Best time to visit Jamaica
Prices and crowds are at their highest during peak season, when the main attractions and beaches get pretty busy. Outside this period everywhere is quieter and, though the main resorts throb with life pretty much year-round and the summer school vacations see an upsurge in visitor arrivals, less popular tourist areas like Port Antonio and Treasure Beach can feel a little lifeless.
The good news is that hotel prices everywhere fall by up to 25 percent, there are more bargains to be had in every field of activity and a number of festivals – including the massive annual Reggae Sumfest – inject some summertime zipper.
Festivals and Vacations in Jamaica by month
From regional food festivals to massive music concerts, Jamaica plays host to a huge variety of annual events, with as many geared towards tourists as they are to locals. We’ve detailed the main and most interesting events here, but for comprehensive listings, visit the website of the JTB (visitjamaica.com) for details of each year’s program.
Throughout the year, the Jamaican Cultural Development Commission stages various events centred around traditional Jamaican song, dance and the arts, with the Festival Song Competition Finals at the Ranny Williams Entertainment Center in Kingston being one of the highlights; see jcdc.gov.jm for full details.
January
Accompong Maroon Festival Accompong, St Elizabeth. All-day celebration of the 1739 Maroon peace treaty, held on January 6. Food and craft stalls, drumming, traditional dancing, speeches and a sound-system dance till dawn.
Jamaica Jazz and Blues Festival Greenfield Stadium, Trelawny facebook.com/jamaicajazzandblues. This increasingly popular event has a fabulous setting and a big enough purse to attract some excellent international performers, from John Legend to Al Green.
Rebel Salute Grizzly’s Plantation Cove, Priory, St Ann facebook.com/rebelsalutejamaica. Large-scale annual concert with a festival atmosphere, featuring a huge line-up of cultural artists and attracting a large rootsy crowd. Meat and alcohol are banned from the grounds (but ganja certainly isn’t).
February
A Fi Wi Sinting Port Antonio fiwisinting.com. Daytime event highlighting Jamaica’s African heritage, with dub poetry, drumming, fashion and traditional food and craft stalls.
Bob Marley Birthday Week Nine Mile, St Ann; Bob Marley Museum, Kingston; Trench Town Cultural Yard, Kingston bobmarley-foundation.com, trenchtownculturalyard.com, bobmarleymuseum.com. Celebrations for the king of reggae are held on and around the anniversary of Marley’s birthday on February 6, from seminars to live shows and sound-system jams.
Jamaica Carnival Kingston, Ocho Rios and Montego Bay bacchanaljamaica.com. Featuring dynamic performances from top artists across the Caribbean, these high energy parties see scantily clad patrons “get on bad” at parties in Mass Camp (Kingston) and across the island, of which the best is Beach Jouvert in Oracabessa. Carnival culminates in a costumed parade through the streets of Kingston in April.
Blue Mountain Music Festival St Andrew bluemountainmusicfestival.com. A two-day music festival at Holywell National Park that includes opportunities to hike, practices yoga and listen to Maroon drumming. Past performers include Third World and Chronixx. Family friendly, camping available.
Jamaica Fat Tire Festival Ocho Rios smorba.com. One-of-a-kind mountain-biking festival with unique organized rides that take participants through parts of St Mary, St Ann, up and over the Blue Mountains, and finishing in Bull Bay.