This Caribbean Adventure Hot Spot Is Adding Five New Flights From the US, With Reef Diving, Maya Ruins, and Rainforest Vacations


The morning begins waist-deep in the turquoise water of Hol Chan Marine Reserve, where sea turtles drift over coral gardens and schools of blue tang flash beneath the surface. Two days later, you’re standing atop the stone temples of Lamanai, looking out across a seemingly endless canopy of rainforest stretching toward Guatemala. By the end of the week, you’re lingering over grilled snapper on Placencia, where fishing boats rock gently offshore as the sun slips into the Caribbean Sea.

Few destinations let you experience all of that in a single vacation.

That’s what has made Belize one of the Caribbean Basin’s most compelling escapes for years. This winter, it’s becoming easier to reach.

BermudAir is expanding its Caribbean network with new nonstop service to Belize City from Boston, Raleigh-Durham, Fort Lauderdale, Orlando and St. Petersburg, with every route beginning in December. Each flight will operate two or three times every week, adding five new gateways to a destination that has quietly become one of the region’s most complete vacation experiences.

The new routes arrive at an ideal moment. Belize continues to attract travelers looking beyond a traditional beach vacation, drawing visitors with its remarkable blend of Caribbean islands, rainforest adventures, luxury resorts, wildlife, diving and ancient history. Rather than choosing between the beach and the jungle, you can experience both in the same trip.

For BermudAir, the expansion marks another step in the airline’s steady growth throughout the wider Caribbean. For Belize, it delivers another important increase in airlift ahead of the country’s busiest season.

A Bigger Winter for Belize

Beginning in December, BermudAir will connect Belize with five U.S. markets that continue to generate strong demand for Caribbean vacations.

The new Boston route creates another convenient nonstop option from New England. Raleigh-Durham gives North Carolina another direct connection to the destination, while the departures from Fort Lauderdale, Orlando and St. Petersburg provide multiple choices for Florida residents.

Each route will operate either twice or three times weekly, creating flexibility whether you’re planning a quick escape or a longer vacation.

The timing is particularly important because December marks the beginning of Belize’s dry season. Warm temperatures, lower humidity and generally calm seas create ideal conditions for snorkeling, diving, boating, hiking and exploring the country’s inland attractions.

It’s also the season when Belize reveals why it has become one of the Caribbean Basin’s fastest-growing destinations.

Unlike many destinations, Belize rarely asks you to create an entire vacation around one experience.

One part of the country revolves around the sea. Another is defined by rainforest, caves and rivers. Another still is shaped by centuries-old Garifuna traditions (Hopkins is a must) and fishing villages where life continues at an unhurried pace.

That diversity has become Belize’s calling card.

Where Most Belize Vacations Begin

For many first-time visitors, the journey starts on Ambergris Caye.

The island has long been Belize’s best-known destination, anchored by the colorful town of San Pedro and bordered by the extraordinary waters of the Belize Barrier Reef, the second-largest barrier reef system in the world.

Almost every day here begins with the sea.

Dive boats head toward the reef before breakfast. Catamarans leave the docks carrying snorkelers toward coral gardens alive with eagle rays, nurse sharks, sea turtles and hundreds of tropical fish. Fly-fishing guides push skiffs across shallow flats while paddleboarders drift through calm Caribbean water just offshore.

Despite its popularity, Ambergris has managed to preserve much of the relaxed atmosphere that first made it famous. Golf carts remain the preferred way to get around much of the island, and evenings still revolve around waterfront restaurants where the day’s catch arrives directly from local boats.

Much of the island’s appeal comes from its proximity to Hol Chan Marine Reserve, widely considered one of the Caribbean’s premier snorkeling destinations. Just beyond lies Shark Ray Alley, where generations of fishermen unintentionally created one of Belize’s most memorable wildlife encounters. Today, nurse sharks and southern stingrays gather in the shallow water, creating an experience that continues to draw visitors from around the world.

Ambergris has also evolved into Belize’s leading luxury destination. Boutique beachfront resorts share the island with larger full-service properties offering spas, expansive pools, private docks and restaurants that showcase Belizean seafood alongside international cuisine.

Whether you’re planning your first Belize vacation or your fifth, Ambergris remains the destination that introduces so many visitors to the country.

The Slower Rhythm of Caye Caulker

Just a short boat ride away, Caye Caulker tells a completely different story.

The island has never tried to compete with larger Caribbean destinations. Instead, it has embraced a pace that feels increasingly rare.

You explore much of Caye Caulker on foot or by bicycle. Colorful wooden buildings line sandy streets. Open-air cafés spill onto the waterfront. The Caribbean is almost always within view.

Locals have long embraced the phrase “Go Slow,” and it remains an accurate description of daily life.

That doesn’t mean there’s little to do.

Snorkeling and diving excursions depart throughout the day, many visiting the same spectacular sections of the Belize Barrier Reef that have made the country famous. Kayaking, sailing and paddleboarding all fit naturally into the rhythm of the island, while beach bars and small restaurants become gathering places after the boats return in the afternoon.

Caye Caulker also serves as an excellent base for longer excursions to the Great Blue Hole, perhaps Belize’s most famous natural landmark. While many visitors know it from dramatic aerial photographs, the surrounding reef system offers equally memorable experiences for divers and snorkelers alike.

What distinguishes Caye Caulker isn’t a single attraction.

It’s the feeling that time stretches a little differently here.

Breakfast easily becomes lunch. An afternoon swim becomes the highlight of the day. Dinner arrives after sunset with fresh lobster, snapper or conch prepared the same way generations of Belizean families have enjoyed it.

It’s an island that rewards slowing down.

Head Inland, and Belize Changes Completely

Leave the coast behind, and Belize reveals another personality altogether.

The Cayo District replaces turquoise water with rainforest, rivers and limestone hills, creating one of the Caribbean Basin’s finest destinations for adventure and archaeology.

This is the Belize that surprises first-time visitors.

Ancient Maya cities emerge from dense jungle. Cave systems wind for miles beneath the landscape. Howler monkeys call from the forest canopy while toucans flash through the trees overhead.

Among the region’s highlights is Xunantunich, where one of the tallest Maya temples in Belize rises dramatically above the surrounding countryside. A little farther south, Caracol tells the story of one of the greatest cities of the ancient Maya world, its plazas and pyramids revealing the sophistication of a civilization that flourished more than a thousand years ago.

The landscape invites exploration.

You can float through cave systems on an inner tube, ride horseback along jungle trails, hike to waterfalls or spend the day with naturalist guides searching for wildlife in protected reserves.

Luxury has found its place here, too.

Belize’s collection of jungle lodges has grown steadily over the past decade, with beautifully designed retreats tucked into rainforest landscapes where your morning might begin with birdsong instead of waves. Many combine refined accommodations with farm-to-table dining, guided excursions and wellness experiences that draw directly from the surrounding environment.

Spending several days in Cayo before heading to the coast—or vice versa—has become one of the defining Belize itineraries.

The contrast between the two experiences is exactly what makes the destination so memorable.

What About Prices? 

I found rates for about $872.33 from Raleigh to Belize in December — but you should note that’s as high as high season gets. 



Karen Udler

2026-06-30 02:01:00