Best Things to Do in San Jose, Costa Rica

San Jose is the capital and largest city of Costa Rica, a metropolitan area of over 1.5 million in the Central Valley at 1,170 meters. It is primarily the transportation hub and cultural center of Costa Rica rather than a destination in its own right — most visitors spend 1-2 days before dispersing to national parks, beach towns, and adventure areas. The Museo del Oro Precolombino (Pre-Columbian Gold Museum) and the Mercado Central are the key in-city draws.

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The unmissable in San Jose

These are the staple sights — don't leave San Jose without seeing them.

1
Arenal Observatory Lodge and Spa
#1 must-see

Arenal Observatory Lodge and Spa

📍 La Fortuna, Alajuela, 21007
🕐 Mon–Sun 9:00-22:00
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2
Arenal Volcano National Park
#2 must-see

Arenal Volcano National Park

📍 La Fortuna, Alajuela, 21007
🕐 Mon–Sun 8:00-16:00
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3
Baldi Hot Springs
#3 must-see

Baldi Hot Springs

📍 San Carlos, Alajuela, 30109
🕐 Mon–Sun 10:00-22:00
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Attractions in San Jose

More attractions in San Jose

Arenal Observatory Lodge and Spa 1
#1 must-see

Arenal Observatory Lodge and Spa

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📍 La Fortuna, Alajuela, 21007

Arenal Observatory Lodge and Spa holds the singular distinction of being the closest hotel to Arenal Volcano in Costa Rica, originally established as a research base for volcanologists monitoring one of Central America's most active peaks. Positioned on a ridge just 2.7 kilometers from the volcano's cone, the lodge offers uninterrupted views of the towering 1,670-meter stratovolcano across a landscape of tropical forest and hardened lava fields. The property sits within its own 870-hectare private reserve, threaded with hiking trails that lead through primary and secondary rainforest to viewpoints, hanging bridges, and the shores of Lake Arenal. Guests can observe volcanic steam venting from the summit on clear mornings and, during periods of activity, may witness glowing lava flows after dark — a genuinely extraordinary natural spectacle. The on-site spa offers treatments incorporating volcanic mud and mineral-rich waters in harmony with the dramatic surroundings. Birdwatching is exceptional throughout the reserve, with toucans, resplendent quetzals, and dozens of hummingbird species recorded on the trails. The lodge's restaurant sources local produce and offers panoramic volcano views from every table. Access is via a scenic 4WD road through the national park buffer zone, adding to the sense of adventure and remoteness that defines a stay at this remarkable destination.

Arenal Volcano National Park 2
#2 must-see

Arenal Volcano National Park

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📍 La Fortuna, Alajuela, 21007

Arenal Volcano National Park is Costa Rica's most visited protected area and the centerpiece of the country's adventure tourism industry, encompassing the iconic Arenal Volcano and the surrounding rainforest, lava fields, and lake ecosystems of the northern Alajuela region. Rising to 1,670 meters, Arenal was one of the world's most consistently active volcanoes for decades following a catastrophic eruption in 1968 that destroyed three villages. Though volcanic activity has decreased significantly since 2010, the cone remains impressively present, frequently shrouded in cloud and occasionally venting steam from its summit. Hiking trails within the park traverse hardened lava flows, primary rainforest, and open viewpoints offering dramatic perspectives of the volcano against the backdrop of Lake Arenal. The biodiversity of the park is extraordinary — jaguars, tapirs, howler monkeys, sloths, and hundreds of bird species inhabit the reserve. The surrounding La Fortuna area has developed into a hub of adventure activities, with white-water rafting, zip-lining, canyoning, and kayaking all accessible from the park's fringes. Hot springs fed by geothermal activity are a defining feature of the region, with both natural and developed thermal pools available nearby. Entry to the national park requires a fee and can be combined with guided naturalist tours that dramatically enhance wildlife sightings and geological understanding.

Baldi Hot Springs 3
#3 must-see

Baldi Hot Springs

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📍 San Carlos, Alajuela, 30109

Baldi Hot Springs is one of Costa Rica's most celebrated thermal resort complexes, spread across a lushly landscaped hillside in San Carlos with Arenal Volcano as its dramatic backdrop. The complex features 25 natural hot spring pools graduated in temperature from a gentle 35°C to an intense 67°C, fed by geothermal waters that emerge from deep within the volcanic geology of the Arenal region. The pools are terraced across beautifully maintained tropical gardens, connected by waterfalls and rivers of warm mineral water that cascade dramatically between levels. Water slides, swim-up bars, and a swim-up restaurant bring a resort atmosphere to the experience, making Baldi equally appealing to families seeking fun and couples looking for relaxation. The thermal waters are rich in minerals including magnesium and calcium, traditionally credited with therapeutic benefits for muscles, joints, and skin. As evening falls and steam rises from the pools against the jungle backdrop, Baldi takes on a genuinely magical quality — especially on nights when the volcano is visible through the clearing clouds. A full-service spa offers massage treatments, mud wraps, and facials that complement the thermal experience. Entrance fees vary by time of day, with evening visits typically offering a more atmospheric experience at a higher price point. Advance booking is strongly recommended during Costa Rican holiday periods.

