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French Guiana in the Rainy Season: What to Do When It Rains (Field Guide)

Published on January 20, 2026 · by Ismael Samuel

French Guiana in the Rainy Season: What to Do When It Rains (Field Guide)

You’ve surely been told to come between mid-July and mid-November, during the dry season. That’s true if you’re after turtle beaches and mud-free trails. But after several years living here and welcoming travelers, I can assure you: French Guiana in the rainy season has a face the brochures never show. The forest overflows, the rivers swell, the waterfalls roar, prices drop and the sites empty out. As long as you know how to organize yourself, it’s a magnificent season to discover this French department of South America.

Understanding the rainy season in French Guiana

French Guiana has an equatorial climate: it’s hot (27 to 30 °C) all year round. What changes is the rain. The dry season runs from mid-July to mid-November. The rest of the year is the rainy season, with two peaks: a first wet season from December to February, a brief and sometimes dry “little summer of March,” then the heavy rainy season from April to June, the wettest of all.

What a rainy day here really looks like

First thing to know: it almost never rains all day long. The showers are intense but short, often in the early morning hours or early afternoon. In between, the sun returns and the light on the canopy is spectacular. In practice, you keep several dry windows each day to get out and about. The classic visitor mistake is to cancel the day’s plans at the first drops, when a shower passes in twenty minutes.

A few concrete pointers for your gear:

  • Pack a lightweight waterproof jacket and quick-drying sandals rather than a bulky rain coat.
  • Put your devices in waterproof bags: humidity is constant.
  • Always keep a dry change of clothes in the car.
  • A car remains essential: budget 35 to 60 €/day for rental, and favor a vehicle with a bit of ground clearance for waterlogged trails.
Pluie tropicale tombant sur des fougères et une roche humide en pleine forêt, illustrant la saison des pluies en Guyane
Averse en forêt tropicale humide pendant la saison des pluies — © Alexey Demidov (Pexels, Pexels License)

What to do in French Guiana when it rains: the activities that stay great

Good news: a large share of French Guiana’s highlights work very well, even better, in the rain.

The Guiana Space Centre, the ultimate all-weather activity

In Kourou (1 hour’s drive from Cayenne), the visit to the Guiana Space Centre is free and largely covered. You discover the history of Ariane, the launch sites for Ariane 6 and Vega, and the Space Museum. Book in advance (photo ID required), plan on half a day. If a launch is scheduled during your stay, it’s an unforgettable spectacle, and rain doesn’t stop the liftoff. It’s the number-one activity to slot in on the wettest days.

Markets, culture and heritage under cover

Cayenne is easily explored between showers:

  • The Cayenne market (Wednesday, Friday, Saturday morning): awara broth, Chinese soup, spices, Amerindian basketry. You stay dry under the covered halls.
  • A stroll around the Place des Palmistes and the colorful Creole houses.
  • Over in Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni (3 hours from Cayenne), the guided tour of the Camp de la Transportation, the former penal colony, is fascinating and partly covered. Expect 7 to 10 € for the guided tour.

Cacao and the Hmong community

An hour and a half from Cayenne, the village of Cacao is worth the detour, especially on Sunday for its market: pho soup, bo bun, Hmong embroidery. The road winds through a forest that, swollen by the rains, takes on the look of primary jungle. An insect museum rounds out the outing under cover.

Swollen nature: the real privilege of the wet season

This is where the rainy season takes its revenge on the dry season.

Waterfalls and rivers at their peak

The creeks and waterfalls are at maximum flow. The walks around Roura and the Cacao region, the sauts (rapids) on the rivers, everything is more powerful and greener. The pirogue trip on the Maroni River from Saint-Laurent remains doable: with high waters, the Bushinengé boatmen go further upstream. Expect 40 to 70 € for a half-day outing depending on the route.

The Kaw marshes at daybreak

The Kaw marshes (about 2 hours from Cayenne, including a stretch of dirt track) are a marvel in any season. In the wet period, the vegetation explodes and the black caimans remain observable during nighttime pirogue outings. Book a night in a floating carbet: expect 80 to 120 € per person with caiman outing and sunrise. Departures adapt to weather windows, which is why a local guide is so valuable.

