10 Cool Jamaica Shore Excursions

Jamaica ports are popular for Western Caribbean cruises, and it’s easy to see why Jamaica shore excursions are so popular. This stunning island in the Caribbean boasts an array of attractions to suit every taste.

A tropical coastline with clear turquoise water, a sandy beach in the foreground, and greenery and houses on the hilly shoreline under a partly cloudy sky.
(Photo courtesy of Carnival Cruise Line)

From gorgeous beaches to thrilling adventures, fascinating history, exotic wildlife, serene relaxation, and endless fun, Jamaica has something to offer everyone.

Popular Jamaica Cruise Ports

  • Montego Bay
  • Ocho Rios
  • Falmouth

If you’re wondering what to do while your ship is docked in Jamaica, here are the top 10 activities and adventures for cruise passengers visiting Jamaica:

Swim with Dolphins

Aerial view of a coastal landscape with lush green hills, sandy beaches, and blue waters. Cloudy sky in the background.
(GOLDEN EYE/JAMAICA)

Get up close and personal with dolphins (and even snorkel with sharks) at Jamaica’s number one marine attraction, Dolphin Cove.

Cruisers can interact and swim with the dolphins at Dolphin Cove Ocho Rios. As part of their entrance fee, visitors can take out their mini boats to explore the coast, snorkel and interact with stingrays, take a glass-bottom kayak ride, and interact with exotic snakes, birds, and iguanas on the Jungle Trail.

Dolphin Cove Negril may be your closest option if your ship is docked in Montego Bay. Here, passengers can experience the same fantastic dolphin experiences at this 20-acre property, the largest natural dolphin lagoon in the world.

Take a Bobsled Run

View from a first-person perspective of a ride on a bobsled roller coaster moving quickly through a forested area.
(Photo courtesy of Shutterstock)

The cool bobsled ride at Mystic Mountain in Ocho Rios is one of Jamaica’s hottest attractions. Here’s your chance to star in your Cool Runnings movie and hurtle along on steel rails 1,000 meters through the forest.

Although gravity drives this bobsled ride, you can control your speed by maneuvering your handlebars. Parents who want to manage their child’s experience can have two bobsleds connected.

Fly through the Canopy

Green mountain landscape with a foreground of fruit-bearing trees and a distant view of rolling hills under a partially cloudy sky.
(Photo courtesy of Shutterstock)

Cruise passengers visiting Jamaica have multiple choices for zipline and sky trek adventures. Take the Original Canopy Tour, a two-hour zipline experience that will send you soaring through the treetops.

Cruisers near the Rose Hall Great House can take Chukka Caribbean’s exciting Flight of the White Witch zipline canopy tour.

Ziplines traverse a densely forested canyon about 1200 feet above sea level. Guests will also rappel 100 feet from Annie’s Web, a gravity-defying suspended platform high above the forest floor. Mystic Mountain offers a zipline tour and a sky trek experience.

Go Rafting on a River

A person in a hat sits on a bamboo raft, photographing the surroundings, while a guide steers the raft along a forested river.
(Photo courtesy of Shutterstock)

Treat yourself to a rafting trip experience unlike any other — journey down the Martha Brae River on 30-foot-long bamboo rafts built for two.

Located about three miles inland from the port of Falmouth, this river rafting tour was started over forty years ago and is the leading rafting excursion in Jamaica. Many famous individuals and celebrities, including Queen Elizabeth II, Chuck Norris, Spike Lee, and Jane Seymour, have taken this trip.

As families glide along the three-mile stretch of water, they’ll learn about the “Legend of Martha Brae” and have the opportunity to swim. Jamaica’s rivers are a delight.

If tubing is more your style, take a shore excursion to Jamaica’s White River and enjoy the fun. Kayaking safaris are available on Jamaica’s Great River as well.

Get Wet in the Waterfalls

Two views of Dunn's River Falls, a multi-tiered waterfall surrounded by lush green foliage; one image shows people climbing the falls, while the other features a wooden viewing platform near the water.
(Photo courtesy of Cruise Radio)

Dunn’s River Falls is one of Jamaica’s most famous tour attractions. Take a guided climb over 600 feet up to the top of the falls – a great bonding activity.

Wear water shoes with good treads for the best experience. Those who don’t wish to make the climb can view the human chain ascending the falls from a series of observation decks.

There’s a nice beach below the falls for swimming and playing before or after your climb.

Trips to Dunn’s River Falls are often combined with other activities on shore excursions, such as river tubing, catamaran sails, dolphin swims, bobsled or dogsled rides, zipline adventures, and more.

For even more exciting waterfall adventures, check out YS Falls, a set of seven spectacular tiered waterfalls and over-the-water zipline adventures in Jamaica’s Cockpit Country. 

