Things to do in Aruba
Aruba is one of Americas's best places for beach, family trips. Turquoise water, palm shade and barefoot dinners. Here's how we'd actually spend the time — what to book, what to skip, and the small choices that make the difference.
- 01
Spend a full morning on the best-rated beach — get there before 10
- 02
Book one boat trip or snorkel tour, even if you don't normally
- 03
Find the beach club locals actually go to (not the one in the brochure)
- 04
Eat seafood at a place with paper tablecloths and no English menu
- 05
Stay out for sunset at least once with a drink in hand
- 06
Pick a hotel with a pool — it's worth more than the upgrade you skip
- 07
Build in a slow morning every other day; nobody enjoys a packed schedule
- 08
Mix one 'kid choice' day with one 'adult choice' day
- 09
Eat early — most places are calmer at 6:30pm than 8pm
Nearby in Americas
Aruba FAQs
- What are the must-do things in Aruba?
- In Aruba, lean into what the place is famous for — beach experiences first, then a slower day to find the neighbourhoods most visitors miss. Build the trip around one big day and one easy day.
- How many days do you need in Aruba?
- Three days is enough to see the headlines, five days is the sweet spot, and seven lets you add a day trip or a slow morning without rushing. See our 3-, 5- and 7-day itineraries for Aruba.
- Is Aruba expensive?
- Hotels in Aruba start from around $140/night on Booking.com. Eating and getting around is reasonable if you avoid the most touristy streets — locals' favourites are usually a third the price and twice the food.
- What's the best area to stay in Aruba?
- Stay close to where you'll actually spend time — a central neighbourhood saves an hour a day. We pick the area based on what kind of beach trip you're after; the full Aruba guide breaks it down.
- Is Aruba worth visiting?
- Yes — Aruba is one of Americas's best places for beach, family trips. Turquoise water, palm shade and barefoot dinners.