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Showing posts from June, 2026

Affordable Belize: Why Buyers Are Discovering Corozal

By Frik de Meyere While crowds rush toward the cayes, a quieter group of buyers heads north to Corozal. This bayside town near the Mexican border pairs affordability with an easygoing pace and quick access to a major Mexican city. Here is why Corozal has become one of Belize's best-value markets. Why Corozal Appeals to Buyers Corozal offers waterfront living without the premium prices of the popular cayes. The bay is calm and scenic rather than a swimming beach, but the trade-off is space, value, and a genuine small-town atmosphere. The cost of everyday life, from produce at the local market to dining out, tends to run lower than in tourist hotspots, which stretches a fixed income further. For many retirees, that combination is the whole point. The Real Estate Market Compared with Ambergris Caye or Placencia, Corozal real estate is notably more affordable, with bayfront lots, modest homes, and the occasional larger property all available below what equivalent coastal land cost...

San Ignacio Travel Guide: Maya Ruins, Caves, and Jungle Living

By Frik de Meyere The Cayo District is Belize's adventure heartland, and San Ignacio is its lively, walkable hub. Within a short drive you can climb a Maya pyramid, crawl through a sacred cave, or paddle a jungle river. This guide covers the highlights and the appeal of inland life. A Base for Maya Archaeology Cayo is rich in Maya history. Xunantunich, reached by a hand-cranked ferry across the Mopan River, is famous for its towering El Castillo pyramid and sweeping views into Guatemala. Caracol, deep in the Chiquibul Forest, is the largest Maya site in Belize and once rivaled the great cities of the region. Cahal Pech sits right at the edge of San Ignacio itself. Together they make the district one of the best places in Central America to combine ruins with rainforest in a single trip. Caves, Rivers, and Jungle Adventure The district is honeycombed with caves, the most renowned being Actun Tunichil Muknal, or the ATM cave, where guided tours pass Maya ceremonial artifacts and...

Snorkeling and Diving Belize: Hol Chan, the Blue Hole, and More

By Frik de Meyere Belize is one of the world's great underwater destinations, anchored by the second largest barrier reef on Earth. Whether you want to snorkel with nurse sharks or descend into a famous sinkhole, the reef has something for every level. Here is how to plan your time on the water. Hol Chan Marine Reserve Hol Chan, meaning little channel in Maya, is the most famous snorkeling and diving site near Ambergris Caye and Caye Caulker. The reserve protects a cut in the reef where currents concentrate marine life, and the adjacent Shark Ray Alley lets snorkelers float among harmless nurse sharks and southern stingrays. Because it is shallow, accessible, and teeming with fish, it is an ideal first reef experience for families and beginners, while still rewarding seasoned divers. The Great Blue Hole The Great Blue Hole is a near-perfect circular sinkhole more than 300 meters across, made famous by Jacques Cousteau and now a bucket-list dive. It is an advanced site: divers ...

A Traveler's Guide to Hopkins, Belize: Garifuna Culture and Calm Beaches

By Frik de Meyere Tucked between the Maya Mountains and the Caribbean, Hopkins is a village where culture is lived rather than staged. Drumming drifts through the evening air, the food is unforgettable, and the beach asks nothing of you. This traveler's guide covers why Hopkins deserves a spot on your Belize itinerary. The Garifuna Heart of Belize The Garifuna are descendants of West African and Indigenous Caribbean peoples, and their language, music, and cuisine form a living culture recognized by UNESCO. In Hopkins you can hear traditional drumming most evenings, take a hands-on drumming or cooking lesson, and taste dishes like hudut, a fragrant fish-and-coconut stew served with mashed plantain. Garifuna Settlement Day each November turns the village into a celebration. Engaging respectfully with this culture is, for many visitors, the most memorable part of a Belize trip. Beaches and the Barrier Reef Hopkins fronts a calm stretch of the Caribbean with golden sand and shallo...

Placencia Peninsula Property in 2026: What Beachfront Buyers Should Know

By Frik de Meyere Placencia, a sixteen-mile sliver of land in southern Belize, has become one of Central America's most discussed property markets. Long beaches, a genuine fishing-village feel, and better roads and utilities have pushed it onto the radar of international buyers. Here is a grounded look at the peninsula for anyone weighing a 2026 purchase. Why Placencia Stands Out Placencia offers something many Belizean destinations cannot: a continuous, swimmable beach running for miles along the Caribbean. The peninsula has matured from a backpacker hideaway into a place with paved road access, a regional airstrip, restaurants, marinas, and reliable utilities, while still keeping its barefoot pace. Its position near the southern barrier reef and the cayes makes it a natural base for diving, fishing, and island day trips, which sustains a healthy vacation-rental market for owners who want their property to earn income when they are away. What You Can Buy and What It Costs The...

Belize Travel Guide 2026: Top Things to Do, See & Experience

By Frik de Meyere Belize manages to feel like several destinations in one. In a single trip you can dive a world-famous reef in the morning and climb a Maya pyramid in the afternoon. For first-time visitors in 2026, this guide covers the experiences worth building a trip around — plus a few practical tips to make it smoother. Dive and Snorkel the Barrier Reef The Belize Barrier Reef is the headline attraction, and for good reason. As the second-largest reef system in the world and a UNESCO World Heritage Site, it offers extraordinary diving and snorkeling right off the coast. The Great Blue Hole, a massive marine sinkhole, is a bucket-list dive for experienced divers, while protected areas like Hol Chan Marine Reserve give snorkelers easy access to vibrant marine life. If you do one thing in Belize, make it time in the water. Explore the Cayes The cayes — small islands off the coast — are where many visitors base themselves. Ambergris Caye and its town of San Pedro offer the widest ran...

Best Places to Invest in Belize Real Estate in 2026

Living in Belize: A 2026 Expat Guide to Cost, Residency & Lifestyle

By Frik de Meyere For a growing number of retirees, remote workers, and families, Belize has moved from vacation to maybe we should live here. It is one of the few Caribbean-region destinations where English is the official language, the US dollar is widely accepted, and residency programs are designed to welcome newcomers. Here is a grounded look at what living in Belize actually involves in 2026. The Cost of Living Belize is not the cheapest country in Central America, but it remains affordable for many North American and European budgets, especially outside the most touristy spots. Local markets, domestic produce, and modest housing keep everyday costs reasonable. Imported goods, electronics, and cars are where prices climb, since much is shipped in. Where you live makes the biggest difference. Ambergris Caye and other tourist hubs carry higher rents and grocery bills, while inland towns like San Ignacio or northern Corozal stretch a budget much further. A realistic plan accounts fo...

Belize Tourism in 2026: Why the Industry Keeps Growing

Belize Real Estate Guide 2026: How to Buy Property in Paradise

By Frik de Meyere Belize has quietly become one of the most approachable places in the world for foreigners to buy property — and 2026 is a strong year to pay attention. With English as the official language, a currency pegged to the US dollar, and ownership laws that treat foreign buyers the same as citizens, the country removes much of the friction that makes overseas real estate intimidating. This guide walks through what you actually need to know before buying. Why Belize Appeals to Foreign Buyers The single biggest draw is legal simplicity. Belize allows foreigners to own property outright through fee simple title — the same form of ownership a Belizean citizen holds. There is no requirement to take on a local partner, set up a special trust, or navigate the kind of restricted-zone rules you find in some neighboring countries. For buyers who want a clean, straightforward title, that clarity is a major reason Belize keeps appearing on shortlists. English being the official language...