Braulio Carrillo National Park 4

Braulio Carrillo National Park

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📍 Heredia, 40101

Braulio Carrillo National Park is one of Costa Rica's most biologically significant protected areas, covering over 47,000 hectares of virtually untouched premontane and montane rainforest on the Caribbean slopes of the Central Volcanic Mountain Range. Established in 1978 to protect the watershed and forest between San José and the Caribbean coast, the park preserves an extraordinary altitudinal range — from lowland jungle at 36 meters above sea level to the cloud-shrouded summit of Volcán Barva at 2,906 meters — creating conditions for exceptional biodiversity. The park is home to all six species of Costa Rican wild cat, including jaguars and pumas, alongside tapirs, giant anteaters, harpy eagles, and hundreds of endemic plant species. The main highway from San José to Limón (Route 32) passes directly through the park, offering accessible rainforest views from the road itself. However, the interior trails into the park's depths are for experienced hikers prepared for muddy, challenging conditions and often dramatic rainfall. The Barva Sector in Heredia provides the most accessible highland trails, leading to crater lakes and cloud forest habitats where resplendent quetzals are sometimes spotted. Braulio Carrillo serves as an important ecological corridor linking multiple protected areas and maintaining the biodiversity of Costa Rica's Caribbean lowlands. Its proximity to San José makes it a genuine wilderness accessible from the capital.

Butterfly Conservatory 5

Butterfly Conservatory

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📍 El Castillo, Alajuela, 21007

Butterfly Conservatory in El Castillo, just south of La Fortuna and Arenal Volcano, is widely regarded as one of Costa Rica's finest butterfly attractions — a private facility dedicated to the breeding, display, and conservation of the country's extraordinary lepidopteran diversity. The conservatory houses multiple enclosed garden environments representing different Costa Rican ecosystems, each stocked with free-flying butterfly species native to that habitat. The Blue Morpho (Morpho peleides), with its iridescent electric-blue wings spanning up to 20 centimeters, is the undisputed highlight — and at the Butterfly Conservatory, it is encountered in genuine abundance rather than the occasional sighting typical of wild forest walks. The facility also displays poison dart frogs in naturalistic terrariums, leaf-cutter ant colonies in observation tanks, and a fascinating exhibit on insect camouflage and mimicry. Knowledgeable guides explain the life cycle, ecology, and conservation status of each species, transforming what might otherwise be a passive viewing experience into a genuinely educational encounter. The conservatory breeds its own specimens and participates in sustainable export programs that support rural communities. Morning visits coincide with peak butterfly activity, when warmth encourages flight. The El Castillo location puts the conservatory within easy reach of the Arenal hanging bridges and the lake, making it a natural addition to any itinerary centered on the northern Alajuela region.

California's Great America 6

California's Great America

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📍 4701 Great America Parkway, Santa Clara, California, 95054

California's Great America in Santa Clara has served as Silicon Valley's premier amusement park since opening in 1976, occupying a 112-acre site near Levi's Stadium and offering more than 40 rides across themed zones. The park is operated by Cedar Fair and is particularly known for its wooden and steel roller coaster lineup: Flight Deck delivers inverted loops and corkscrews at 55 mph, while Gold Striker, a wooden coaster, is ranked among the best traditional coasters in California. Railblazer introduced the single-rail 'raptor' coaster concept to the West Coast when it opened in 2018. Planet Snoopy, themed around the Peanuts characters, provides gentler family attractions and a dedicated children's coaster zone. A large water park section with wave pools, lazy rivers and waterslides operates seasonally during summer months. The park hosts Halloween Haunt in October — a separately ticketed evening event filling the grounds with scare zones and mazes — and WinterFest in November and December adds ice skating and holiday-themed entertainment. Great America is easily reached from San Jose, San Francisco and the broader Bay Area via the Santa Clara Caltrain station, which provides a direct link to the main entrance during operating hours.

