

San Ignacio sits in western Belize’s Cayo District on the banks of the Macal and Mopan Rivers, where the town and its sister settlement of Santa Elena are linked by Belize’s lone suspension bridge. Its location also makes San Ignacio a gateway to both inland Belize and the nearby Guatemalan border, making it easy for curious travelers to explore beyond town limits.
History is all around here. Just outside San Ignacio lie ancient Maya sites that go back thousands of years. Cahal Pech, perched above the town, was a hilltop palace and ceremonial center inhabited as early as 1200 BCE, providing one of the oldest known windows into Maya life in the Belize River Valley. A short drive away at Xunantunich, a broad plaza and towering pyramid known as El Castillo rise above the treetops, offering views over the Mopan River and into neighboring Guatemala.
For a different chapter of history below ground, the Actun Tunichil Muknal (ATM) Cave invites adventurers to wade and swim through caverns where ancient Maya left pottery and ceremonial sites, including the sparkling calcified bones known as the “Crystal Maiden” deep within its chambers. Nearby, Barton Creek Cave can be explored by canoe, gliding past limestone formations carved by centuries of water.