Puerto Rico with Kids: The Complete Family Trip Guide
No passport needed. Same currency. Your phone works. 3.5 hours from the East Coast. This is the easiest Caribbean trip you'll ever plan.
💳
Currency
US Dollar
🛂
Passport
Not needed
🌡️
Weather
75-85°F year-round
✈️
From East Coast
3-4 hour flight
📱
Phone
Works normally
🌊
Water Temp
78-80°F
🚗
Driving
US license, right side
💧
Tap Water
Safe to drink
🗓️ Pick Your Trip Length
Three real itineraries, built for families. Each one is ready to customize in TripDeck -- drag activities around, add your own ideas, share with your travel partner.
Best for a long weekend. Focus on San Juan and the east coast. You'll hit the highlights without rushing.
Day 1 — Old San Juan
Explore El Morro fortress -- tunnels, lighthouse, kite flying on the lawn. Kids under 15 are free ($10/adult).
Walk Paseo de la Princesa, the tree-lined promenade with street vendors and musicians.
Grab piraguas (shaved ice, $1-2) from a street cart. Try coconut or passion fruit.
Lunch at El Jibarito -- best mofongo in Old San Juan, $8-18/plate, cash only.
Explore Castillo San Cristobal -- the largest fortress in the Americas. Same combo ticket.
Cool off at Plaza del Quinto Centenario fountains.
Dinner at Lote 23 food park in Santurce -- 12+ stalls, everyone picks what they want.
Day 2 — El Yunque Rainforest + Luquillo
Arrive at El Yunque before 9 AM (they close entry when parking fills). No reservation needed. Free entry.
Hike Big Tree Trail to La Mina Falls -- under 1 mile each way, manageable for kids.
Pick up a Junior Ranger activity booklet -- kids get it signed by a ranger for a badge.
The full experience. San Juan, east coast rainforest and bioluminescent bays, west coast surf towns and hidden gems. End near the airport so your last day is stress-free.
Day 1 — Old San Juan
Morning at El Morro -- go early to beat cruise ship crowds (10am-3pm is packed). Junior Ranger program for kids.
Walk to San Cristobal, then Pigeon Park for bay views and bird feeding.
Lunch at El Jibarito -- mofongo with salsa music in the courtyard, $8-18. Or Chocobar Cortes for chocolate grilled cheese.
Afternoon stroll on Paseo de la Princesa -- artisan vendors, food carts, musicians.
Dinner at Cocina al Fondo in Condado -- elevated Puerto Rican grandma food, 4.9/5 on OpenTable. Book weeks ahead.
Day 2 — El Yunque Rainforest
Arrive before 9 AM. Hike Big Tree Trail to La Mina Falls. Allow 3-4 hours.
Lunch at Lluvia Deli Bar -- wood-fired pizza, right at the base of El Yunque. Or El Verde BBQ for $2 beers and slow-roasted chicken.
Afternoon at Luquillo Beach -- gentle waves, food kiosks right there.
Dinner: walk the Luquillo Kiosks. Terruno (#20) for artisanal PR food, Ceviche Hut (#42) for Peruvian ceviche.
Day 3 — Fajardo Island Hopping
Morning catamaran to Cayo Icacos -- uninhabited island, snorkeling, lunch included. ~$115/adult.
Afternoon: Seven Seas Beach for calm water snorkeling, or Carabali Rainforest Park for horseback riding and UTVs.
Dinner at Pasion por el Fogon -- best restaurant on the east coast, fresh catch from local fishermen. $40-60/entree. Reserve ahead. Closed Mon/Tue.
Day 4 — Bio Bay + Drive West
Relaxed morning. Breakfast at Simple Food in Luquillo -- salmon toast, French toast, great coffee. $8-12/person.
Pack up and drive to west coast (~3-3.5 hours). If it's a weekend, detour through Guavate for roadside roast pig.
Arrive mid-afternoon. Beach time at Crash Boat or Pools Beach (natural tidal pools, very calm).
Sunset at Rincon Lighthouse -- the legendary sunset spot. Free, bring a picnic.
