In the northeastern Caribbean Sea, where the Atlantic Ocean meets warm tropical waters and the trade winds blow steadily from the east, lies a small constellation of islands that has captivated sailors, explorers, and travelers for centuries. The United States Virgin Islands, an unincorporated territory of the United States consisting of three main islands and dozens of smaller cays and islets, offer one of the most complete and varied Caribbean experiences available anywhere in the region. Here, within a chain of islands spanning roughly 50 miles, visitors find world-class sailing waters, beaches of breathtaking beauty, some of the best snorkeling and diving in the Western Hemisphere, the ruins of a sugar plantation economy built on the labor of enslaved Africans, vibrant towns with a strong West Indian character, and a national park that protects more than half of one of the islands in near-pristine condition.
The three main islands, St. Thomas, St. John, and St. Croix, each have a distinct personality. St. Thomas is the commercial and tourist hub, a lively, hilly island with a busy cruise ship port, duty-free shopping that draws shoppers from around the world, a sophisticated restaurant and nightlife scene, and access to some beautiful beaches on its more sheltered coasts. St. John is the most natural and serene of the three, where the Virgin Islands National Park covers nearly two-thirds of the island and where the pace of life is slow, the beaches are legendary, and the waters of Trunk Bay and Cinnamon Bay are among the most beautiful in the Caribbean. St. Croix, the largest of the three but the least visited, is in many ways the most authentically West Indian, with a rich African heritage, a charming historic capital in Christiansted, the best agricultural land in the territory, a growing farm-to-table food scene, and diving off the dramatic underwater wall along its northern coast that is among the most spectacular in the entire Caribbean.
For American citizens, the U.S. Virgin Islands offer a particular combination of convenience and tropical escape. No passport is required. The currency is the U.S. dollar. English is the primary language. American cell phone plans typically work without international charges. And yet the islands feel genuinely foreign, genuinely Caribbean, with a culture shaped by African, Danish, and West Indian traditions that gives them a character entirely their own. The food is different. The music is different. The colors of the water and the architecture and the flowers are different from anything on the mainland. The U.S. Virgin Islands are, for American travelers, among the most accessible yet most transporting international-feeling destinations in the world.
A BRIEF HISTORY
The islands that are now the U.S. Virgin Islands have been inhabited for thousands of years. Archaeological evidence indicates that indigenous peoples settled the islands as early as 2000 BCE, and the Ciboney, Arawak, and Taino peoples all had communities in the islands before European contact. The Kalinago, also known as the Caribs, were the dominant people in the region when Europeans arrived, and their reputation as fierce warriors who resisted colonization with great tenacity gave the entire region its name: the Caribbean.
Christopher Columbus encountered the islands during his second voyage in 1493, naming the archipelago Las Once Mil Vírgenes, meaning the Eleven Thousand Virgins, in honor of Saint Ursula and her legendary martyred companions. Columbus landed on St. Croix, where his party had a violent confrontation with Kalinago inhabitants, the first recorded armed conflict between Europeans and indigenous peoples of the Americas. Spain claimed the islands but did not develop them significantly, and the indigenous population was decimated by disease, violence, and enslavement within decades of European contact.
The Danish West India Company established the first permanent European colony on St. Thomas in 1672, and Denmark went on to colonize St. John in 1718 and to purchase St. Croix from France in 1733. Under Danish rule, the islands were developed primarily as sugar-producing colonies, an enterprise that depended entirely on the labor of enslaved Africans brought across the Atlantic in the horrific conditions of the Middle Passage. By the 18th century, the sugar plantations of St. Croix in particular had made the Danish West Indies among the most productive colonial possessions in the Caribbean, and the enslaved population vastly outnumbered the European colonists.
The resistance of enslaved people to their bondage took many forms, from day-to-day acts of defiance to organized uprisings. The most significant rebellion occurred on St. John in 1733 and 1734, when enslaved Akwamu people from present-day Ghana seized control of most of the island and held it for six months before Danish and French forces suppressed the uprising. It was one of the earliest and longest slave revolts in the Americas and is remembered with pride in the Virgin Islands today. Denmark abolished the slave trade in its colonies in 1792, the first European colonial power to do so, though slavery itself continued until full emancipation in 1848, which came after an uprising led by a man named Moses Gottlieb, known as General Buddhoe, who led hundreds of enslaved people to demand freedom. The Danish governor, fearing a broader revolt, declared emancipation on July 3, 1848, a date still celebrated as Emancipation Day in the U.S. Virgin Islands.
