Labadee
Labadee is a cruise ship port in Northern Haiti. It is a private resort leased by Royal Caribbean International (RCI) for use by its Royal Caribbean Cruise Line and Celebrity Cruise line cruise ships. Royal Caribbean International has contributed the largest proportion of tourist revenue to Haiti since 1986. The resort is completely tourist-oriented and safe as there is a personal security force. A controlled group of Haitian merchants are given sole rights to sell their merchandise and establish their businesses in the resort. The site is fenced off from the surrounding area. The cruise ships anchor either at the pier or offshore and passengers walk from the pier to dry land or are ferried to the resort when ships have to anchor offshore.
The village of Labadie, after which the resort is named, is not normally accessible from the resort and is not for the casual tourist, as it is a fairly nondescript, impoverished community.
Get in
Note: Due to the volatile situation in much of Haiti, Royal Caribbean has cancelled all trips to Labadee until further notice. | |
(Information last updated 25 Mar 2024) |
As a virtually private resort for the cruiselines owned by RCI, the primary but not only entry for visitors is by cruise ship. The cruise ships moor to the pier at Labadee capable of servicing the Oasis class ships, which was completed in late 2009.
Other visitors can come by land to the resort's security gate or may use small water taxis from a nearby town. Guards are reportedly very "firm" with anyone (especially Haitians that do not work there) who attempts to breach the security perimeter.
Except for some workers and security people, virtually no one stays beyond twilight.
Get around
The resort is on a peninsula about 300-400 m long, so is small enough to reach all areas by foot from the landing dock. Open air shuttles also run between all areas.
The resort does offer wave-runners and kayaks to explore elsewhere along the sheltered shoreline.
See
There are several ruins in Labadee, dating back to its time as a small colonial port. You really have to look hard to find them in most cases but a few are out in the open.
Do
- The beaches are quite pretty, though the ones closest to the dock can become crowded if the cruise ship is carrying many families. Consider taking a shuttle to one of the areas to the left from where you tender in. A few lifeguards watch the designated swimming areas. Some snorkeling can be enjoyed around rock ledges on the protected side, but the resort insists that snorkelers rent/use buoyancy vests, making diving problematic. Swimming on the Atlantic side can be tricky (due to undertows and sharp rocks/coral) if there is a brisk wind (often). Padded beach chairs are available at no charge.
- Cruise line activity staff usually organize a volleyball game at the volleyball court.
For a fee:
- Children (of all ages) may also enjoy a modest waterpark with floating waterslides.
- Adults can ride the Dragon's Breath zip line, a long (but fast) cable slide starting from high atop a nearby hill and ending in the resort. Riders are first trained on a small line (Jan 2020 fee: $99).
- Jetskis and other water toys are available for rental.
- The cruise lines run snorkeling, kayaking and sightseeing excursions.
- Dragon's Tail Coaster. An alpine roller coaster that is over 2000ft long and can reach 30mph.
Buy
The resort offers a large but sometimes repetitive group of stalls (inside and outside an open-air building) offering Haitian arts, crafts, souvenirs and Haitian rum. Prices are typical for what is found at most cruise ports. Vendors are highly aggressive and will haggle. If you decide to go into the building, be wary of entering stalls that have a dead end as vendors have been known to block the exit by standing in the doorway to attempt to prevent those who have not purchased anything from leaving.
Eat
Most of the food and beverage offerings (hamburgers, hot dogs, BBQ, salads, fruit, soft drinks, juice drinks) are catered by each cruise ship at three "cafés". Passengers receive a buffet lunch and tea, lemonade, punch for free but must pay for soda and alcoholic beverages just as on the ship.
Drink
There are seven bars scattered across the peninsula, including a nice bar overlooking the beach near the main café building. Waiters constantly offer frozen drinks, usually the labadoozie (or sometimes spelled labaduzie) along the beaches and will also retrieve well drinks or beer on request--all at cruise ship prices and paid by cruise ship room key/account card. The labadoozie consists of a number of mixed fruit juices. It may either be non-alcoholic or have rum in it, depending on what the customer wants. Also, bottled water is available at the bars.
Sleep
There are no such facilities in the resort, and security guards will remove any visitor trying to remain overnight.
Go next
The rest of Haiti, including the town of Labadie, which the resort of Labadee is named after, is not normally accessible from Labadee resort. Your logical next destination is wherever your cruise ship takes you.