VCT · North America
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines is a 32-island Caribbean country where the travel style shifts from rainforest and volcano hiking on St. Vincent to sailing, snorkeling, beach stays, and small-island hopping in the Grenadines. The official Discover SVG tourism site highlights St. Vincent, Young Island, Bequia, Mustique, Canouan, Mayreau, Tobago Cays, Union Island, Palm Island, and Petit St. Vincent, plus sailing and yachting, diving and watersports, eco-adventures, festivals, dining, ferries, taxis, tour operators, and tour guides.
The biggest natural highlights are La Soufriere volcano, waterfalls and rainforest trails on St. Vincent, Bequia's beaches and harbor, Mustique and Canouan resort stays, Union Island as a sailing hub, and the Tobago Cays for reefs, turtles, clear lagoons, and boat-based photography. The official Tobago Cays Marine Park site should be checked for current conservation rules, mooring/anchoring requirements, fees, and permitted operators. UNESCO lists no World Heritage properties in Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, but its tentative list includes Rock Art of St. Vincent and the Grenadines, the Grenadines Island Group, and La Soufriere National Park.
The U.S. State Department lists Saint Vincent and the Grenadines at Level 1, Exercise Normal Precautions, but its current country page still flags Hurricane Beryl recovery on Canouan, Mayreau, Palm Island, Petit Saint Vincent, and Union Island, with potentially fewer hotels and transportation options until repairs are complete. U.S. tourists do not need a visa, but need a valid passport at entry; cruise visitors may have other document options, though the State Department strongly recommends a passport in case an emergency requires return by air.
Most visitors need at least a week: two or three nights on St. Vincent for rainforest or volcano activities, then several nights in Bequia or the southern Grenadines for sailing and snorkeling. The driest, most reliable season is typically winter into spring, while hurricane season requires more flexible planning and travel insurance. Visitor Tip: Before booking inter-island ferries, hotels, or charters in the southern Grenadines, contact the operator directly to confirm post-Beryl availability, dock access, and current Tobago Cays Marine Park rules.
Sources
- Official tourism, State Department, Tobago Cays, and UNESCO pages were accessible during research.
- The Tobago Cays official site returned limited readable text through automated browsing, so fees and marine-park rules should be checked directly before a charter.
- State Department guidance at research time was Level 1, with continuing Hurricane Beryl recovery cautions for several Grenadine islands.




