 meters, and a marine protection program in place since 1986, the Cayman Islands remain the gold standard for Caribbean wall and wreck diving.
Liveaboard Vessels in Cayman Islands
- Cayman Aggressor IV — 4.5/5 stars, from €328/day
Top Dive Sites in Cayman Islands
- Stingray City — beginner (1-4m)
- USS Kittiwake — intermediate (5-20m)
- Bloody Bay Wall — intermediate (6-40m)
- Devil's Grotto — intermediate (8-15m)
- Eden Rock — beginner (8-15m)
- Babylon — advanced (15-35m)
- Orange Canyon — intermediate (18-40m)
- MV Captain Keith Tibbetts — intermediate (18-30m)
- Stingray City Sandbar — beginner (1-2m)
- Trinity Caves — intermediate (15-25m)
- Doc Poulson Wreck — beginner (12-18m)
- Jackson Bight Wall — intermediate (12-40m)
- Mixing Bowl — advanced (15-30m)
- Great Wall East — intermediate (12-40m)
- Marilyn's Cut — intermediate (10-35m)
- Lighthouse Reef — beginner (10-25m)
- Cemetery Wall — intermediate (15-40m)
- Tarpon Alley — beginner (10-20m)
- Kittiwake Reef — beginner (8-15m)
- Bonnie's Arch — intermediate (15-30m)