Celeste River (Río Celeste) 7

Celeste River (Río Celeste)

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📍 Alajuela, 61102

Celeste River (Río Celeste) in Costa Rica's Tenorio Volcano National Park is one of the natural world's most astonishing color spectacles — a river that flows in a vivid, opaque turquoise-blue unlike almost anything else on Earth. The extraordinary color results from a phenomenon called 'Mie scattering': when two colorless streams converge at a point called Los Teñideros, the interaction of volcanic minerals — primarily aluminosilicate particles — with the acidity of the water creates a suspension that scatters blue light with remarkable intensity. The result is a river the color of a tropical swimming pool, winding through dense primary rainforest that amplifies the surreal effect. The national park trail system leads visitors through several kilometers of untouched jungle to the convergence point, a series of small turquoise waterfalls, boiling mud pools, and hot spring areas where geothermal activity is palpable. Wildlife is exceptionally abundant along the trail — tapirs, spider monkeys, toucans, and resplendent quetzals have all been recorded in the area. The terrain can be muddy and demands appropriate footwear; the journey is genuinely rewarding but not trivial. The river's color is at its most intense in dry season when sediment levels are lower. Guided tours from La Fortuna provide transport, a naturalist guide, and access to this remote and genuinely breathtaking corner of Costa Rica.

Children's Museum (Museo de los Ninos) 8

Children's Museum (Museo de los Ninos)

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📍 Avenue 9, Bajos de La Union, San Jose

Children’s Museum (Museo de los Ninos) in San José, Costa Rica, is one of Latin America’s most celebrated interactive museums for young visitors. Housed in a magnificently restored 19th-century prison — the former Penitenciaría Central — the building itself is a landmark worth admiring before you even step inside. Over 40 permanent interactive exhibitions span themes from science and technology to ecology, outer space, and Costa Rican culture.

Kids can explore a simulated earthquake room, pilot a virtual spacecraft, and discover how ecosystems function in the tropics. The museum shares its campus with the National Auditorium and the Children’s Cultural Center, making it a full cultural hub for families. Weekend programs often include live science demonstrations and arts workshops. Located on Avenue 9 beneath La Union, it’s easily reachable from San José’s center by public bus or taxi. Admission is affordable, and multilingual materials help international visitors feel at home. Whether you’re navigating the human-body exhibit or marveling at the colonial-era architecture, the Museo de los Ninos earns its reputation as Costa Rica’s premier destination for curious young minds and the adults who travel with them.

Chirripó National Park 9

Chirripó National Park

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📍 Pérez Zeledón, San Jose, 10101

Chirripó National Park protects the highest peak in Costa Rica — and indeed in all of Central America. Cerro Chirripó rises to 3,821 meters above sea level, and summiting it is considered one of the great hiking challenges of the continent. The park covers roughly 50,000 hectares of páramo, cloud forest, and glacial lakes, offering a landscape utterly unlike the tropical lowlands most visitors associate with Costa Rica.

The summit trail begins in the town of San Gerardo de Rivas, near Pérez Zeledón, and ascends through dense forest before breaking into open páramo grasslands dotted with hardy bromeliads and alpine wildflowers. Most hikers complete the ascent over two days, spending a night at the SINAC refuge hut at 3,400 meters. On clear mornings, both the Pacific and Caribbean coasts are simultaneously visible from the summit. Wildlife includes the resplendent quetzal, tapirs, pumas, and the rare Chirripó oak forest salamander. Permits are strictly limited and must be reserved months in advance through Costa Rica’s national park system — a policy that preserves the pristine character of one of the country’s most extraordinary wild places.

Computer History Museum 10

Computer History Museum

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📍 1401 N Shoreline Blvd., Mountain View, California, 94043

The Computer History Museum in Mountain View, California, holds the world's largest collection of computing artefacts and documents the full arc of information technology from ancient counting devices to the dawn of artificial intelligence. The museum's flagship exhibition, Revolution: The First 2000 Years of Computing, spans 19 galleries and more than 1,100 artefacts arranged chronologically, including a working Babbage Difference Engine No. 2 — one of only two complete examples in the world — and a restored IBM System/360 mainframe. The collection preserves historic machines including the ENIAC, Apple I, Cray-1 supercomputer and the original Google servers housed in a custom rack built from LEGO bricks. Software preservation is a major focus: the museum's archive holds hundreds of thousands of programs, manuals and corporate records. Regular public programmes include lectures by Silicon Valley pioneers, film screenings and hands-on coding workshops for children. The museum sits at the heart of the tech industry's birthplace, just a short drive from Googleplex, NASA Ames and Stanford University. For anyone curious about how digital technology reshaped modern life, the Computer History Museum delivers context, depth and working demonstrations that no textbook can match. Allow three to four hours for a thorough visit.

