2 Weeks in Aruba

Aruba Itinerary 14 days

Week 1: The West Coast, Sun and Sand,

Don’t just camp out on one beach

  • Yes, Eagle Beach and Palm Beach earn the hype Eagle Beach keeps landing on Tripadvisor’s Travelers’ Choice lists for a reason. But with fourteen days on the island, you’ve got room to actually go looking for the beach that feels like yours.
  • Manchebo Beach is the wide, quiet one. Show up with a yoga mat in the morning, or just come back at dusk for a sunset with far fewer people in your photos.
  • Arashi Beach wants an early alarm. Get there before the tour groups and the snorkeling around the rocks is some of the best on the island plus it still feels like a beach locals actually use, not a resort extension.
  • Boca Catalina is barely a beach at all, more of a sandy notch in the coastline, but the water is shallow and clear enough that you’ll spot sea turtles before the boat tours show up and stir things up.

 

Dinner should happen near the water

The sunset here isn’t a special occasion, it’s just what happens every evening around six, so lean into it. The Old Man and the Sea, down in Savaneta, puts you at a private table right over the water. Faro Blanco sits at the base of the California Lighthouse and gives you the whole island laid out below as the hotel lights start flickering on for the night.

Give the north end a proper morning.

Most people snap a photo at the lighthouse and leave. Don’t. Walk the dunes behind it instead the white sand against that particular shade of blue water is worth the extra twenty minutes. On the drive back, pull over at Tres Trapi, a set of natural rock steps leading straight into water so clear it barely looks real, more like someone filled a pool with the ocean.

Week 2: The Wild Side Trails, Caves, and Local Life

By now you’ve got a tan and a favorite beach. Time to head south and inland, where the island stops performing for tourists and just is what it is.

Give Arikok a whole day, not an afternoon.

  • Arikok National Park takes up close to a fifth of Aruba’s land, and trying to rush it defeats the point. The Conchi, also called the Natural Pool, is a basin carved out of volcanic rock where Atlantic waves crash in over the edge you’ll need a 4×4 or a genuinely tough hike to reach it, no shortcuts. Then there are the caves: Quadirikiri, where beams of sunlight cut down through openings in the rock and light up the chambers like something staged, though it isn’t; and Fontein Cave, where the walls still carry drawings left by the Arawak people long before any of this was a vacation destination.

 

San Nicolas doesn’t feel like the rest of the island.

  • Locals call it the sunrise city, and these days it’s also becoming known as the mural capital of the Caribbean a title that would’ve sounded strange a decade ago. Spend an afternoon just walking the streets and looking at the street art; it rotates and grows, so no two visits look quite the same. Charlie’s Bar is worth ducking into even if you don’t drink decades of memorabilia crowd every inch of the walls and ceiling. And find a snack stand for a pastechi, a savory pastry that’s less a menu item and more what actual Arubans eat for lunch.

 

End the trip where the island itself started

  • Savaneta was Aruba’s first capital, and it’s still a working fishing village rather than a postcard version of one. Eat at Zeerovers, where the fish gets weighed and sold right off the boat no menu, just what came in that day. Then close things out at Baby Beach, a lagoon in the far south so shallow and so sheltered that the water barely reaches your waist, a fitting, calm bookend to two weeks that started at Eagle Beach’s postcard shoreline and ended somewhere far quieter.

Go beyond the resorts. Discover Aruba like a local

Find the best things to do in Aruba here.

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