Fishing in the Gulf of Papagayo & Guanacaste: Roosterfish, Sailfish & More (2026)

Fishing in the Gulf of Papagayo & Guanacaste: Roosterfish, Sailfish & More (2026)

Guanacaste is the roosterfish capital of Costa Rica. Trophy inshore fish, offshore sailfish May through August, and the calmest charter water on the Pacific coast.

Fieldnote Toorizta Blog · · 4 min read

Quick answer: The Gulf of Papagayo and northern Guanacaste offer some of the best inshore fishing in Costa Rica. This is prime roosterfish territory, with trophy fish in the 40 to 80-pound range along the rocky coastline. Offshore, the sailfish migration peaks May through August (opposite of the Central Pacific), and marlin show up year-round. Half-day charters start around $700, full-day offshore $1,200 to $2,200.

Guanacaste’s Pacific coast is drier, warmer, and less green than the Central and Southern Pacific. The landscape looks more like Baja California than the rainforest most people picture when they think of Costa Rica. For anglers, that translates to clear water, rocky shorelines, and some of the best sight-casting opportunities in the country.

The Gulf of Papagayo sits between the Papagayo Peninsula (home to Four Seasons and Andaz resorts) and Playa del Coco. The bay is protected from big Pacific swells, which means calmer water for inshore trips and a more comfortable ride to the offshore grounds. This is the fishing destination of choice for anglers staying in the resort corridor around Liberia (LIR) airport.

What You Can Catch in Guanacaste

Roosterfish: The Star of the Show

Guanacaste is the roosterfish capital of Costa Rica. The rocky points, sandy bottoms, and reef structure along this coast hold roosters year-round, with the best fishing from November through March. Fish in the 20 to 60-pound range are common, and trophy roosters over 70 pounds are caught every season. This is primarily sight-casting and live bait fishing in 3 to 15 feet of water. When you see that dorsal comb rise behind your bait, everything else stops.

Sailfish and Marlin

The Guanacaste sailfish run peaks May through August, roughly the inverse of the Quepos/Los Sueños peak. This makes Guanacaste an excellent choice for green season fishing trips when hotel rates are lower and the offshore fleet is less pressured. Blue marlin are caught year-round, with the best numbers from December through March and again in August through October.

Inshore Variety

Beyond roosterfish, the inshore waters produce cubera snapper (some over 50 pounds on the deeper reef structure), Pacific jack crevalle, yellowtail, wahoo closer to shore during cooler months, and grouper around the rock piles. The variety makes half-day inshore trips consistently productive even when one species is slow.

🎣 Dallas’s Tip: If you are flying into Liberia (LIR) for a beach resort vacation and want to add a fishing day, Papagayo inshore trips are the play. You are 30 minutes from the dock, the water is calm in the bay, and roosterfish do not care if you have never held a rod before. They hit hard regardless.

Best Time to Fish Guanacaste

Species

Peak Months

Type

Roosterfish

Year-round (best Nov–Mar)

Inshore

Sailfish

May–Aug

Offshore

Blue Marlin

Year-round (best Dec–Mar, Aug–Oct)

Offshore

Cubera Snapper

Year-round

Inshore

Dorado

May–Oct

Offshore

Yellowfin Tuna

Jun–Oct

Offshore

Charter Costs in Papagayo and Guanacaste

Guanacaste charters are comparable to Quepos in price and slightly below Los Sueños. Half-day inshore trips (4 to 5 hours) run $600 to $900. Full-day offshore (8 to 10 hours) runs $1,200 to $2,200 depending on boat size. Three-quarter day trips that combine inshore and a short offshore run are popular here and typically cost $900 to $1,400.

Most charters depart from Playas del Coco or the Papagayo Marina. A few operators also run out of Playa Hermosa and Playa Ocotal.

Getting to Papagayo

Liberia (LIR) airport is the gateway. It is a 30 to 45 minute drive from LIR to the Papagayo area. If you are flying into San José (SJO), it is a 4.5 to 5 hour drive or a 45-minute domestic flight to Liberia.

We arrange private airport transfers from LIR directly to your hotel or resort in the Papagayo/Guanacaste area.

Where to Stay for Guanacaste Fishing

The resort corridor from Playa del Coco to the Four Seasons at Papagayo Peninsula offers everything from budget-friendly surf hotels to ultra-luxury resorts. For anglers, staying in Playas del Coco puts you closest to the most charter operators. For a resort experience with fishing added, the Papagayo Peninsula properties (Four Seasons, Andaz, Planet Hollywood) are 20 to 30 minutes from the docks.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Guanacaste or Quepos better for fishing?

It depends on what you want to catch. For offshore billfish volume, Quepos has the edge, especially December through April. For roosterfish and inshore variety, Guanacaste is hard to beat. Guanacaste also has a later sailfish peak (May through August), which is useful if you are traveling in green season.

Can I fly fish for roosterfish in Guanacaste?

Yes. Several captains in the Papagayo area specialize in fly rod roosterfish trips. This is technical sight-casting with 9 to 10 weight setups in shallow water. Book a captain who specifically offers fly fishing; not all conventional charter boats are set up for it.

What is the best month for roosterfish?

November through March typically produces the largest fish and most consistent action. However, roosters are caught year-round along the Guanacaste coast. Water clarity tends to be best in the dry season (December through April), which helps for sight-casting.

Plan Your Guanacaste Fishing Trip

Tell us your dates and what you are chasing. We will connect you with the right captain in the Papagayo area and coordinate your hotel and transfers from Liberia airport.

Talk to Dallas & Marta on WhatsApp

Dallas & Marta
Pura Vida 🌿

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