The United States purchased the islands from Denmark in 1917 for 25 million dollars in gold, motivated primarily by strategic concerns during World War I about the possibility of Germany seizing the territory and using its harbors to threaten the Panama Canal. The residents of the islands, who were not consulted about the sale, were granted American citizenship in 1927. The islands became an unincorporated organized territory of the United States, a status that, as in Guam and Puerto Rico, gives residents American citizenship but denies them the right to vote in presidential elections unless they establish residency on the mainland.
The sugar industry, already declining by the time of the American purchase, collapsed entirely during the early and mid-20th century. Tourism began to emerge as an economic driver in the 1950s and 1960s, and the establishment of the Virgin Islands National Park on St. John in 1956, largely through the efforts and funding of Laurance Rockefeller, transformed that island and helped establish the territory’s reputation as a premier Caribbean destination. Today tourism is by far the dominant economic activity across all three islands, supplemented by the Hovensa oil refinery complex on St. Croix, which was one of the largest oil refineries in the Western Hemisphere before its closure in 2012, and by a small but growing agricultural and artisan economy.
Hurricane Irma and Hurricane Maria, which struck the islands in September 2017 within two weeks of each other, caused catastrophic damage across the territory. Irma, one of the most powerful Atlantic hurricanes ever recorded, devastated St. Thomas and St. John in particular, destroying infrastructure, homes, hotels, and boats, and stripping vegetation from the hillsides. The recovery has been substantial and ongoing, and the islands have largely rebuilt and reopened, though some scars and some ongoing projects remain visible to attentive observers.
GEOGRAPHY AND CLIMATE
The U.S. Virgin Islands sit about 40 miles east of Puerto Rico and about 1,100 miles southeast of Miami, at a latitude of approximately 18 degrees north. They form the western end of the Lesser Antilles island chain, with the British Virgin Islands beginning immediately to the east across the Sir Francis Drake Channel.
St. Thomas is the second largest of the three main islands, covering about 32 square miles. It is dramatically hilly, with a central ridge running east to west that reaches its highest point at Crown Mountain at 1,556 feet. The island’s topography creates a distinction between the calmer, more protected waters of the southern and western coasts and the more exposed northern and eastern coasts, which face the Atlantic trade winds and swell. The capital and main port, Charlotte Amalie, sits on the island’s southern coast around a deep, well-protected natural harbor.
St. John is the smallest of the three main islands, covering about 19 square miles, and the most rugged, with steep, heavily forested hills dropping to turquoise bays. The Virgin Islands National Park covers approximately 60 percent of the island’s land area and extends underwater to protect the surrounding coral reefs. The island has no airport; visitors arrive by ferry from St. Thomas or from the British Virgin Islands. The main settlement is Cruz Bay on the western tip, which has restaurants, shops, a ferry dock, and the park visitor center.
St. Croix is the largest of the three main islands, covering about 84 square miles, and it lies about 40 miles south of St. Thomas and St. John, separated from them by a deep ocean channel. Its topography is more varied than the other two islands, with a range of hills in the northwest, a flat coastal plain in the center and east, and dramatic cliffs along parts of the northern coast. This varied geography, combined with its position slightly south and west of the other islands, gives St. Croix a somewhat different ecological character, with drier conditions in the east and more lush tropical vegetation in the northwest. The two main towns are Christiansted on the northern coast and Frederiksted on the western coast. St. Croix is also home to the territory’s airport, Henry Rohlsen Airport, which receives commercial flights from the mainland.
The climate across all three islands is tropical, moderated by the consistent easterly trade winds that keep conditions more comfortable than the temperature alone would suggest. Average temperatures hover around 80 degrees Fahrenheit year-round, rarely dropping below 70 or rising above 90. The dry season runs roughly from December through April, with lower humidity, less rainfall, and the clearest water conditions. The wet season from May through November brings heavier but usually brief tropical rain showers and the risk of tropical storms and hurricanes, with the peak hurricane season running from August through October.
The water temperature is warm year-round, typically ranging from about 78 degrees in winter to about 84 degrees in summer, making it comfortable for extended snorkeling and diving in all seasons without a wetsuit, though a thin rash guard provides useful protection from sunburn and the occasional jellyfish.
ST. THOMAS: THE COMMERCIAL HUB
St. Thomas is the entry point for most visitors to the U.S. Virgin Islands, home to the territory’s main international airport, Cyril E. King Airport, and the busiest cruise ship port in the Caribbean. On any given day during high season, two, three, or four massive cruise ships may be docked in Charlotte Amalie harbor, disgorging thousands of passengers for the day’s shopping and sightseeing. Despite, or perhaps because of, this commercial intensity, St. Thomas has developed a full-service tourist infrastructure that is sophisticated, varied, and generally impressive.
