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Guna Yala

San Blas Islands

365 islands. One indigenous nation. Zero traffic lights.

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From Panama City

What are the San Blas Islands?

An archipelago of 365 small Caribbean islands off Panama's northeast coast, governed by the indigenous Guna Yala people, famous for white-sand cays, turquoise water, and untouched beaches. Visit on a day tour from Panama City, an overnight cabin stay, or a multi-night sailing charter.

The Last Untouched Paradise
The Islands

The Last Untouched Paradise

San Blas is not a resort. There are no hotels, no roads, no nightclubs. Just 365 islands scattered across 100 kilometers of Caribbean coastline, governed entirely by the Guna people. The water is so clear you can see the sand 10 meters down. The beaches are so white they hurt your eyes at noon. Most islands are small enough to walk around in five minutes. Some have a single palm tree. Others have small Guna communities where families have lived for generations. This is one of the last places on Earth where the Caribbean looks the way it did before tourism arrived.

San Blas Islands
The Guna People
The Culture

The Guna People

Guna Yala is an autonomous indigenous territory. The Guna people govern their own land, set their own rules, and control who enters. Tourism exists on their terms. When you visit San Blas, you are a guest in their home. The Guna are master sailors, skilled artisans known for their vibrant mola textiles, and fierce protectors of their environment. They banned foreign-owned hotels decades before sustainability was a marketing term. Your visit directly supports their communities, their schools, and their way of life.

The Journey Is the Adventure
Getting There

The Journey Is the Adventure

Getting to San Blas is part of the experience. No airports on the islands. No ferry terminals. Just a mountain road through dense jungle, a border checkpoint, and a boat ride into the blue.

5:00 AM
Hotel pickup in Panama City
7:30 AM
Mountain road through Guna Yala
9:00 AM
Arrive at port, board your boat
9:30 AM
Step onto the sand. You are here.
Choose Your Experience

Three Ways to Explore San Blas

Before You Go

Good to Know

Best Time to Visit

December to April is dry season with calm seas and clear skies. February and March are peak months with the best snorkeling visibility. May to November has lower prices, fewer crowds, and the islands mostly to yourself. Avoid September and October for first visits.

What to Bring

Your original passport (photocopies not accepted). Cash in USD for Guna taxes and island purchases. A soft bag or backpack (hard suitcases don't fit in the 4x4s). Reef-safe sunscreen. Motion sickness pills for the mountain road. No ATMs exist in San Blas.

Entry Fees & Costs

$22 per person Guna Yala border tax, paid in cash at the checkpoint. This is collected by Guna authorities and is not included in any tour price. Bring exact change in USD. Budget extra cash for mola textiles, coconuts, and lobster from Guna fishermen.

Trusted by Travelers

AMPA Tours delivered an unforgettable San Blas experience. Local guides who truly know the islands, fresh seafood included, and crystal clear water for snorkeling. This is one of those trips that stays with you long after you get home.

Omar G. , TripAdvisor

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