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Puerto Rico is not just beaches. The northeastern corner of the island is covered by El Yunque National Forest — the only tropical rainforest in the entire United States National Forest system. It receives up to 200 inches of rain per year, suppo...
One of the advantages of Puerto Rico being a US territory is that you can find Costco, Walmart, and other mainland retail chains (if that is your preference). But understanding the full grocery landscape, including local options can expose you to man...
Puerto Rico's official languages are Spanish and English but the island's primary language is Spanish . While English is widely understood in tourist areas and by professionals who deal with Americans regularly, if you travel around outside of those ...
Puerto Rico rewards visitors who arrive prepared. Most first-time visitors make the same set of avoidable mistakes — staying only in San Juan, not renting a car, eating only at tourist restaurants, or being surprised by the heat and the language. The...
The question of whether to rent a car in Puerto Rico is genuinely context-dependent. Get the answer wrong and you'll either miss most of the island or spend your San Juan days frustrated by traffic and parking. Here's the honest breakdown. Rent a ...
Puerto Rico's nightlife is the best in the Caribbean. It is not even a close competition. The island that gave the world reggaeton, that has been producing internationally famous DJs for decades, that operates on a schedule where nothing starts unti...
Puerto Rico's LGBT community is one of the most visible, organised, and culturally embedded in the Caribbean and Latin America. Beyond the bar and club scene, the island has queer-affirming spaces, organisations, events, and a cultural fabric that m...
If you're renting a car to explore beyond San Juan — and you should be — understanding Puerto Rico's petrol station landscape will save you several headaches. Here's the practical guide. Fuel Grades and Prices Puerto Rico uses the same fuel syste...
The short answer: it depends entirely on which coast and which beach you're on. Puerto Rico's geography creates dramatically different ocean conditions on its various coasts, and the island has a meaningful number of drowning incidents every year — ...
Puerto Rican cuisine — cocina criolla — is a synthesis of three culinary traditions: Spanish, West African, and Taíno Indigenous. The Spanish brought the techniques, the pork, and the olive oil. The Africans brought okra, pigeon peas, and the seasoni...
Puerto Rico is a small island — 100 by 35 miles — that contains an almost implausible amount of geographic and cultural variety. Rainforest and desert. Atlantic surf and Caribbean calm. 500-year-old walled cities and modern food markets. Glowing bays...
Let's be direct: Puerto Rico is largely a car island. Outside of the walkable core of Old San Juan and parts of Condado, getting around without your own vehicle requires planning. The good news is that Uber and rideshares work reliably throughout the...
San Juan's gay bar scene is concentrated primarily in Condado, with an important secondary scene in Santurce and individual spots scattered through Old San Juan. The vibe across the scene is warm, unpretentious, and genuinely inclusive — Boricua hos...
Puerto Rico earns its reputation as the most LGBT-friendly destination in the Caribbean. As a US territory, it carries the full weight of federal anti-discrimination law and the landmark Obergefell v. Hodges (2015) Supreme Court ruling legalising sam...
When you arrive at Luis Muñoz Marín International Airport in San Juan, you do not clear customs or immigration. The currency is the US dollar. Signs are in English and Spanish. Police drive Ford Explorers with lights and sirens identical to those in ...
Puerto Rico has been growing coffee since the 18th century. At its peak in the late 19th century, Puerto Rican coffee was served at the Vatican and to the royal families of Europe. The island's mountainous interior — the Cordillera Central — creates...
Puerto Rico's 270+ miles of coastline encompass an extraordinary range of beach types — calm shallow Caribbean bays on the south and west, powerful Atlantic surf on the north, secluded island beaches on Culebra and Vieques, and bioluminescent waters ...
Puerto Rico has produced a dining scene that punches far above its size. The combination of exceptional local ingredients (fresh seafood, tropical fruits, heritage pork, local coffee), a strong Spanish and African culinary tradition, and a generation...
Puerto Rico sits in a unique position among Caribbean destinations: it offers the richness of Latin Caribbean culture — the food, the music, the Spanish architecture, the warmth of the people — wrapped in the practical ease of a US territory. No pass...
Puerto Rico is more bikeable than many visitors expect — particularly along the coast and in the calmer streets of Old San Juan. Dedicated bike paths exist in several areas, and the island's compact geography means cycling can genuinely replace a car...
Puerto Rico takes fitness seriously. The island has a strong gym culture, a passionate CrossFit community, and the kind of outdoor training environment — ocean swims, beachside runs, year-round warmth — that makes staying active feel like a pleasure ...
San Juan is Puerto Rico's capital and its beating heart — a city where 500-year-old Spanish fortresses tower over turquoise water, streets painted in pastel blues and yellows wind between rum bars and coffee shops, and the Atlantic crashes against th...
Puerto Ricans call themselves Boricuas — from Boriquén, the name the Taíno Indigenous people gave to the island. It is a term of deep cultural pride, used in music, in political speech, in everyday conversation. When Bad Bunny performs at the Super B...
If you are a fan of Thomas Dambo and his Trolls, then you cannot miss "Hector El Protector" on your next visit to Puerto Rico! On the island of Culebra off the coast of the main island of Puerto Rico, is Hector El Protector, technically the se...
The United States is a young country built on ancient geology, indigenous spiritual traditions, frontier mythology, and a national character that has always been captivated by the unknown. The result is a remarkable inventory of places that generate ...
Dominica (not to be confused with the Dominican Republic) has made a deliberate bet against mass tourism: it has no large resorts, no cruise-ship promenade, and no pumped-up party beach. What it has instead is a volcanic island so geologically active...
There are places on the American East Coast where you can walk along the ocean and see horses — genuinely wild, unmanaged, government-protected horses — grazing in the dunes, standing belly-deep in the surf, or trotting across the sand with the Atlan...