Day 5 — West Coast Adventure
Morning: Gozalandia Waterfalls near San Sebastian -- 35 min inland from the coast. Natural swimming pools, 4-min walk from parking. Kids can swim and jump off lower rocks.
Lunch at Desecheo in Aguadilla -- creative mofongo, huge portions, $8-24. Even picky kids find something.
Afternoon at Crash Boat Beach -- snorkel the pier pilings (blue tangs, parrotfish, baby barracuda). Gear rental right on the beach.
Evening: if it's Thursday, hit the Rincon Art Walk -- 60+ artisan stalls, food trucks, live jazz, 5-10 PM. Best evening activity on the west coast.
Day 6 — Cabo Rojo Day Trip
Drive south to Cabo Rojo (~45 min from Rincon/Aguadilla).
Morning at Playa Sucia (La Playuela) -- often called the most beautiful beach in Puerto Rico. Requires a short hike. Bring everything (no vendors).
Hike to Los Morrillos Lighthouse for photos -- dramatic red cliffs, turquoise water below. Free.
Lunch at Bamboleio on the Joyuda seafood strip -- conch-stuffed mofongo, chipotle fish tacos, ocean terrace.
Visit the Salt Flats -- pink-hued pools, incredible photos. Free.
Dinner: Boqueron village street food scene (best on weekends) -- pushcart oysters, empanadas, live music.
Day 7 — Beach Day + Head Home
Relaxed beach morning. Montones Beach in Isabela for a hidden natural pool, or back to Crash Boat for one last snorkel.
If staying west: leave by 6-7 PM for the 2.5-3 hour drive to SJU airport.
Better option: drive back to the east coast (or near SJU) the night before. Last night near the airport = zero stress departure.
Airport tip: USDA agriculture inspection before TSA -- arrive earlier than you normally would.
There are a lot of Caribbean destinations. Here's why Puerto Rico keeps winning for families with kids.
No passport, no currency exchange, no roaming charges. Puerto Rico is a US territory. You fly domestic. Your phone plan works. You pay in dollars. It's the lowest-friction Caribbean trip possible.
3-4 hours from the East Coast. JetBlue, Spirit, and Frontier regularly run sub-$150 roundtrip flights. It's closer than most people think.
Two coasts, completely different vibes. The east coast has rainforests, bioluminescent bays, and catamaran trips to uninhabited islands. The west coast has surf towns, salt flats, hidden waterfalls, and legendary sunsets. You can do both in one trip.
The food is incredible and kid-friendly. Pinchos (grilled meat skewers), tostones (smashed fried plantains), piraguas (shaved ice for $1). Kids eat well here without you having to find a pizza place every night.
All beaches are public and free. By law. No private beach clubs or resort lock-outs. Just show up.
It's safe for tourists. Stick to tourist areas -- Old San Juan, Condado, Rincon, Luquillo, Fajardo -- and you'll feel as safe as any US city. The west coast is especially relaxed.
Affordable if you're smart about it. Airbnbs run $80-150/night. Luquillo Kiosks feed a family for $25. El Yunque is free. A week-long family trip can come in under $3,500 excluding flights.
🏄 Best Activities for Kids
These are the activities families actually remember years later. Sorted roughly by "kids will talk about this for months" factor.
✨ Bioluminescent Bay Kayaking
Paddle through water that glows when you move your hands through it. Laguna Grande in Fajardo is the most accessible bay. Tandem kayaks work perfectly -- one adult + one kid per boat. Best on dark nights near the new moon.
📍 Fajardo💰 ~$60-70/person⏱ 2 hoursAges 6+
🏰 El Morro & San Cristobal Forts
16th-century Spanish fortresses with tunnels, dungeons, lighthouse, and multiple levels to explore. Not a boring museum -- kids run through cannon rooms and dark passages. Junior Ranger program: complete an activity book, get a badge from a ranger. Fly kites on the massive lawn outside El Morro ($5-10 from vendors).