Charlotte Amalie, the capital and commercial center, is a working town as well as a tourist destination, with a waterfront that handles both cruise ship passengers and serious commerce. The downtown shopping district, concentrated along Main Street and the parallel streets and alleyways running up the hillside behind it, is one of the premier duty-free shopping destinations in the Caribbean. Jewelry, watches, perfumes, liquors, electronics, clothing, and luxury goods are available at prices that, for certain categories, are genuinely competitive with or lower than mainland prices and far lower than comparable items in some visitors’ home countries. Shopping in Charlotte Amalie is an experience in itself: the stores are housed in old Danish colonial warehouses and counting houses, painted in the warm pastels that characterize historic Caribbean architecture, and the alleyways between them have names that recall the mercantile history of the port.
Beyond shopping, Charlotte Amalie has genuine historic and architectural interest. Fort Christian, a rust-red Danish fortification completed in 1680 and one of the oldest buildings in the territory, is a landmark at the edge of the waterfront and houses a museum of Virgin Islands history. The 99 Steps, one of several stairways built by the Danes from ship’s ballast brick that climb the steep hillside above the town, lead up to Blackbeard’s Castle, an 18th-century watchtower with panoramic views of the harbor and the surrounding islands. The Frederick Lutheran Church, dating from 1793, is the second oldest Lutheran congregation in the Western Hemisphere and a beautiful example of Danish colonial ecclesiastical architecture.
Hassel Island, in the middle of Charlotte Amalie harbor, is a unit of the Virgin Islands National Park and contains the ruins of a 19th-century British fortification and a marine railway. The island is accessible by water taxi from the waterfront and offers hiking, birding, and a peaceful contrast to the busy mainland shore.
The beaches of St. Thomas are among its greatest assets, though reaching the best ones requires a short drive or a water taxi ride from the main tourist areas. Magens Bay, on the northern coast, is one of the most celebrated beaches in the entire Caribbean, a mile-long arc of white sand sheltered by wooded hills on either side and fronted by calm, clear, flat water that is perfect for swimming and kayaking. It is justifiably famous and can be crowded during cruise ship days, but its beauty is undeniable at any time of day.
Coki Beach, also on the northern coast near Coral World Ocean Park, is a smaller beach with excellent snorkeling directly from shore and a lively, local-feeling atmosphere with vendors selling food, drinks, and beach rentals. Coral World itself is an ocean park with underwater observation areas, a sea turtle sanctuary, reef tanks, and various marine encounters that make it particularly popular with families.
Hull Bay, also on the north coast, is a local favorite with a relaxed surf shack atmosphere and the best surf conditions on the island when the north swell runs. Brewers Bay, near the airport on the western coast, is a quiet, shallow bay with good snorkeling and a more local feel. Sapphire Beach and Secret Harbour on the eastern end of the island are resort beaches with calm water, water sports rentals, and good dining nearby.
Drake’s Passage and the surrounding waters off St. Thomas’s eastern end are some of the finest sailing waters in the Caribbean, and the charter boat industry is a major part of the island’s economy. Day sails to the neighboring British Virgin Islands, sunset cruises, snorkeling charters, and full-crewed private yacht charters departing from Red Hook Marina on the eastern tip of St. Thomas are all popular and widely available.
The view from Paradise Point, reached by cable car from the waterfront near the cruise ship dock, offers spectacular panoramic views of Charlotte Amalie, the harbor, and the surrounding islands, including St. John and several of the British Virgin Islands on clear days. It is a tourist attraction but a genuine one, and the view at sunset is memorable.
ST. JOHN: THE JEWEL OF THE CARIBBEAN
If St. Thomas is the commercial heart of the U.S. Virgin Islands, St. John is its soul. Small, hilly, and largely protected by the national park that covers most of its area, St. John is the island that visitors most often describe as life-changing, the one they cannot stop thinking about when they return home, the one that brings them back year after year.
The ferry ride from Red Hook on St. Thomas to Cruz Bay on St. John takes about 20 minutes and crosses waters of extraordinary clarity. Cruz Bay itself is a small, colorful, walkable village with a handful of restaurants, bars, boutiques, and galleries clustered around the ferry dock and the adjacent streets. It has a genuine community feeling; unlike the aggressively commercial atmosphere of Charlotte Amalie, Cruz Bay has the character of a place where people actually live rather than merely sell.
