Dive sites in Curacao
Browse by region, city or dive type to find suitable locations for your experience level.
Regions
All dive sites
Blue Room Cave
Willemstad · Banda Abou · Curacao
A stunning sea cave on Curacao's northwest coast where sunlight enters through a submerged opening and refracts into an electric blue glow, creating one of the Caribbean's most photogenic underwater experiences in a compact, accessible cavern.
Watamula
Westpunt · Banda Abou · Curacao
A dramatic wall dive on Curacao's wild northwestern tip where strong currents sweep the exposed headland, attracting pelagic visitors, massive tarpon schools, and pristine deep-water corals rarely seen on the calmer leeward coast.
Tugboat
Willemstad · Caracas Bay · Curacao
A small, fully intact tugboat wreck resting in just 5 metres of water, beautifully encrusted with sponges and corals and accessible from shore.
Mushroom Forest
Sint Willibrordus · Sint Willibrordus · Curacao
An underwater forest of mushroom-shaped hard coral formations creating an alien landscape unique in the Caribbean.
Diving in Curacao
Dive sites in Curacao include cave, wall, wreck, reef locations across Banda Abou, Caracas Bay, Sint Willibrordus. Each location includes depth, conditions and environment type to help you plan safely.
Use the region and city navigation above to narrow your search, or explore individual site pages for detailed conditions, entry type, skill requirements and nearby alternatives.
FAQ
How do I reach the Blue Room?
The Blue Room is located on the rugged northwest coast of Curacao near the village of San Nicolas, roughly 30 minutes' drive from Willemstad. It is only accessible by boat due to the cliffy coastline. Several dive operators offer combined snorkel-dive trips, typically departing from Porto Mari beach or Lagun. The best light effects occur between 10 AM and 2 PM when the sun is high.
Can snorkelers visit the Blue Room?
Yes, the Blue Room is one of the few cave experiences that works equally well for snorkelers and scuba divers. The entrance is at about 3 metres depth and the cave interior includes an air pocket where visitors can surface. Snorkelers duck-dive through the short entrance and surface inside the cave to experience the blue light. Many operators offer guided snorkel trips specifically for this purpose.
How does this compare to Mushroom Forest and Tugboat Wreck?
The Blue Room is a completely different type of dive focused on the visual phenomenon of the blue light rather than marine biodiversity. Mushroom Forest features unique coral formations on a sandy slope, while the Tugboat Wreck is a classic shallow wreck dive. All three sites showcase Curacao's diving diversity and can be visited on separate days. The Blue Room is the shortest dive and is often combined with a reef dive nearby.
Is Watamula a shore dive or a boat dive and how do I access it?
Watamula is a shore dive but the entry is challenging. The site is located at the far northwestern tip of Curacao, about 45 minutes' drive from Willemstad. You enter from a rocky platform that requires careful timing between swells. The rocks are sharp and uneven, and a giant stride entry into deep water is the standard technique. Some dive operators run boat trips to Watamula from Westpunt which eliminate the difficult shore entry. A 4-wheel drive vehicle is recommended to reach the access point as the final stretch of road is unpaved.
How strong are the currents at Watamula and who should dive here?
Watamula is Curacao's most exposed dive site and currents can be unpredictable. On calm days the current is manageable for experienced divers, but on rougher days it can be dangerously strong with surge at the entry point. Advanced Open Water certification and significant experience with current diving are required. Most local dive operators will only take you here if you demonstrate good buoyancy control and air management. A surface marker buoy is mandatory. The site should not be attempted during strong trade wind periods when the northwest coast becomes very rough.