Snorkel with wild green and hawksbill turtles across 29 destinations. Free cancellation, verified reviews, instant confirmation.
Click any pin for the season, top-rated tours and starting price, then open the full guide. Colours group destinations by region.
Most turtle-snorkeling trips center on green and hawksbill turtles, with loggerheads in a few spots. Tap a card to see every destination where you can swim with that species.
Swimming with turtles almost always means a full reef safari. Schools of tropical fish, parrotfish crunching coral, the occasional reef shark, and rays gliding over the sand share the same shallow bays as the turtles. In a handful of places the encounters go further — spinner dolphins off Hawaii and Zanzibar, and the famous resident dugong of Abu Dabbab in Marsa Alam. Turtles are the headline; the whole reef comes with them.
From wade-in beach snorkels to full-day catamaran reef trips — the right format depends on your budget, group, and how far offshore the turtles feed.
The little things that separate a great turtle encounter from a crowded splash-around.
Sea turtles live in these warm bays all year — so it's less about turtle season and more about calm seas and clear water. Here's the sweet spot by region.
Unlike migratory whales, resident green and hawksbill turtles stay in the same coral bays year-round, grazing seagrass and cleaning at the reef. That means there is always somewhere warm to swim with them. What changes with the season is water clarity and sea state — the calmer and clearer the water, the better the snorkeling. Tropical destinations near the equator (Gili Islands, Zanzibar, the Caribbean) stay swimmable all year, while Hawaii and the Canary Islands have gentle summer-into-autumn windows when visibility peaks. Nesting season (roughly June–October in many spots) adds the bonus chance of seeing adult turtles up close, though hatchlings are protected and viewed only from shore.
Sea turtles are protected almost everywhere they live. We only list operators who brief a strict no-touch, no-chase, no-feeding policy — keeping a respectful distance, never blocking a turtle's path to the surface, and requiring reef-safe sunscreen from every guest.
Responsible snorkeling protects the seagrass beds and coral reefs that keep turtles returning to these bays generation after generation. The same honu you meet on a well-run tour will still be there for the next traveler — because good operators, and good guests, keep it that way.
29 destinations · 100+ tours · from $30 · free cancellation