The Virgin Islands National Park visitor center at Cruz Bay is an excellent starting point for understanding the island. The park was established in 1956 on land donated by Laurance Rockefeller, who had quietly purchased much of the island over several years before donating it to the National Park Service. The park encompasses not only the terrestrial forests, hills, and beaches but also the surrounding coral reef ecosystems, making it one of the first parks to include underwater protection as part of its mandate.
The beaches of St. John are, quite simply, among the most beautiful in the world. Trunk Bay is the most famous, a long crescent of brilliant white sand sheltered by forested hills, with an underwater snorkeling trail marked with plaques identifying coral formations and marine life. It is the most photographed beach in the Caribbean and lives up entirely to its reputation on a calm morning before the day-trippers arrive from St. Thomas. Cinnamon Bay, a few minutes further east along North Shore Road, is longer and more wild-feeling, with a campground and historic sugar mill ruins at its western end and excellent snorkeling at both ends of the beach. Hawksnest Bay, closest to Cruz Bay, is a local favorite with several separate sections of beach, good snorkeling, and a slightly quieter atmosphere than Trunk Bay. Maho Bay is one of the best places in the Caribbean to spot sea turtles feeding on seagrass in the shallows, and patient visitors sitting quietly at the water’s edge in the early morning or late afternoon are frequently rewarded with close encounters with these ancient, beautiful animals.
Watermelon Bay, Leinster Bay, and Francis Bay on the northern coast are more remote and require a short hike from the road, a quality that reduces the crowds substantially and rewards the effort with even greater tranquility. The trail around the Leinster Bay area also passes the ruins of the Annaberg Sugar Plantation, one of the best-preserved plantation complexes in the territory and an important site for understanding the island’s history. The National Park Service offers ranger-led programs at Annaberg that provide context for the lives of the enslaved people who worked the plantation, and the ruins of the windmill tower, boiling house, and other structures speak eloquently of an economy built on brutality.
Hiking in the national park is one of St. John’s great pleasures. The park maintains more than 20 trails covering about 800 different miles of territory across the island’s hills and coast. The Ram Head Trail, in the remote southern part of the island, leads through dry scrub forest and cactus to a dramatic rocky headland 200 feet above the sea, with views in every direction that are among the finest in the Caribbean. The Reef Bay Trail is the island’s most popular hike, descending from the center of the island through various ecological zones to a beautiful bay on the southern coast, passing ancient Taino petroglyphs carved into rocks near a freshwater pool along the way. The National Park Service offers guided hikes to Reef Bay that include a boat return to Cruz Bay, sparing hikers the uphill return journey.
The waters around St. John provide outstanding snorkeling and diving. The healthy coral reefs, protected by their national park status, support an abundance of marine life including sea turtles, eagle rays, nurse sharks, barracuda, parrotfish, angelfish, trumpet fish, and hundreds of other species. The coral formations themselves are complex and beautiful, with brain corals, elkhorn corals, sea fans, and sponges of vivid color. Salt Pond Bay on the southern coast, Waterlemon Cay off the northeastern coast, and the reefs at the eastern end of Trunk Bay are among the top snorkeling locations.
Accommodations on St. John range from the legendary Caneel Bay resort, originally developed by Laurance Rockefeller and long considered one of the premier luxury resorts in the Caribbean, to the Cinnamon Bay Campground, operated by the National Park Service and offering the experience of sleeping in tents or cottages within the park at an affordable price. A range of villas, small inns, and vacation rentals fill the middle ground. The island has no large chain hotels, which is part of what preserves its character.
The restaurant scene in Cruz Bay has grown steadily in quality over the years. Several restaurants offer genuinely excellent food in settings ranging from open-air waterfront tables to hillside terraces overlooking the harbor. The combination of fresh local fish, Caribbean produce, and the culinary ambitions of chefs who have chosen island life makes dining on St. John a genuine pleasure rather than merely a necessity.
ST. CROIX: THE FORGOTTEN GEM
Of the three main islands, St. Croix is the least visited and in many ways the most rewarding for the traveler willing to make the extra effort to reach it. It lies 40 miles south of St. Thomas and St. John, a separation that keeps it off the itinerary of visitors who ferry between the northern islands and consider themselves to have seen the U.S. Virgin Islands. Those who do make the journey to St. Croix, by small plane from St. Thomas or directly from the mainland, discover an island with a stronger West Indian cultural identity, a richer agricultural landscape, a more complex and layered history, and diving along its northern wall that ranks among the best in the Caribbean.