Costa Rican Art Museum (Museo de Arte Costarricense) 11

Costa Rican Art Museum (Museo de Arte Costarricense)

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📍 Calle 42, 10101

The Costa Rican Art Museum (Museo de Arte Costarricense) occupies one of San José's most elegant buildings: the former international airport terminal of La Sabana, a 1940s Art Deco structure that has been beautifully repurposed as the nation's premier visual arts institution. Located at the eastern entrance of La Sabana Metropolitan Park, the museum houses a permanent collection of over 4,000 works spanning the 19th century to the present day, tracing the development of Costa Rican painting, sculpture, printmaking, and photography. Highlights of the collection include works by Francisco Amighetti and Max Jiménez, two of the country's most celebrated modernist artists. The museum's crown jewel is the extraordinary Golden Room (Salón Dorado), a ceremonial hall whose walls and ceiling are covered in a monumental bas-relief frieze created by sculptor Luis Ferrero depicting the history and culture of Costa Rica in exceptional detail. Temporary exhibitions showcase contemporary Costa Rican and Latin American artists, ensuring that the museum remains a living, evolving cultural space rather than a static archive. Admission is free on Sundays, and the museum's location adjacent to La Sabana Park makes it easy to combine with a walk through the capital's largest green space. The museum is an essential stop for travelers seeking cultural depth beyond Costa Rica's celebrated natural wonders.

Doka Estate 12

Doka Estate

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📍 129 Provincia de Alajuela, Poás, Alajuela, 61102

Doka Estate is one of Costa Rica's most celebrated coffee farms, a third-generation family estate in the highlands of Alajuela province where some of the country's finest Strictly Hard Bean Arabica coffee has been grown and processed since 1929. Situated at around 1,500 meters on the slopes of the Poás Volcano, Doka benefits from the combination of volcanic soil, consistent rainfall, cloud cover, and altitude that defines the ideal coffee-growing environment of the Central Valley. The estate operates one of the last remaining traditional drum coffee roasters in Costa Rica — a heritage machine that roasts beans in rotating cylinders over a wood fire, a process that imparts a distinctly complex flavor profile. Guided tours of the farm and mill run daily, taking visitors through every stage of the wet processing method: from the handpicking of ripe red cherries to pulping, fermentation, washing, drying on raised beds, and final milling. The tour concludes with a cupping session where guests taste the estate's own production alongside other Costa Rican coffees. Doka's coffee has won multiple Cup of Excellence awards and is exported to specialty roasters worldwide. The estate also encompasses botanical gardens, a plant nursery, and a small museum dedicated to Costa Rican coffee history. Just 45 minutes from San José, Doka Estate provides one of the most authentic and historically grounded coffee experiences in Central America.

Escazu 13

Escazu

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📍 Escazu, San Jose, 10101

Escazú is San José's most affluent and cosmopolitan municipality, a hillside suburb immediately west of the capital that has evolved from a colonial village into one of Central America's most sophisticated urban destinations. The district comprises three distinct villages — San Miguel, San Antonio, and San Rafael de Escazú — each retaining a colonial church and central plaza that provide anchors of traditional Costa Rican character within a broader landscape of international restaurants, luxury hotels, upscale shopping centers, and diplomatic residences. Multiplaza Escazú and the surrounding commercial district represent the most developed face of the suburb, catering to the large expatriate and business community that has made Escazú Costa Rica's preferred address for multinational headquarters. The older, higher-altitude neighborhoods of San Antonio and San Miguel preserve a quieter, more authentically Costa Rican atmosphere, with cobblestone streets, traditional architecture, and sweeping views over the Central Valley and toward the central volcanic range. Escazú has historically been associated with brujas — witches — in Costa Rican folklore, a reputation that lends the older hillside villages a certain enigmatic charm. The culinary scene is exceptional by any regional standard, with restaurants serving Japanese, French, Italian, Peruvian, and innovative Costa Rican cuisine at internationally competitive quality levels. Proximity to the international airport — just 10 minutes by highway — makes Escazú a practical first or last stop for travelers on tight schedules seeking comfort and quality.

Hacienda Alsacia Starbucks Coffee Farm 14

Hacienda Alsacia Starbucks Coffee Farm

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📍 Ruta Nacional 712, Dulce Nombre, Costa Rica

Hacienda Alsacia is Starbucks' only company-owned coffee farm in the world, a working 240-hectare estate situated on the slopes of the Poás Volcano in the Central Valley of Costa Rica — one of the world's most celebrated coffee-growing regions. The farm sits at elevations between 1,400 and 1,900 meters, where volcanic soil, cloud cover, and distinct wet and dry seasons create ideal conditions for producing high-quality Arabica beans. Acquired by Starbucks in 2013 as an agricultural research center, Hacienda Alsacia functions both as a productive farm and as a global testing ground for sustainable farming techniques, climate-resilient varietals, and support programs for independent coffee growers. The visitor experience includes guided tours of the farm and processing facilities, where guests learn about the journey from cherry to cup — including harvesting, pulping, fermenting, drying, and roasting. A tasting room showcases exclusive single-origin coffees grown on the estate alongside other Reserve coffees from around the world. The farm's setting, with panoramic views toward the active Poás Volcano, adds considerable scenic value to what is already a fascinating educational experience. Booking in advance is essential, as group sizes are limited. Hacienda Alsacia appeals equally to specialty coffee enthusiasts and casual travelers curious about Costa Rica's most economically and culturally significant agricultural export.