Reserves and deep forest

The Nouragues reserve and forest expeditions remain accessible to well-equipped and well-guided travelers. Wildlife is active, the canopy dripping, and you’ll come across far fewer people. Just plan for longer travel times on the trails.

What you should be ready to postpone or anticipate

Let’s be honest, some plans call for flexibility:

  • Awala-Yalimapo and the nesting of the leatherback turtles: the main nesting season centers on the dry season (April to July depending on the year). Ask around once on site.
  • The Salvation Islands from Kourou: the crossing (about 1 hour, 45 to 60 € round trip) can be pushed back by rough seas. Keep a buffer day.
  • The long forest tracks can become difficult; check their condition before setting off.
Avenue du centre-ville de Cayenne bordée de maisons créoles sous un ciel gris et nuageux, propice aux activités quand il pleut
Le centre de Cayenne sous un ciel chargé de la saison des pluies — © Cayambe (Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA 4.0)

Organizing a smart stay in the rainy season

The fan-shaped schedule

My field advice: don’t lock your program down day by day. Prepare a list of “rain-friendly” activities (space center, markets, penal colony, museums, Creole restaurants) and a “good weather” list (waterfalls, islands, the beaches of Rémire-Montjoly). Each morning, you pick according to the sky. This flexibility changes everything.

Budget and good deals

The wet season is also the low tourist season: more available accommodation, sometimes cheaper, and less crowded sites. You enjoy an authentic French Guiana, far from the summer crowds of mainland France.

Formalities not to forget

Whatever the season, the yellow fever vaccine is mandatory to enter French Guiana. Also remember an effective mosquito repellent: the wet season makes them more present. You pay in euros, you speak French (and Creole, Bushinengé, Amerindian languages), the dialing code is +594, and the time difference with Paris is -5 h in winter, -6 h in summer. Arrival is at Félix-Éboué airport, in Matoury.

Where to stay for easy day trips

To chain these outings together stress-free, it’s best to have a well-located base between Cayenne, Rémire-Montjoly, Matoury or Macouria, near the airport and the route toward Kourou. An independent place with a kitchen is ideal in the rainy season: you cook on rainy evenings and dry your gear in peace.

At Hostel Toucan, we manage holiday rentals designed for travelers who want to explore French Guiana with full autonomy. Booking is direct, with no platform fees, with free cancellation up to 7 days before arrival, which is precious when the weather plays with your plans. And our WhatsApp support 7 days a week helps you adjust your program in real time according to the clear-weather windows. To prepare your trip, browse our complete guide to French Guiana and discover our available accommodation.

Do you own a property in French Guiana and want to make the most of it all year, including in the low season? Discover our concierge offer for owners.

Rain doesn’t spoil a stay in French Guiana: it makes it greener, wilder and more intimate. Just come well equipped, stay flexible and let yourself be carried by the tropical rhythm. The forest is waiting for exactly that.

FAQ

Can you visit French Guiana in the rainy season?

Yes, absolutely. The showers are intense but short, often nocturnal or in the early afternoon, and leave wide sunny windows each day. Many must-sees (Space Centre, markets, Saint-Laurent penal colony, Kaw marshes) remain fully accessible. Nature is even greener and the sites less crowded than in the dry season.

When is the rainy season in French Guiana?

The rainy season broadly covers December to June, with a peak from April to June and a possible lull in March (the “little summer of March”). The dry season, considered the best period, runs from mid-July to mid-November. Temperatures stay stable all year, between 27 and 30 °C.

What activities can you do in French Guiana when it rains?

Favor covered or flexible visits: the Guiana Space Centre in Kourou (free), the Cayenne market, the Camp de la Transportation in Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni, the Hmong village of Cacao, the museums and Creole cuisine. The waterfalls around Roura and the Kaw marshes are also superb, with nature swollen by the rains.

Do you need a vaccine to go to French Guiana?

Yes, the yellow fever vaccine is mandatory to enter French Guiana, whatever the season. Also plan for a good mosquito repellent, particularly useful in the wet period, as well as protection against rain and humidity for your belongings and electronic devices.

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