Costa Rica holds 6% of the world’s biodiversity on 0.03% of its surface. Let that sit for a moment. You could explore this country for years and still find species you haven’t seen. The challenge isn’t finding wildlife — it’s slowing down enough to notice it.
I went to Costa Rica for two weeks in 2020 with one question: can you photograph a rainforest without turning it into a cliché? This is what I learned.
Why Costa Rica is a wildlife photographer’s dream
Costa Rica has been protecting its nature seriously since the 1970s. Over 25% of the country is national park or protected area — one of the highest percentages on Earth. The infrastructure is excellent: well-marked trails, licensed guides, eco-lodges that understand what you want before you ask.
The country splits into distinct ecosystems you can move between in a single day: Caribbean jungle, Pacific mangroves, cloud forest at 1,800 m, dry tropical forest in the north-west, coral reef off both coasts.
The 14-day route that worked
Days 1–2 — San José + arrival. Skip the city if you can. Drive straight east to the Caribbean.
Days 3–5 — Tortuguero. No roads in. Boat or small plane only. Green turtles nest July–October. Boat trips at dawn for jaguars on the beach (rare but documented).
Days 6–8 — Sarapiquí + Arenal. Cloud forest at La Selva research station. Volcano hikes around Arenal. Hot springs at Tabacón.
Days 9–11 — Monteverde. The cloud forest reserve. Quetzals March to May. Hummingbird gardens for guaranteed close-up shots.
Days 12–14 — Corcovado. Primary rainforest, 20+ km daily on foot with a guide. The full crocodile-tapir-jaguar circuit. Stay at Sirena ranger station.
What to bring
- Telephoto: 100–400mm minimum. 500mm f/4 ideal. Wildlife rarely cooperates.
- Wide angle: 16–35mm for landscape inside the canopy.
- Macro: 100mm. Frogs, insects, leaf-cutter ants. The small stuff is what makes the trip.
- Rain protection: bag covers, lens cloths, silica gel. The humidity is 95%. Your gear will hate you.
- Headlamp: for night walks. Half the wildlife is nocturnal.
The species you should plan around
- Three-toed sloth. Manuel Antonio. Easy.
- Resplendent quetzal. Monteverde or San Gerardo de Dota. March–May.
- Scarlet macaw. Carara or Corcovado. Reliable.
- Jaguar. Corcovado or Tortuguero. Lucky.
- Tapir. Corcovado, Sirena station, dawn or dusk. Patient.
- Red-eyed tree frog. Sarapiquí, after dark. Worth the bug bites.
The thing nobody tells you
The light inside the canopy is brutally low. ISO 3200 is your baseline. F/2.8 lenses earn their price here. A flash is sometimes the only way to get a sharp shot of a frog at midnight, and yes, it is ethical if you bounce it off a diffuser and don’t blast the animal repeatedly. Three frames maximum, then walk away.
Practical notes
- Visa: 90 days visa-free for EU/US.
- Currency: colón, but US dollars accepted everywhere.
- Driving: 4×4 mandatory for the back roads. Google Maps lies about distances — multiply by 1.5.
- Best season: December to April (dry season). Green season (May–November) has dramatic light and fewer tourists but daily afternoon rain.
- Budget: €120–200/day all-in. Eco-lodges are not cheap.
Original in Spanish: guía Costa Rica. More wildlife photography on @vidaiatzen.