Irazu Volcano National Park 15

Irazu Volcano National Park

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📍 Oreamuno, Cartago, 30101

Irazú Volcano National Park is home to Costa Rica's highest and most accessible active volcano, rising to 3,432 meters above sea level on the eastern side of the Central Valley near the city of Cartago. Irazú — whose name likely derives from an indigenous term meaning 'thunder and earthquake mountain' — produced one of its most famous eruptions in 1963, coinciding with the arrival of U.S. President John F. Kennedy in San José and coating the capital in volcanic ash for months. The volcano's summit craters are among the most otherworldly landscapes in all of Central America: a series of collapsed calderas filled with acid lakes of vivid green, grey, and turquoise hues set against barren, moon-like terrain devoid of vegetation. On exceptionally clear days — most reliably in the dry season between December and April — both the Pacific Ocean and the Caribbean Sea are simultaneously visible from the summit, an experience found in very few places on Earth. The surrounding national park protects cloud forest on the lower slopes, where quetzals, volcano juncos, and endemic plant species thrive in the cool, mist-laden air. A paved road leads directly to the summit crater rim, making Irazú accessible even without hiking expertise. Early morning visits minimize cloud cover and traffic. The park can be reached by bus from Cartago or by tour from San José.

Jade Museum (Museo del Jade) 16

Jade Museum (Museo del Jade)

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📍 13 Avenida Central, San Jose, 10101

The Jade Museum (Museo del Jade) in San José houses the world's largest collection of pre-Columbian jade artifacts, a distinction that makes it one of the most remarkable cultural institutions in the Americas. Opened in its current purpose-built, five-story facility in 2014 near the Plaza de la Democracia, the museum presents over 7,000 pieces spanning jade carvings, gold ornaments, ceramics, and stone sculptures produced by Costa Rica's indigenous cultures over a period of 3,000 years. Jade held sacred, social, and economic significance throughout Mesoamerica and northern South America, and the collection illuminates the sophisticated cultural and trade networks that connected these civilizations long before European contact. The jade pendants and axe-god figures are among the most visually striking exhibits, their translucent green surfaces carved with extraordinary precision using only stone tools. A dedicated archaeology section contextualizes the objects within their original burial and ceremonial settings. The museum's contemporary architecture incorporates dramatic natural light, with exhibits arranged chronologically and thematically across the floors. An anthropology section explores the diversity of Costa Rica's eight indigenous groups and their living cultural traditions. Audio guides are available in multiple languages, and the rooftop terrace offers panoramic views over San José. The Jade Museum is essential viewing for anyone seeking to understand the deep pre-Columbian heritage of Costa Rica and the broader region.

Kalambu Hot Springs Water Park 17

Kalambu Hot Springs Water Park

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📍 21007 Provincia de Alajuela, La Fortuna, Alajuela, 21007

Kalambu Hot Springs Water Park in La Fortuna offers one of Costa Rica's most exhilarating combinations of geothermal relaxation and water park thrills, all set against the magnificent backdrop of Arenal Volcano. Unlike the pure spa-resort experience of neighboring hot spring complexes, Kalambu deliberately blends adrenaline and tranquility — featuring both high-speed water slides and a network of thermal pools fed by natural volcanic hot springs. Six water slides of varying intensity, including a kamikaze drop and a family-friendly lazy river, cater to guests of all ages and thrill tolerances. The thermal pool circuit ranges from ambient temperature to around 42°C, allowing visitors to alternate between exhilarating slides and restorative mineral soaks. The park is meticulously landscaped with tropical vegetation and waterfalls that give it a naturalistic feel despite the modern facilities. A poolside bar and restaurant serve snacks and drinks throughout the day, and the park remains open into the evening when the volcano views and illuminated pools create an atmospheric nighttime experience. Entry is all-inclusive, covering unlimited slide access and pool use, which represents excellent value by regional standards. Kalambu is family-friendly and particularly popular with younger travelers and groups. Advance online booking is recommended during Costa Rican public holidays and the December-April peak season when the park reaches capacity.