Christiansted, the island’s main town, is one of the best-preserved examples of Danish colonial urban architecture in the Caribbean. The historic district, a national historic site maintained by the National Park Service, consists of a compact waterfront area of 18th and early 19th-century buildings in yellow, pink, ochre, and white, many of them with the arcaded sidewalks called galleries that protected pedestrians from sun and rain. The scale of the town is human and walkable, and the harbor, with its small boats, pelicans, and the small yellow Fort Christiansvaern on the point, has a beauty and an authenticity that rewards slow exploration on foot.
Fort Christiansvaern, completed by the Danes in 1749 and the best-preserved Danish colonial fort in the Caribbean, is managed by the National Park Service and open for tours. The fort’s ramparts offer views over the harbor and the surrounding townscape, and the interior, with its cannons, powder magazine, dungeon, and officers’ quarters, provides a vivid sense of the colonial military world. The nearby Steeple Building, a former Lutheran church completed in 1753 and now a museum, houses exhibits on the island’s Amerindian, African, and Danish heritage.
The Christiansted boardwalk along the harbor is a pleasant place to walk, eat, and watch the activity of the small harbor, from which boats depart for snorkeling and diving trips, for day trips to Buck Island, and for sailing excursions. The restaurants and bars along the waterfront and the adjacent streets offer a range of cuisines and price points, with fresh fish and lobster prominent on many menus.
Frederiksted, on the western coast, is a smaller and quieter town with its own Danish colonial architecture and Fort Frederik, where emancipation was proclaimed on July 3, 1848. The fort and the adjacent Victorian-era pier are the main attractions, and the town has a handful of restaurants and a different, more subdued character from the busier eastern coast. The pier at Frederiksted is one of the few places in the Caribbean where night diving directly from a pier is possible, and the marine life that congregates around the pier’s pilings after dark, including seahorses, frogfish, flamingo tongues, and various other nocturnal creatures, makes it a favorite among divers.
The north shore of St. Croix, between Christiansted and the northwestern end of the island, is where the island’s most dramatic natural feature lies: the St. Croix Wall, also known as the north drop. The island’s coral shelf drops abruptly from about 35 feet to depths exceeding 3,000 feet just off the northern coast, and the wall dive along this dramatic underwater cliff is one of the great dive experiences in the Caribbean. The wall is festooned with black corals, deep-sea sponges in colors ranging from orange to purple to yellow, sea fans, and a diversity of fish life including large pelagics that cruise past in the blue water beyond the wall’s edge. Several dive operators based in Christiansted run regular trips to the wall, and the combination of the wall diving with the shallower reef diving in the same area makes St. Croix a destination that serious divers regard as unmissable.
Buck Island Reef National Monument, a small island and surrounding reef about a mile and a half off the northeastern coast of St. Croix, is one of the great snorkeling destinations in the United States. The underwater trail through the elkhorn coral gardens along the island’s eastern shore, in water that ranges from three to twelve feet in depth and visibility that can exceed 100 feet on good days, is an experience of almost overwhelming beauty. The reef here is some of the healthiest in the territory, and the fish life, including large schools of blue tangs, sergeant majors, parrotfish, and the ever-present sea turtles, is abundant. Boat tours to Buck Island depart from Christiansted harbor throughout the day.
The interior of St. Croix, with its gentle hills, pastures, and historic sugar estate ruins scattered across the landscape, is worth exploring by rental car. The northwestern highlands, known as the Rain Forest, receive more moisture than the rest of the island and support dense, lush tropical vegetation. The Estate Whim Museum, a beautifully preserved 18th-century sugar plantation near Frederiksted, is the most complete plantation museum in the territory and offers a thoughtful and unflinching interpretation of the plantation system and the lives of the enslaved people who made it run. The great house, cookhouse, windmill, and other structures are well-preserved, and the museum’s programming engages seriously with the African heritage that is central to Crucian identity.
The food scene on St. Croix has been developing rapidly, driven in part by a local agricultural revival that has brought small farms producing tropical fruits, vegetables, herbs, and livestock back to life on land that was fallow for decades after the sugar industry’s collapse. The St. Croix Food and Wine Experience, held annually in April, celebrates this local food culture with dinners, tastings, and events held at plantation estates and other beautiful settings around the island. The Farmer’s Market held in various locations around the island on weekends is an excellent place to sample local produce, prepared foods, and artisan products.
St. Croix also has a growing craft spirits scene. Cruzan Rum, produced at a distillery near Frederiksted that has been making rum on the island since 1760, is the most established producer and offers tours and tastings. The rum production tradition is deeply connected to the sugar history of the island, and Cruzan Rum remains one of the most respected names in Caribbean rum.
