Whale Watching Samana: Complete 2026 Guide
Samana Bay hosts one of the largest humpback whale gatherings in the Atlantic. Between mid January and late March around 1,500 whales arrive from the North Atlantic feeding grounds to mate, give birth and nurse their calves in warm shallow water.
This guide covers the season, the regulated tour format, what you see and the rules that make Samana the most ethical place in the Caribbean to watch whales.
The migration in plain terms
Humpbacks summer in the cold rich waters off Greenland, Iceland and Canada. As temperatures drop and feeding slows, the population swims south. The shallow protected basin of Samana Bay is one of two main destinations, the other being the Silver Bank sanctuary north of the Dominican Republic.
Arrivals start in mid December. Density builds through January and peaks in February. By late March most adults have left, and only the last few calves are still being weaned in the bay before the long ride north.
🪨 Book this tour: Full Day Bacardi Whale Watching - End Season March →
How the regulated tours work
All whale watching boats in Samana are licensed by CODOPESCA and the Ministry of Environment. The maximum boat size is 80 passengers, the minimum approach distance to a whale is 80 metres and only three boats may surround a single whale at once.
Tours leave from the Samana town pier between 8 and 9 am, last three hours and almost always include a stop at Cayo Levantado on the return. Mid morning slots after 11 am exist but are not recommended, since the wind picks up and the boat ride becomes choppier.
What you actually see
Surface behaviour is the main show. You will see whales blowing, slapping the surface with pectoral fins and tail flukes, and breaching out of the water in a full body leap. Calves stay close to mothers and often mimic the same moves at smaller scale.
Singing males float vertically just below the surface and produce songs you sometimes hear through the boat hull. The captain often cuts engines so passengers can listen. Each song is regional and gets updated through the season.
Choosing your operator
Stick with operators that use four stroke engines, that include a marine biologist as guide and that are part of the Samana Whale Watching Association. The association enforces approach distances and shares whale ID data with the National Marine Mammal Lab.
Avoid any operator that offers swimming with whales or any contact with the animals. It is illegal in the Dominican Republic, and any operator pitching it is also cutting corners on safety equipment and licensing.
Combining with Los Haitises
A whale watching half day in the morning pairs naturally with Los Haitises in the afternoon. Both tours leave the same bay area, and the operators often share boats. Look for combined packages from Samana town with a small group format.
From Punta Cana, the only combined option is the 14 hour day tour that includes whales, Cayo Levantado and El Limon. It is intense but covers the entire bay in one ride. Whale spotting is statistically guaranteed in February but not in November or early December.
If your trip to the Dominican Republic falls between January and March, whale watching in Samana is the single most memorable wildlife experience you can have on the island. Book a small group boat, take the 8 am slot and bring a windproof layer for the open bay segment. The rest is up to the whales.
Ready to plan? Browse our Samana whale watching tours.