Hit Some Balls

An aerial view of a lush, green golf course by a calm, blue ocean under a partly cloudy sky, with a white building to the left and sand bunkers near the water.

Golf lovers visiting Jamaica will find some of the Caribbean’s most beautiful and challenging courses.

As part of their ship’s cruise experience – or even on an independent tour – cruisers can arrange to play Jamaica’s famous Half Moon Course, consistently ranked as one of the top golf courses in the world.

This breathtaking Par-72 Robert Trent Jones, Sr. course has hosted several prestigious tournaments, including the Dunhill Cup Final of the Americas and the Jamaica Open Golf Championship.

Other popular courses for cruise passengers are the Sandals Golf & Country Club and the Breezes Resort’s course in Runaway Bay.

See the Wildlife

A multi-tiered waterfall flows into a clear, turquoise pool surrounded by lush green vegetation.
(Photo courtesy of Pixabay)

Go “under da sea” in an air-conditioned semi-sub reef explorer and learn about the fascinating marine life found in Montego Bay Marine Park – or snorkeling on one of Jamaica’s many catamaran boat trips to see loads of bright corals and tropical fish.

If your ship docks in Montego Bay or Falmouth, you may have the opportunity to take a scenic boat safari up the Black River, where wild crocodiles can often be seen swimming through the water and sunning along the banks.

Your guide will introduce you to these fascinating creatures; you could even be lucky to touch one if you dare!

Live the Legends

Colorful tapestries and flags hang next to a thatched hut on a sandy beach with turquoise water and a clear blue sky in the background.
(Photo courtesy of Pixabay)

Visiting Nine Mile, the birthplace of reggae legend Bob Marley, is the equivalent of a Graceland pilgrimage for many fans. Cruise passengers can journey to this quaint mountain village to learn about Bob Marley’s life, see his home, and visit his final resting place.

Several variations of this tour are offered, sometimes with a stop at Jamaica’s lush Fern Gully – home to over 200 different species of ferns, for those seeking a different type of legend, a trip to Rose Hall, Jamaica’s most famous Great House.

Built in the 1770s and immaculately restored, this Georgian mansion was the home of Annie Palmer, also known as the “White Witch of Rose Hall.” Visitors can walk through the rooms where Annie is said to have killed her three husbands – areas she is said to haunt to this day.

Go on a Camel Safari

A group of camels stand closely together, some looking at the camera. They have thick, brown and white fur.
(Photo courtesy of Pixabay)

Take a ride atop a camel at Prospect Plantation, a privately owned 1000-acre 18th-century working agricultural estate. The plantation is an interesting stop for cruise passengers, allowing them to see locally grown crops and taste freshly cut coconut. Guests can feed the ostriches as well.

Once at the Camel Park, visitors will get a brief orientation to the camels and have the opportunity to ride and pose with these exotic creatures. Children must be at least eight to participate, and a paying adult must accompany kids 8-12. 

Saddle Up

A group of people in blue life vests riding horses through waist-deep water on a sunny day.

Enjoy a leisurely trail ride through Jamaica’s lush rural areas, then head along the beach and into the sea to cool off. This popular tour from Chukka Caribbean takes cruise passengers on a trail ride through Jamaica’s countryside and to old sugar plantation estates.

After riding through these areas, the horses will come to Chukka’s beach, where riders (and their horses) can swim in the sea. Children must be at least 6 to participate in this tour. If horseback riding isn’t your thing, consider a Jamaican dogsled ride instead – without the snow! 

Of course, any list of what to do in Jamaica wouldn’t be complete without mentioning the beaches. Jamaica’s beautiful beaches are one of the major reasons why cruise passengers visit this tropical island repeatedly.

While Negril’s stunning white strand is legendary, other popular beaches include Runaway Bay, Mahogany Beach, Oracabessa, and James Bond Beach.

Ocho Rios jamaica
Ocho Rios, Jamaica (Photo courtesy of Cruise Radio)

Shopping, bar-hopping, and garden tours are some of my favorite options for doing something more low-key in Jamaica.

Margaritaville in Montego Bay and Ocho Rios are both popular with cruise passengers – and there’s one in Negril, too. Wassi Art Pottery Works and Harmony Hall are great places for locally-made pottery and arts & crafts.

Cruise passengers also enjoy touring the gardens at Shaw Park and Coyaba, visiting the rainforest at Fern Gully, and touring the 18th-century Good Hope great house.

You can visit the Jamaica Tourism Board website for more things to do while visiting.

Nancy Schretter is the Founder and Managing Editor of the Family Travel Network.

This article was updated in June 2024

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