Packing List & Rain Gear
What You Absolutely Need
Costa Rica has extremely diverse climate zones — from hot beaches to cool cloud forests. A well-thought-out packing list saves nerves:
Clothing
- Rain Jacket (light, packable): A MUST, even in the dry season! It rains almost daily in the cloud forest and highlands.
- Hiking Boots (waterproof): Essential for national parks, volcanoes, and the Río Celeste. Flip-flops are NOT enough.
- Quick-Drying Clothing: Cotton never dries in the tropical climate — synthetic materials are better.
- Long Pants & Sleeves: For jungle hikes (mosquitoes, snakes) and cloud forest (cool!)
- Swimwear: At least 2 sets — they hardly dry during the rainy season.
- Warm Layer: For Monteverde (18°C), Irazú (5–10°C!), and evenings in the Central Valley.
Equipment
- DEET Mosquito Spray (30%+): Tropical DEET from the pharmacy, not the mild European kind
- Reef-Safe Sunscreen: Costa Rica bans environmentally harmful sunscreens in national parks
- Dry Bag: For boat tours (Tortuguero), rafting, and rain hikes
- Binoculars: Almost essential for bird watching — without binoculars, you'll see quetzals and toucans only as dots
- Flashlight/Headlamp: For night hikes and lodge paths without street lighting
- Adapter Type A/B: Flat, two-pin US plugs. Available in most lodges, but better safe than sorry
💡 Tipp
Invest in a good dry bag (10–20€) — it will save your phone, camera, and passport during boat tours in Tortuguero, rafting on the Pacuare, and sudden tropical downpours. A 10-liter bag is sufficient for the most important valuables.