La Fortuna Waterfall 18

La Fortuna Waterfall

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📍 La Fortuna, Alajuela, 21007

La Fortuna Waterfall (Catarata del Río Fortuna) is one of Costa Rica's most spectacular natural landmarks, plunging 75 meters into a turquoise pool at the foot of a sheer basalt cliff draped in tropical vegetation. Located just 5.5 kilometers from the town of La Fortuna in the shadow of Arenal Volcano, the waterfall is accessible via a well-maintained trail that descends approximately 500 steps through dense rainforest alive with the sounds of birds, insects, and rushing water. Swimming in the natural pool at the base is permitted and deeply refreshing, with the mist from the falls creating a perpetually cool microclimate even in dry season. The cascade is fed year-round by the Río Fortuna, which drains the volcanic slopes above, ensuring consistent flow regardless of season — though the falls are at their most powerful during and immediately after the rainy months. The surrounding reserve is privately managed and charges an entry fee that contributes to conservation and trail maintenance. Wildlife along the trail includes poison dart frogs, toucans, and various species of butterfly. Early morning visits are recommended to avoid the midday heat and to enjoy the falls in the soft light that filters through the rainforest canopy. Guided tours from La Fortuna often combine the waterfall with hot springs and the national park for a comprehensive regional experience.

La Paz Waterfall Gardens 19

La Paz Waterfall Gardens

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📍 Alajuela

La Paz Waterfall Gardens is Costa Rica's most comprehensive wildlife and nature attraction, combining five spectacular waterfalls with an extensive network of sanctuaries for rescued and rehabilitated native wildlife. Located on the slopes of the Poas Volcano in the Central Valley highlands of Alajuela, the private reserve spans 70 acres of primary and secondary cloud forest at elevations ranging from 1,200 to 1,800 meters. The attraction's wildlife facilities are among the finest in Central America, housing jaguars, pumas, ocelots, tapirs, giant anteaters, white-faced capuchins, and sloths in naturalistic enclosures designed to prioritize animal welfare and visitor education. A dedicated hummingbird garden hosts up to 30 species in a single enclosed greenhouse, creating an extraordinary spectacle of iridescent wings and hovering flight. The butterfly observatory displays dozens of tropical species at every life stage, from egg to adult. The namesake waterfalls descend through the forest in a sequence of escalating drama, culminating in the thundering La Paz fall itself. Trails are well maintained and partially covered, making the reserve accessible in the frequent highland rains. La Paz is one of the few places in Costa Rica where visitors are virtually guaranteed sightings of big cats, making it invaluable for wildlife travelers whose time is limited. An on-site restaurant serves Costa Rican and international cuisine.

La Sabana Park 20

La Sabana Park

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📍 Avenida de Las Américas, 10101

La Sabana Metropolitan Park (Parque Metropolitano La Sabana) is San José's largest urban green space, a 72-hectare park that serves as the capital's recreational and cultural heart. Built on the site of the original Juan Santamaría International Airport, whose elegant Art Deco terminal now houses the Costa Rican Art Museum, La Sabana offers a welcome respite from the dense urban fabric surrounding it. The park contains football pitches, tennis courts, an Olympic-size swimming pool, a skating rink, jogging paths, and open lawns where josefinos gather on weekends for picnics, informal sport, and open-air concerts. The National Stadium, rebuilt with Chinese investment and reopened in 2011, dominates the park's eastern edge with a capacity of 35,000 and hosts national football matches and major concerts. Mature trees shade the park's central areas, providing habitat for urban wildlife including parakeets, herons, and iguanas. A large artificial lake at the park's center attracts ducks and wading birds, while monumental public sculptures are distributed throughout the grounds. La Sabana is a democratic, intensely local space — less polished than many tourist attractions but deeply authentic as a window into everyday San José life. Free outdoor fitness classes and weekend markets add further vitality. The park is accessible from the city center by bus or taxi and is best visited on a weekend morning when it is at its most animated.

Lake Arenal 21

Lake Arenal

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📍 Guanacaste, 50306

Lake Arenal is Costa Rica's largest lake, a 88-square-kilometer reservoir created in 1979 when a hydroelectric dam was constructed across the lower Arenal Valley, dramatically expanding the original natural lake. Framed by rolling green hills, remnant tropical forest, and the unmistakable silhouette of Arenal Volcano to the east, Lake Arenal has become one of Costa Rica's most scenic destinations — beloved by photographers, windsurfers, anglers, and travelers simply seeking the unhurried rhythm of lakeside life. Windsurfing and kiteboarding conditions at Lake Arenal are among the best in the Americas, driven by consistent trade winds that funnel through the valley between December and April, attracting international enthusiasts to the small town of Tilarán on the lake's western shore. Rainbow bass (guapote) and machaca fishing draw anglers year-round, while kayaking and stand-up paddleboarding offer quieter ways to explore the coves and inlets along the shoreline. Scenic drives around the lake pass through small farming communities, artisan studios, and viewpoints offering exceptional vistas of the water and volcano. The Arenal-Monteverde corridor makes Lake Arenal a natural waypoint between Costa Rica's two most famous natural attractions. Sunset over the lake, with the volcano reflected in still water, is one of the country's defining travel images.

