The Great Blue Hole Isn’t Just a Place
It’s a moment.
A perfect circle of deep blue surrounded by brilliant turquoise reef.
Seen from above, it almost looks unreal.
Located within Lighthouse Reef Atoll, approximately 55 miles offshore from mainland Belize, the Great Blue Hole has become one of the most recognizable natural landmarks on Earth.
For many travelers, their first encounter isn’t underwater.
It’s through a photograph.
A magazine cover.
A drone video.
Or an image that makes them stop scrolling.
The Great Blue Hole is one of the most photographed natural wonders in the Caribbean—and one of the few places that looks just as impressive in person as it does in photos.
The famous aerial photos reveal several things at once:
✔ The nearly perfect circular shape
✔ The dramatic contrast between reef and deep water
✔ The surrounding coral formations
✔ The isolation of Lighthouse Reef Atoll
✔ The immense scale of the sinkhole itself
From above, the Blue Hole appears almost black in the center because of its depth.
The surrounding waters glow bright turquoise thanks to the shallow reef platform that surrounds it.
That visual contrast is what makes Great Blue Hole photos instantly recognizable worldwide.
Few places combine:
into a single view.
Unlike many famous dive sites that only reveal their beauty underwater, the Great Blue Hole is spectacular from both the air and beneath the surface.
This is one reason travelers who never dive still place it on their bucket list.
For many visitors, a flyover becomes the highlight of their trip.
A scenic flight provides:
✔ The iconic aerial view
✔ Lighthouse Reef Atoll from above
✔ Half Moon Caye
✔ The surrounding Belize Barrier Reef
From the air, you can appreciate something that is impossible to see underwater:
the complete scale of the formation.
For photographers, this is often the ultimate Great Blue Hole experience.
For divers, the experience becomes something completely different.
This is not a colorful reef dive.
It is a descent into geological history.
Inside the Blue Hole you’ll encounter:
Typical dives reach approximately 130 feet (40 meters).
The dive is famous not because of marine life, but because of the feeling of entering a submerged cave system created during the last Ice Age.
Many first-time visitors arrive expecting the Blue Hole itself to be the entire experience.
Then they discover something surprising.
The surrounding reef often becomes their favorite part.
Around Lighthouse Reef Atoll you’ll find:
Many divers leave saying:
“The Blue Hole was why I came. The reef is why I’ll return.”
People rarely visit the Great Blue Hole by accident.
It often becomes part of:
Whether viewed from a plane or experienced underwater, it becomes a story people tell long after the trip ends.
That is why the Great Blue Hole continues to appear on lists of the world’s most remarkable natural wonders.
Most visitors choose between two very different approaches.
Most travelers:
This works well if you’re already staying on the islands.
Guests staying at Itza Resort experience something entirely different.
Instead of traveling to the Blue Hole:
👉 You’re already there.
Benefits include:
✔ Less travel time
✔ More flexibility with weather
✔ Access to multiple reef dives
✔ A slower pace
✔ More time enjoying Lighthouse Reef itself
Rather than treating the Blue Hole as a single stop, guests experience the entire atoll environment.
Long before modern dive tourism expanded, explorers and researchers recognized the significance of Lighthouse Reef Atoll.
Jacques Cousteau’s famous expeditions helped introduce the Great Blue Hole to the world and brought international attention to this remote section of the Belize Barrier Reef.
Today, Long Caye remains one of the closest inhabited locations to the Great Blue Hole, allowing visitors to experience the area with significantly less travel than mainland-based excursions.
If you’re looking for:
✔ One of the world’s most photographed natural wonders
✔ A unique geological formation
✔ A bucket-list dive
✔ An unforgettable flyover
Then the answer is usually yes.
The experience isn’t about checking off a destination.
It’s about standing in front of something that simply doesn’t exist anywhere else.
The way you experience the Blue Hole matters.
Where you stay.
How you get there.
How much time you spend at Lighthouse Reef.
Those decisions often determine whether it becomes a quick photo opportunity—or one of the most memorable parts of your Belize trip.
✔ Certified divers
✔ Couples and small groups
✔ Reef-focused travelers
✔ Guests who enjoy quiet, remote places
May not be ideal for
✖ Luxury seekers
✖ Non-divers
✖ Nightlife travelers
Non-divers are welcome, especially if they enjoy snorkeling, quiet island time, and nature — but Itza Resort is built around reef access and diving.
Why Divers Choose Itza
Plan Your Dive Trip
→ Dive Packages
→ Blue Hole vs Ambergris
→ Real Cost of a Dive Trip
→ What It’s Like Staying Here
Ready to Plan Your Stay?
Trips to Lighthouse Reef take a bit more planning — from boat transfers to dive days.
If you’re considering it, we can help you put it together properly.