📍 Old San Juan💰 $10/adult, kids under 15 free⏱ 2-3 hours for both
🌲 El Yunque Rainforest
The only tropical rainforest in the US National Forest system. Hike to La Mina Falls via Big Tree Trail -- under a mile each way, manageable elevation. You'll hear coqui frogs everywhere (Puerto Rico's iconic tiny tree frog). Junior Ranger booklets available. No reservation or entry fee required.
📍 Rio Grande (1hr from SJU)💰 Free (visitor center $8/adult)⏱ 3-4 hours
🏝️ Catamaran to Cayo Icacos
Sail to an uninhabited island with white sand and turquoise water. Snorkeling, lunch on board, drinks included. The boat pulls right up to the beach so no deep-water swimming required. Better value than Culebra catamarans at roughly half the price.
📍 Fajardo💰 ~$115/adult, $95/child⏱ 5 hoursAges 4+
🏄 Surf Lessons
Rincon is the surf capital of Puerto Rico. Multiple surf schools offer group lessons for beginners. Tweens love this. Aguadilla and Isabela also have options. April is transition season -- waves are calming down but still rideable.
The old military pier pilings are an artificial reef. Kids can snorkel around them and see blue tangs, parrotfish, sergeant majors, and baby barracuda. Sandy entry, shallow area near shore, food kiosks right there. The best all-around beach day on the west coast.
📍 Aguadilla💰 Parking $9/day⏱ Half day
🪂 Toro Verde Zipline
Seven ziplines through the mountains of central Puerto Rico. "The Monster" is one of the longest ziplines in the world (100 lb minimum). The regular course works for kids 4.5 ft+ tall. Reservations required.
📍 Orocovis (1.5hr from SJU)💰 Check website⏱ 3-4 hoursHeight/weight mins
🎳 Gozalandia Waterfalls
Two waterfalls with natural swimming pools, 35 minutes inland from the west coast. The first waterfall is just 4 minutes from the parking lot on a paved trail. Shallow pools for safe swimming. The real jungle waterfall experience -- and no tour required.
📍 San Sebastian💰 Parking ~$5⏱ 2-3 hours
These activities (and 20+ more) are already loaded in TripDeck. Drag them onto your days to build your schedule.
Puerto Rican food is naturally kid-friendly: grilled meats, fried snacks, rice and beans, fresh fruit. You don't need a "kids menu" here. Here's what to try.
Snacks Kids Will Love
These are the things your kids will be asking for by day two.
Piraguas 🧊Shaved ice with tropical syrup -- coconut, passion fruit, guava. $1-2 from street carts everywhere.
Quesitos 🥐Puff pastry filled with sweetened cream cheese, brushed with sugar syrup. Every bakery has them.
Pinchos 🍖Grilled chicken or pork skewers served with bread. Easy handheld food. Found at every kiosk.
Pan de Mallorca 🍞Soft sweet bread dusted with powdered sugar. Like a cinnamon roll without cinnamon. Great for breakfast.
Bacalaitos 🍟Thin crispy codfish fritters. Salty, crunchy, addictive. Best at Pinones kiosks.
Limbers 🍦Frozen fruit juice cups. Like a Caribbean popsicle. Tons of flavors. From street vendors and small shops.
Empanadillas 🥟Fried turnovers stuffed with meat or cheese. Easy kid food. Available at every kiosk and bakery.
Tostones 🍌Twice-fried smashed plantains. Like thick chips. Served with every meal. Kids always eat these.
Dishes Worth Trying
Mofongo -- mashed fried plantains with garlic and pork cracklings, often stuffed with chicken or shrimp in broth. It's the national dish. Order it "relleno de pollo" (stuffed with chicken) for picky eaters. The garlic is strong, so set expectations.
Alcapurrias -- fried plantain/yautia fritters stuffed with meat. Crispy outside, familiar filling inside. The best ones are at the Pinones kiosks east of San Juan. Cash only.
Lechon -- slow-roasted whole pig. Tastes like the best pulled pork you've ever had. The place to get it: La Ruta del Lechon in Guavate (mountain town between San Juan and the east coast). Roadside restaurants, live salsa, whole pigs on spits. Best on weekends.
