Skip to content

Bookmark Nomada·⌘D / Ctrl+D

Climate · Americas

Caye Caulker climate, year-round

Belize · Tropical maritime · Updated May 2026

Best months

Jan · Feb · Mar · Apr · Dec

Best for: Caribbean-tropics seekers who want flat island life with no cars.

Year at a glance

Cells coloured by typical daytime average temperature. = best months for nomads.

  • Jan

    25°C

    78%

    3mm

  • Feb

    25°C

    75%

    2mm

  • Mar

    26°C

    75%

    2mm

  • Apr

    27°C

    75%

    2mm

  • May

    28°C

    78%

    3mm

  • Jun

    28°C

    80%

    6mm

  • Jul

    28°C

    80%

    6mm

  • Aug

    28°C

    80%

    6mm

  • Sep

    28°C

    82%

    7mm

  • Oct

    28°C

    80%

    8mm

  • Nov

    27°C

    80%

    5mm

  • Dec

    26°C

    78%

    4mm

Summer peak

28°C

May · 78% humidity

Winter low

25°C

January · 78% humidity

Climate type

Tropical maritime

Humid summers, Humid winters

Field notes

Dry season Nov–April is the postcard window — 25–28°C, low humidity for the tropics, calm Caribbean seas. Wet season May–October brings afternoon downpours and the active hurricane window (June–November peaks August–September). Sandflies are real on the lee side; the breeze is your friend.

Visa for nomads

Medium nomad-friendly

Pathway

Extendable tourist

Program

Typical max stay

12 months

Same Belize visa story as San Pedro — 30-day tourist on arrival, extendable monthly in-country up to ~12 months. QRP residency available for over-45s with proven pension income. No formal DNV.

Editorial summary, not legal advice. Verify with the relevant consulate before applying — visa programs change with little notice.

Cost of living in Caye Caulker: ~$1,510/mo

Mid-tier monthly across rent, food, transport, utilities, and coworking.

Useful while you’re in Caye Caulker

The weekly nomad digest

One email a week with new visa launches, fresh city data, and the moves that actually matter. Free, no spam, unsubscribe in one click.

Nomad News

One issue per week, no spam, unsubscribe in one click. We’ll never share your email — see Privacy.

Editorial estimates aggregated from public climatological summaries — typical monthly averages, not forecasts. Treat as order-of-magnitude. Microclimate, altitude, and recent extreme weather can swing these values significantly.