The culture of St. Croix, shaped by its African, Danish, and West Indian heritage, has a distinct character from the other islands. The Crucian accent and dialect are different from those of St. Thomas and St. John. The music, food, and customs have their own local flavor. The Crucian Christmas Festival, held from late December through early January, is one of the great Caribbean Carnival celebrations, with parades, music, food, and the crowning of the Festival Queen. The J’ouvert celebration on the morning of January 6, with its mud, paint, and revelry, is one of the most exuberant street parties in the Caribbean.
SAILING AND THE WATER
The U.S. Virgin Islands are situated at one of the finest sailing locations in the world. The consistent easterly trade winds, the protected anchorages, the short distances between beautiful islands, and the clarity and warmth of the water make these islands a sailor’s paradise. The charter boat industry is enormous; hundreds of bareboat and crewed charter yachts operate out of marinas in St. Thomas and St. John, and spending a week sailing between the U.S. and British Virgin Islands is one of the defining Caribbean travel experiences.
The Sir Francis Drake Channel, separating the British Virgin Islands from the U.S. side to the south, is one of the great sailing passages in the world, with steady winds, manageable seas, and an extraordinary parade of islands and anchorages. From St. Thomas or St. John, a charter can reach the Baths on Virgin Gorda, the beautiful harbor at Jost Van Dyke, Anegada’s flamingo ponds, and dozens of other British Virgin Islands destinations within a day’s sail.
For non-sailors, day sail charters, sunset cruises, snorkeling excursions, fishing charters, and power boat rentals all provide ways to experience the water that surrounds these islands in varying degrees of independence and comfort. Kayaking and paddleboarding in the protected bays of St. John are excellent, and the water is calm and clear enough for beginners to paddle safely and enjoyably.
WILDLIFE AND NATURE
The natural environment of the U.S. Virgin Islands is rich and diverse, both above and below the water, and nature-focused visitors will find much to reward careful attention.
The coral reefs, already discussed in the context of snorkeling and diving, are among the most biodiverse ecosystems on the planet and are home to hundreds of species of fish, crustaceans, mollusks, echinoderms, and corals. Sea turtles, particularly hawksbill and leatherback turtles, nest on several beaches in the territory, and conservation programs monitor and protect nesting sites. Seeing a sea turtle in the wild, whether gliding past on a snorkel, surfacing to breathe just offshore, or laboriously hauling itself up a beach in the darkness to lay eggs, is one of the most moving wildlife experiences available to visitors.
The terrestrial wildlife of the islands includes numerous species of birds, including resident species and migratory birds that use the islands as a stopover. Brown pelicans, magnificent frigatebirds, red-billed tropicbirds, bananaquits, pearly-eyed thrashers, and various herons and egrets are among the species commonly seen. The tropical forests of St. John’s national park provide habitat for a range of bird species, and early morning walks on the park’s trails offer excellent birdwatching.
Mongooses, introduced to the islands in the 19th century to control snakes in the sugar plantations, are now ubiquitous and an invasive presence that has had negative impacts on ground-nesting birds and other native species. Iguanas, both the native green iguana and an introduced population that has grown to enormous numbers, are visible everywhere on St. Thomas and St. Croix. Deer were introduced to St. John by the Danes and are now widespread in the national park, where they browse in forest clearings and on the edges of beaches.
The Salt Pond at Salt Pond Bay on St. John, the mangrove ecosystems at various locations around all three islands, and the freshwater pools along the Reef Bay Trail on St. John are all important habitats that support distinct communities of birds, fish, crustaceans, and other wildlife.
The Virgin Islands Environmental Resource Station, known as VIERS, on St. John has for many years operated as a marine science research station, and its work on coral reef ecology and restoration is important for the long-term health of the reefs that are so central to the territory’s natural heritage and its tourism economy.
FOOD, DRINK, AND LOCAL CULTURE
The cuisine of the U.S. Virgin Islands reflects the complex cultural heritage of the islands, drawing most deeply from African and West Indian traditions while incorporating Danish, American, and other influences.
The foundational elements of local cooking are fresh fish and seafood, tropical root vegetables including sweet potato, yams, and cassava, plantains, rice, and the complex seasoning traditions brought by enslaved Africans whose culinary knowledge has shaped Caribbean cooking throughout the region. Callaloo, a thick soup or stew made from leafy greens (usually dasheen leaves or spinach) combined with okra, crab, and various seasonings, is one of the most characteristic dishes of the islands and is found at local restaurants and home kitchens across the territory. Fungi, a cornmeal-based dish similar to polenta or grits, is the traditional starch accompaniment and is often served with stewed fish or chicken. Pates, the local version of the filled pastry found throughout the Caribbean under various names, are a beloved street food; the dough is fried and filled with combinations of seasoned beef, chicken, conch, or saltfish.