Tembleque -- coconut pudding that jiggles. Kids love the texture. Cinnamon on top. Ask for it as dessert anywhere.
The Kiosk Strategy
Puerto Rico has two legendary kiosk strips. Both are essential.
🏖️ Luquillo Kiosks
~60 family-owned food stalls near Luquillo Beach. Walk the strip, pick 2-3 stalls. Everyone gets what they want. Best: Terruno (#20) for artisanal PR food, Ceviche Hut (#42) for Peruvian ceviche, Revolution Pizza (#34) for picky eaters. Go on a weekday afternoon to avoid crowds. Whole family eats for $25-30.
🥠 Pinones Kiosks
Rustic open-air shacks along the coast road, 15 minutes east of San Juan. THE spot for alcapurrias and bacalaitos. Kiosko El Boricua is famous -- long line, worth it. Cash only at many stalls. More authentic and cheaper than Luquillo. Go late morning to beat lunch rush.
🏖️ Best Family Beaches
All beaches in Puerto Rico are public and free by law. Here are the best ones for families, organized by coast.
East Coast
Luquillo Beach (Balneario de Luquillo)
Calm wavesFood kiosksFacilities
Big, long crescent of sand with gentle waves. The 60+ food kiosks are right there -- swim, eat, repeat. The default family beach on the east coast. Free parking near the kiosks.
Seven Seas Beach (Fajardo)
Calm coveBeginner snorkeling
Protected cove with flat calm water. Best beginner snorkeling spot on the east coast. Bathrooms, showers, picnic areas. Less crowded than Luquillo. Reef-protected, so even on windy days the water stays manageable.
West Coast
Crash Boat Beach (Aguadilla)
SnorkelingFood kiosksPier jumping
The must-visit west coast beach. Turquoise water, golden sand, old military pier. Kids snorkel around the pier pilings and see parrotfish and baby barracuda. Teens jump off the pier. Food kiosks, restrooms, gear rental on site. Arrive before 10 AM. Parking $9/day (card only).
Balneario de Boqueron (Cabo Rojo)
Very calmShallowLifeguards
Wide, calm, shallow water with lifeguards, restrooms, showers, picnic tables, and BBQ pits. The safest and most facilitated beach on the west coast. Boqueron village is walking distance for dinner.
Pools Beach (Rincon)
Natural tidal poolsVery calm
Coral creates natural tidal pools at low tide -- calm, shallow, protected. The zero-worry swimming option on the west coast. Favorite for families with younger kids.
Playa Sucia / La Playuela (Cabo Rojo)
Stunning sceneryHike required
Often called the most beautiful beach in Puerto Rico. White sand crescent, turquoise water, dramatic limestone cliffs. Requires a short hike to reach. No facilities -- bring everything. Worth the effort for the photos alone. Free.
Montones Beach Natural Pool (Isabela)
Hidden gemNatural pool
The biggest natural pool in Isabela. Beach is naturally divided -- one deep side, one shallow ("El Posito") where water reaches knee level. Mostly locals. Tourists barely know about it. Restaurant right on the beach.
Hidden Gem
Isla Ratones (off Cabo Rojo)
Best for kidsLifeguardsMax 6ft depth
Small island just offshore from Joyuda. 5-minute boat ride ($5-7/person). Most of the water around it is no deeper than 6 feet. Roped swimming zones, lifeguards, picnic tables, restrooms. Underwater interpretive snorkel trail. Arguably the best kid-friendly snorkeling spot on the island.
💰 Budget Breakdown
What a Puerto Rico family trip actually costs for a family of four, excluding flights. Based on real 2026 prices.
Item
7-Day Estimate
Notes
Car rental (7 days)
$250 - $500
Book early. Economy from ~$18-40/day + insurance.
Gas
$80 - $120
~$3.50-3.80/gal. Fill up at Costco if you pass one.
Icacos: ~$115/adult, $95/child. Includes lunch + gear.
Other activities
$100 - $300
Surf lessons, snorkel gear, mini golf, etc.