Lake Hule (Lago de Hule) 22

Lake Hule (Lago de Hule)

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📍 Alajuela, Costa Rica

Lake Hule (Lago de Hule) is a remote and pristine volcanic crater lake hidden within the rainforest of northern Alajuela province in Costa Rica, part of the buffer zone surrounding the Juan Castro Blanco National Park. Formed within an ancient volcanic caldera, the lake sits at approximately 700 meters above sea level and is encircled by dense primary rainforest that descends steeply to the water's edge, creating an atmosphere of remarkable seclusion and biodiversity. The lake's waters are notably clear and darkened by tannins from decomposing forest organic matter, giving them a distinctive deep color that contrasts dramatically with the surrounding green vegetation. Wildlife is exceptional throughout the area — tapirs, peccaries, river otters, multiple monkey species, and an extraordinary diversity of birds inhabit the forest surrounding the lake. Access requires a guided trek through secondary and primary forest, typically departing from the town of Florencia or Ciudad Quesada, and the trail involves river crossings and uneven terrain that demands reasonable fitness and appropriate footwear. The relative difficulty of access keeps visitor numbers very low, preserving an atmosphere of genuine wildness unusual even by Costa Rican standards. Fishing for machaca and guapote is permitted with local guides. Lake Hule rewards adventurous travelers seeking authentic off-the-beaten-track experiences in a country increasingly defined by well-organized ecotourism infrastructure.

Lankester Botanical Garden (Jardin Botanico Lankester) 23

Lankester Botanical Garden (Jardin Botanico Lankester)

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📍 Cartago, 30109

Lankester Botanical Garden (Jardín Botánico Lankester), managed by the University of Costa Rica, is one of the world's foremost orchid research and conservation centers, housing a collection of over 1,000 orchid species in a beautifully maintained 11-hectare garden near Cartago in the Central Valley. Founded by British naturalist Charles H. Lankester in the early 20th century and subsequently donated to scientific management, the garden has developed into a globally respected institution for tropical plant research and ex-situ conservation. Orchids are the undisputed stars of the collection, with the garden maintaining species from across Costa Rica and the broader Neotropical region in greenhouse and outdoor displays. March and April are peak flowering season, when hundreds of species bloom simultaneously in a spectacle of color and form that draws orchid enthusiasts from around the world. Beyond orchids, the garden contains impressive collections of bromeliads, heliconias, palms, bamboos, and timber trees that together create a varied and deeply pleasant walking environment. Interpretive signage in Spanish and English provides botanical and conservation context throughout. The garden is widely accessible to general visitors while maintaining its serious scientific mission, making it a rare institution that succeeds equally as a research center and a public attraction. Guided tours are available and strongly recommended for visitors seeking to understand the ecological and scientific significance of what they are seeing.

Los Laureles Hot Springs (Termales Los Laureles) 24

Los Laureles Hot Springs (Termales Los Laureles)

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📍 San Carlos, Alajuela, 50101

Los Laureles Hot Springs (Termales Los Laureles) offers one of Costa Rica's most authentic and natural thermal bathing experiences in the volcanic San Carlos region of northern Alajuela province. Unlike the large commercial hot spring resorts that have come to define the Arenal area, Los Laureles operates on a smaller, more intimate scale — a family-run facility where the emphasis is on the thermal waters themselves rather than elaborate entertainment or resort amenities. The springs emerge from geothermal sources deep within the volcanic geology of the region, surfacing at temperatures between 38°C and 45°C and flowing into a series of naturally configured pools set within riparian forest beside the river. The surrounding environment — shade trees, tropical vegetation, birdsong, and the sound of moving water — creates an atmosphere of peaceful immersion that larger resorts struggle to replicate despite greater investment. The facility typically includes changing rooms, a small restaurant serving traditional Costa Rican food, and attentive family-style hospitality that reflects the authentic tico character of the San Carlos valley. Wildlife sightings, including herons, kingfishers, and various amphibians, are common along the riverbank. Los Laureles appeals particularly to independent travelers, couples seeking tranquility, and those who have found the scale and commercialization of the major Arenal hot spring complexes at odds with the natural wonder that drew them to Costa Rica in the first place. Advance reservations are recommended, especially on weekends.

