Is August a good time to visit Costa Rica?
August is a low season for tourism in Costa Rica, which means you can often find cheaper prices and fewer crowds. If you're looking for a more relaxed and less crowded experience, then August might be a good time to visit.
August is the peak season for the desove, or egg-laying of endangered marine turtles, inside Parque Nacional Tortuguero. Few are disappointed, with the majority of tours during laying seasons (March to May and July to Oct, though most will lay in August) resulting in sightings of the surreal procession of the reptiles from the sea to make their egg-nests in the sand.
While turtles have been known to lay in the daylight (the green turtles and hawksbills nest mainly from July to October, with August the peak month, while the leatherbacks may come ashore from March to May), it is far more common for them to come ashore in the relative safety of night.
Grey-sand Playa Hermosa, 5km south of Jacó, becomes a playground for hotshot surfers in August. Pummelled by powerful waves, the 10 km-long strip rivals Dominical for having the most consistent beach breaks on Costa Rica’s Pacific coast. Steep sandbars cause waves to break hard, fast and close to the shore, most impressively during the rainy season between May and August – with the best breakers in front of Terraza del Pacífico and the Backyard Hotel.
On this tailor-made trip to Beaches and Volcanoes, you have a chance to escape to Arenal for volcanoes, waterfalls and wildlife reserves. Enjoy gentle hikes or partake in adrenaline-fuelled river rafting. Then journey down to Costa Rica’s Central Pacific for some sand and surf fringed by dense forest that’s teeming with wildlife.
Average rainfall in August
In the Central Valley region, which includes San Jose, August marks one of the rainiest periods of the year, with an average rainfall of approximately 18 inches (457 mm) throughout the month.
This drops along the North Pacific Coast, specifically around Guanacaste, where the average rainfall is around 10 inches (254 mm) throughout August. On the Caribbean Coast, precipitation levels increase again, with an average of around 16 inches (406 mm) of rainfall experienced throughout the month.