Total (excl. flights)
$2,300 - $3,800
Lower end = Airbnb + cooking + free activities.
How to Save Money
Stay in Airbnbs with kitchens. Cook breakfast and lunch, eat out for dinner. A 2BR apartment runs $80-150/night vs $200-400 for hotels.
Eat at kiosks. Luquillo Kiosks and Pinones feed a family for $25-30. Skip tourist restaurants in Condado.
Free activities are some of the best. El Yunque (free), beaches (all free), salt flats (free), lighthouses (free), Old San Juan trolley (free).
Buy snorkel gear at Walmart. Basic sets run $20-30. Cheaper than renting daily, and you keep them.
Fly on weekdays for cheaper tickets. JetBlue, Spirit, and Frontier often have sub-$150 roundtrips from East Coast cities.
🍴 Where to Eat (Real Recommendations)
Not tourist traps. These are the restaurants we actually researched, read hundreds of reviews for, and would eat at ourselves.
San Juan
La Casita Blanca (Santurce) -- $
James Beard Award winner. Operating since the 1940s. Free chicken soup and bacalaitos when you sit down. Menu changes daily. If you go to one authentic Puerto Rican restaurant, make it this one. $8-18/plate.
El Jibarito (Old San Juan) -- $
Best mofongo in Old San Juan. Salsa music in the courtyard. Packed with locals. Cash only. Go before noon or around 5 PM to avoid the wait. $8-18/plate.
Lote 23 (Santurce) -- $-$$
Open-air food park with 12+ stalls. Pizza, tacos, bao buns, burgers, popsicles. Everyone picks what they want. Best option when the family can't agree. Closed Mon/Tue.
Chocobar Cortes (Old San Juan) -- $$
Chocolate-based restaurant by a family that's been making chocolate since 1929. Chocolate grilled cheese, hot chocolate flights, churros. Kids will beg to come back. Parents get good food too.
Cocina al Fondo (Condado) -- $$-$$$
Elevated grandma food. Farm-to-table Puerto Rican comfort food on an outdoor patio. 4.9/5 on OpenTable. Book weeks ahead -- this is one of the best restaurants in San Juan, period.
East Coast
Pasion por el Fogon (Fajardo) -- $$$
Best restaurant on the east coast. Chef Myrta gets fish directly from local fishermen. Shrimp-stuffed lobster, fresh conch. Kids menu available. Closed Mon/Tue. Reserve ahead.
La Estacion (Fajardo) -- $$
"Nuyorican BBQ" in a converted gas station. World-class brisket, smoky flash-fried wings with coconut-passion fruit glaze. Kids who like BBQ will be in heaven. Limited hours: Mon, Fri-Sun only.
Las Vistas Cafe (Fajardo) -- $
Best breakfast on the east coast. Rooftop restaurant with 360-degree views -- Vieques, Culebra, the whole coastline. Owner Gladys personally welcomes everyone. Reserve ahead, it's tiny.
Lluvia Deli Bar (Rio Grande) -- $$
Wood-fired pizza, guava pancakes, fresh-from-local-farms. Family-run -- grandmother does the cooking. Right at the base of El Yunque. Perfect before or after hiking.
West Coast
Cowboys Cantina (Rincon) -- $$-$$$
Wood-fired steaks on a 20-acre farm in the hills. Play area, horse rides for kids, ping pong table. The atmosphere alone is worth the trip. Closed Mon/Tue.
Tamboo Seaside Grill (Rincon) -- $$
Iconic beach bar since 1982. Named one of 50 Best Beach Bars by Travel + Leisure. Upper deck is the sunset spot. Good ceviche, famous pina coladas. Kids get burgers while adults get adventurous.
Desecheo (Aguadilla) -- $
Creative Puerto Rican comfort food. Their signature mofongo is stuffed with churrasco, surrounded by shrimp and fish in Creole sauce. Huge portions, $8-24. Even picky eaters find something.
Buena Vibra (Cabo Rojo) -- $$
Best restaurant in Cabo Rojo. The stuffed avocado with seafood and aranitas (crispy plantain strips) is unforgettable. Everything from scratch, so allow extra wait time.