See all things to do in San Jose

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San José is the largest city in the San Francisco Bay Area by population and the beating economic heart of Silicon Valley, but it lives somewhat in the shadow of San Francisco as a tourist destination. The things to do in San José reflect its character: technology museums and the intellectual energy of a city built on innovation, extraordinary dining diversity (Little Saigon has the best Vietnamese food outside Vietnam; the East San José taquerias are among California’s finest Mexican food; and the Indian restaurant density of Milpitas and Sunnyvale is remarkable), and warm, sunny weather that makes outdoor activity possible year-round. The Winchester Mystery House is the city’s most famous attraction — a Victorian mansion with 160 rooms built continuously for 38 years by a woman who believed she was haunted by the victims of her husband’s rifles.

Best time to visit

March through May (spring) and September through November (fall) are the best times: warm (20-28°C), not hot, and uncrowded. June is affected by a marine layer (‘June Gloom’) with overcast mornings. July and August are hot (30-38°C) but dry; the Santa Clara Valley heats up significantly compared to San Francisco. December through February brings rain and cooler temperatures but the city remains fully functional and accommodation prices are lower. The Silicon Valley tech conference season (Consumer Electronics Show is in Las Vegas in January, but many SF Bay Area conferences occur in spring) affects hotel availability and pricing.

Getting around

San José International Airport (SJC) is 4km from downtown, served by all major U.S. carriers and some international routes. BART now connects downtown San Jose to San Francisco (Berryessa/North San José station, opened 2020) in about 1 hour. The VTA light rail connects SJC Airport to downtown. For the region, a car is strongly recommended — Silicon Valley is spread across multiple cities and suburbs without a cohesive transit network. Caltrain runs north to San Francisco along the Peninsula. Uber and Lyft are widely available and well-priced.

What to eat and drink

San José has exceptional food diversity rooted in its demographics. Little Saigon (Story Road and King Road area) is the largest Vietnamese commercial district outside Vietnam: pho, banh mi, com tam (broken rice with grilled pork), and che (sweet desserts) at prices far below San Francisco. The East Side taquerias (in the Alum Rock area) are among California’s best for regional Mexican food. The Japanese community around Japantown (6th Street) has reliable ramen, sushi, and izakayas. For upscale dining, Santana Row (an outdoor shopping and dining district) has a concentration of restaurants including the reliable Baumé (two Michelin stars) and Oak & Rye. The San Pedro Square Market is a food hall good for grazing.

Top things to do

Winchester Mystery House – One of California’s most eccentric historic sites: Sarah Winchester, widow of rifle manufacturer William Winchester, built and rebuilt her San Jose mansion continuously from 1884 until her death in 1922, reportedly to confuse the spirits of those killed by Winchester rifles. The result is 160 rooms with stairs to nowhere, doors opening into walls, and windows in floors. Guided tours run daily; book in advance for weekend visits.

The Tech Museum of Innovation – Silicon Valley’s science and technology museum, with interactive exhibits on robotics, biotechnology, human spaceflight, and the history of tech innovation. Strong programming for families and well-designed exhibits. The IMAX dome theater shows both science films and movies. Located in the Plaza de César Chávez downtown.

Santana Row and Valley Fair – San José’s premium shopping and dining district: Santana Row is a European-styled outdoor street lined with restaurants, boutiques, and the Hotel Valencia. The adjacent Westfield Valley Fair mall is one of the highest-grossing in California.

Almaden Valley and quicksilver mining history – The Almaden Quicksilver County Park preserves the New Almaden Mine, the most important mercury mine in North America (1845-1912), which supplied mercury for the California Gold Rush amalgamation process. Hiking trails through the mine’s hillsides pass historic mine shafts and the preserved mining town of Hacienda. Excellent for a half-day hike 15km south of downtown.

Frequently asked questions

Is San Jose worth visiting on its own?

Yes, particularly for the Winchester Mystery House, the diverse food culture (especially the Vietnamese and Mexican dining), and the technology context (even without visiting campuses, the ambient sense of being at the center of the world's most concentrated tech ecosystem is interesting). For most Bay Area visitors, San Jose is a day trip or overnight from San Francisco rather than a primary destination, but it merits more attention than it typically gets from international tourists.

Can I visit Google, Apple, or other Silicon Valley campuses?

Limited. Apple Park (Cupertino, 10 minutes from San Jose) has a visitor center and rooftop viewing area open to the public. The Google campus (Mountain View) is partially visible from Castro Street. Meta's headquarters in Menlo Park has a public plaza. None offer interior tours to the general public; the visitor centers are the accessible option.

How far is San Jose from San Francisco?

50 miles (80km) by freeway, 45-60 minutes by car in non-rush-hour traffic; 90+ minutes during peak commute hours (7-10am and 4-7pm southbound and northbound respectively on US-101 and I-280). Caltrain from downtown San Jose to San Francisco takes 1.5-2 hours. BART from Berryessa station (north San Jose) to downtown SF takes about 1 hour.