Fresh lobster and conch are featured prominently in local menus and are excellent when simply prepared by cooks who understand their quality. Whelks, also called Turban shells, are another local seafood delicacy. Johnny cakes, fried or baked cornmeal breads, are eaten at all times of day. Maubi, a bitter-sweet fermented beverage made from the bark of the maubi tree, is a traditional drink that visitors either love or find challenging; it is worth trying. Coconut water, fresh sugarcane juice, and various tropical fruit juices are also widely available.
Rum is the iconic spirit of the Caribbean, and the Virgin Islands take their rum seriously. Cruzan Rum from St. Croix is the most famous local producer, available in numerous varieties from light white rum to aged expressions of considerable complexity. Rum punch, painkiller cocktails (popularized at the Soggy Dollar Bar in the British Virgin Islands but made throughout the territory), and simple rum and coconut water are the social lubricants of island life and tourism.
The restaurant scene varies considerably across the three islands. St. Thomas has the greatest variety and the highest concentration of high-end dining, reflecting its role as the primary tourist hub and the tastes of the cruise ship clientele. St. John has developed a surprisingly sophisticated restaurant scene given its small size, with several establishments offering genuinely excellent farm-and-sea-to-table cuisine in beautiful open-air settings. St. Croix’s food scene has been improving steadily, driven by the agricultural revival and the arrival of talented chefs who are working with local ingredients to create menus that celebrate the island’s heritage.
The music of the Virgin Islands is reggae, calypso, soca, and the uniquely local genre of quelbe, also known as scratch band music, a lively, syncopated style played on instruments that historically included recycled items like bottles, washboards, and flutes, alongside guitars and bass. Quelbe is the official music of the U.S. Virgin Islands and is recognized as a living cultural heritage. It is heard at festivals, cultural events, and certain bars and restaurants, and experiencing a live quelbe performance is a memorable cultural encounter.
Carnival, held on St. Thomas in late April and early May, is the biggest cultural celebration in the territory, with two weeks of events including parades, competitions for steel pan bands and mocko jumbies (stilt dancers), calypso and soca concerts, food fairs, and the elaborate Children’s Parade and Grand Parade that are the culminating events. St. Croix’s Christmas Festival and St. John’s Carnival, held around July 4th, are the corresponding celebrations on those islands, each with their own character and traditions.
PRACTICAL INFORMATION FOR VISITORS
United States citizens do not need a passport to travel to the U.S. Virgin Islands, though a passport is strongly recommended as useful identification and is required for any side trips to the British Virgin Islands. Non-U.S. citizens should carry their passports and check visa requirements, as the territory applies U.S. immigration rules.
The currency is the U.S. dollar, and credit cards are widely accepted throughout the tourist areas of all three islands. Cash is useful for smaller purchases, local markets, beach vendors, and tips.
The territory operates on Atlantic Standard Time year-round, which is the same as Eastern Daylight Time during the summer months and one hour ahead of Eastern Standard Time in winter. This means that in winter, when much of the mainland is on Eastern Standard Time, the Virgin Islands are one hour ahead.
Electricity uses the standard American system of 110 volts with flat-pin outlets, so no adapters are needed for American travelers.
Getting around St. Thomas requires a rental car or reliance on taxis, which are plentiful but operate at fixed rates rather than meters; confirming the price before getting in is advisable. Open-air safari buses, a distinctly local form of transportation using modified flatbed trucks with bench seating and canvas covers, operate on several routes and are a fun and inexpensive way to travel if you are not in a hurry. St. John has limited car access on its interior roads, and many visitors rent a Jeep or small SUV to manage the steep, sometimes unpaved tracks leading to remote beaches and trailheads. St. Croix has the most spread-out geography and a rental car is essentially necessary for anything beyond the Christiansted waterfront.
Ferries connect St. Thomas and St. John frequently throughout the day and into the evening from both the Charlotte Amalie waterfront and the Red Hook ferry dock on the eastern end of St. Thomas. The crossing from Red Hook takes about 20 minutes and costs a few dollars each way. Regular scheduled flights connect St. Thomas and St. Croix, and seaplanes historically offered scenic inter-island flights though service has varied over the years; checking current availability is recommended.
Medical facilities in the territory include the Schneider Regional Medical Center on St. Thomas and the Juan F. Luis Hospital on St. Croix. For serious medical emergencies, evacuation to Puerto Rico or the mainland may be necessary, and comprehensive travel insurance including medical evacuation coverage is strongly recommended.