Boqueron Street Food Strip -- $
Not a restaurant -- it's a whole waterfront strip that comes alive on weekends. Pushcart oysters with homemade hot sauce, empanadas, seafood ceviche, live music. Very local scene. Friday/Saturday nights are the best.
Restaurant Pro Tips
Many places close Monday and Tuesday. Plan your best dinners for Wed-Sun. Estela, Cowboys, Ode to the Elephants, Pasion por el Fogon, Cocina al Fondo -- all closed early week.
Book ahead during Holy Week / spring break. Late March through mid-April is peak season. Restaurants like Cocina al Fondo need weeks of advance booking.
Dinner starts late. 7-8 PM is normal in Puerto Rico. Kitchen closing times are when they stop seating, not when they close.
Cash is useful. Cards work at sit-down restaurants, but kiosks, street vendors, and parking often require cash.
💡 Tips, Hacks & What to Pack
Driving Tips
You need a rental car if you're leaving San Juan. Uber exists in metro San Juan but is unreliable or nonexistent in Rincon, Cabo Rojo, and Fajardo.
Avoid rush hours around San Juan: 6-9 AM and 4-7 PM. Traffic is brutal.
Speed cameras are everywhere. Don't speed. Tickets follow you home.
Gas: pay inside the station first, tell them pump number and amount. ~$3.50-3.80/gallon.
Parking in Old San Juan is hard. Use a private garage ($20-30/day) instead of street parking.
Download offline Google Maps for the whole island before you go. Cell coverage is spotty in El Yunque and on mountain roads.
Honk before blind curves on country roads. Other drivers expect it.
Confirm AutoExpreso (like EZ-Pass) is active on your rental car. Budget ~$5-10/day in tolls.
What to Pack (Stuff People Forget)
Reef-safe sunscreen (SPF 50). Puerto Rico's UV is intense. Buy before you go -- it's more expensive on the island.
Bug spray with DEET or picaridin. Mosquitoes carry dengue. Important at dusk and near mangroves. Don't apply right before bio bay -- it can harm the organisms.
Water shoes. Many beaches have rocky entries, coral, or sea urchins. Essential for kids.
Dry bag. For bio bay kayaking, boat trips, and rain in El Yunque.
Cash in small bills. Many kiosks, parking lots, and street vendors are cash only.
Rain jacket or poncho. Quick tropical showers happen. El Yunque is a rainforest for a reason.
Snorkel gear. Consider buying cheap sets ($20-30 at Walmart) before the trip. Rental quality varies and the costs add up for a family.
Reusable water bottles. Tap water is safe to drink in Puerto Rico. Stay hydrated.
Timing Tips
El Yunque: Arrive before 9 AM or after 2 PM. They close entry when the parking lots fill.
Old San Juan: Early morning or late afternoon. Cruise ship crowds swarm 10am-3pm.
Luquillo Kiosks: Weekday afternoons. Weekends get packed.
Bio Bay: Book for dates closest to the new moon. Darker sky = brighter glow.
Beaches: Arrive before 10 AM on weekends. Popular beaches fill their parking early.
Airport departure: There's a USDA agriculture inspection before TSA. Allow extra time.
Wildlife Your Kids Will See
Iguanas -- everywhere. San Juan plazas, beaches, rock walls. They'll let you get close for photos.
Coqui frogs -- you'll hear their "co-KEE" call every single night. Most vocal at dusk. Very hard to actually spot (tiny and camouflaged), but the sound is everywhere, especially in El Yunque.
Tropical fish -- parrotfish, blue tangs, angelfish, sergeant majors. Visible while snorkeling at Crash Boat, Seven Seas, and Icacos.
Sea turtles -- possible while snorkeling, especially near Fajardo and on catamaran trips.
Pelicans -- at every fishing pier and beach. Hermit crabs on many beaches too.
Ready to plan your Puerto Rico trip?
Pick a trip length, then drag and drop activities to build your perfect family itinerary. Share the link with your travel partner -- changes sync in real time.