Sea Turtle Species & Best Months in Aruba
| Species | January–March | April–June | July–September | October–December | Likelihood |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Green Sea Turtle | Common | Common | Common | Common | Very likely |
| Hawksbill Turtle | Occasional | Occasional | Occasional | Occasional | Sometimes |
Sea Turtle Behaviors to Watch For
Green turtles feed on the seagrass in the sheltered Malmok and Boca Catalina bays, where snorkelers find them a short swim from the boat.
Turtles and reef fish shelter around the Antilla shipwreck, which sits in shallow water and is easy to snorkel over.
A feeding turtle rises for air every few minutes. Give it a clear path to the surface and never crowd the space above one.
Turtles rest on the sandy seabed between feeds. A resting turtle should be watched quietly from the surface, not disturbed.
What to Bring (and What to Leave at Home)
✓ Bring
- Reef-safe (oxybenzone-free) sunscreen
- Swimsuit worn under your clothes
- A light layer for the sunset sail
- Towel and a change of clothes
- Waterproof phone case or GoPro
- A hat and sunglasses for the deck
- Your booking voucher (printed or phone)
✗ Leave at home
- Regular sunscreen (harmful to the reef)
- Any urge to touch turtles or the shipwreck
- Single-use plastics
- Valuables you would not want on a boat
Where Tours Depart From
| Port / Area | Details | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Palm Beach / hotel strip | Most sails pick up along the high-rise hotel strip, close to Malmok and Boca Catalina. | Sunset snorkel sails |
| Oranjestad | The capital and cruise port, where some sailings depart from the marina. | Cruise-day trips |
How to Choose an Ethical Tour
What ethical operators do
- Brief a strict no-touch, no-chase policy
- Keep a respectful distance from turtles
- Never block a turtle’s path to the surface
- Require reef-safe sunscreen from all guests
- Cap group sizes for calmer encounters
- Support reef and sea-turtle conservation
Red flags to avoid
- Let guests touch, ride, or chase turtles
- Feed turtles to lure them in
- Crowd or corner a turtle in the water
- Stand on coral or trample seagrass
- Oversized groups with no guide in the water
- Any “hold a turtle” photo op