The sun in the Caribbean is intense at this latitude, and sunburn is one of the most common ailments affecting visitors. Reef-safe, high-SPF sunscreen applied generously and frequently, protective clothing, wide-brimmed hats, and seeking shade during the midday hours are all important precautions. The combination of sun, saltwater, and wind can also cause dehydration more rapidly than expected; drinking plenty of water throughout the day is essential.
Marine life safety deserves attention from anyone entering the water. Fire coral, which resembles regular coral but causes an intense burning rash on contact, is present on the reefs; not touching any coral, both for your own protection and for the reef’s, is important. Sea urchins inhabit rocky areas and reef bottoms; wearing water shoes in areas where you might step is advisable. The Portuguese man-of-war, a colonial organism related to the jellyfish, occasionally appears in the waters, particularly after certain wind conditions; their distinctive blue floating bubble is the warning sign to avoid.
Mosquitoes and no-see-ums, tiny biting midges, can be present particularly during the wet season and in mangrove areas; insect repellent provides good protection. The tap water is generally safe to drink, though many residents and visitors prefer bottled water; the territory collects rainwater as its primary fresh water source, supplemented by reverse osmosis desalination.
The social culture of the islands reflects West Indian traditions of warmth, formality of greeting, and a pace of life that differs from mainland American norms. Greeting shopkeepers, restaurant servers, and other local people with a “good morning” or “good afternoon” before launching into a request is considered basic courtesy and is genuinely appreciated. The pace of service may be slower than some visitors expect; this is not inefficiency but a cultural preference for human interaction over transactional speed, and relaxing into that pace makes for a more pleasant experience for everyone. Haggling is not customary in shops. Tipping follows American norms of 15 to 20 percent in restaurants.
Hurricane season, running from June through November with peak activity in August through October, requires planning consideration. Travel insurance that covers hurricane-related cancellations and delays is strongly recommended for anyone traveling during this period. The islands are well-experienced with hurricanes and have invested heavily in resilient infrastructure, but a major storm can disrupt travel plans significantly.
WHEN TO VISIT
The dry season from mid-December through April is the peak tourist season, offering the most reliably pleasant weather, the clearest water for snorkeling and diving, and the calmest sailing conditions. This is also the most expensive time to visit, when hotels and villas book up well in advance and prices are at their highest. The Christmas and New Year period is the absolute peak, with prices and bookings reflecting that demand.
January through April offers excellent weather with somewhat less extreme pricing than the holiday peak, and this period, particularly February and March, represents perhaps the best overall value of the dry season. The trade winds are consistent, temperatures are comfortable, and the water clarity is typically at its best.
May and June offer good weather at reduced prices as the peak season winds down, though the humidity begins to increase and the risk of tropical weather starts to build toward the end of June. This can be an excellent time to visit for travelers with flexibility who want to see the islands without the high-season crowds and costs.
July through November requires the most careful planning due to hurricane risk, but many weeks in this period pass with beautiful weather and the islands largely to themselves. September and October are the highest-risk months and are best approached with maximum flexibility and comprehensive insurance. Avid divers sometimes favor this period for the calmer water conditions that can develop between weather systems, and the deals on accommodations can be extraordinary.
CONCLUSION
The U.S. Virgin Islands offer something for almost every kind of traveler, but they offer it most completely to those who come with curiosity as well as a desire for tropical beauty. The beaches are extraordinary, the water is among the clearest in the world, the sailing is second to none in the Caribbean, and the diving and snorkeling rank among the best experiences available anywhere on earth. These alone would make the islands worth the journey.
But the U.S. Virgin Islands are also a place with a deep and complicated human story. The ancient Taino people left their mark on the rocks at Reef Bay. The Akwamu freedom fighters held St. John for six months against the full force of colonial power. General Buddhoe’s brave confrontation at Frederiksted changed the lives of thousands. The Danish colonists left their architecture and their surnames and their church spires behind in the warm Caribbean air. African culture survived the Middle Passage and slavery and colonization and transformed itself into the quelbe music, the callaloo, the Carnival, the warmth and resilience of Virgin Islands culture today.
Walking through the ruins of the Annaberg plantation on St. John with an understanding of what happened there, or standing on the ramparts of Fort Christiansvaern in Christiansted and thinking about the layers of history those yellow walls have witnessed, or listening to a quelbe band play as the sun sets over the harbor in Charlotte Amalie: these are experiences that add a dimension of meaning to the blue water and the white sand that no beach alone, however beautiful, can provide.
Come for the paradise. Stay for the people and the history and the culture. Leave with something more than a tan.
Leave a Reply