Quick Facts: Matthew Town, Inagua Island | Bahamas | No formal cruise terminal β ships anchor offshore | Tender port | ~1 mile (1.6 km) from Matthew Town center | Time Zone: UTC-5 (EST)
Inagua is the Bahamas’ wildest, most remote island β a place where 80,000 flamingos outnumber people by a ratio of about 40 to 1, and where the rhythm of daily life runs at a pace most of the modern world has long forgotten. Matthew Town serves as the island’s only real settlement and the landing point for the occasional expedition-style cruise ship bold enough to call here. The single most important planning tip: this is not a port with a tourist infrastructure waiting for you β come with curiosity, flexibility, and cash in your pocket, because not much here takes a card.
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Port & Terminal Information
There is no dedicated cruise terminal on Inagua. Ships anchor in the waters off Matthew Town and ferry passengers ashore by tender boat, landing at the small government dock at the foot of Gregory Street in Matthew Town. Check [Google Maps](https://www.google.com/maps/search/Inagua+Island+Bahamas+cruise+terminal) for dock orientation before you arrive β it helps to know where you’re stepping off.
What tender means for you: Tender operations add 20β40 minutes to your going-ashore and returning timeline each way. If your ship announces last tender at 4:30 PM, you need to be back at the dock by 4:15 PM at the absolute latest β tender queues on small ships can be slow and the sea conditions around Inagua can pick up in the afternoon. Listen to your ship’s announcements carefully.
Terminal facilities: There are essentially none in the Western sense. No ATMs at the dock. No official luggage storage, no Wi-Fi hub, no tourist information kiosk. The dock area is a working government wharf. A few locals typically gather near the landing to offer transport or guiding services when cruise ships are in. Bring everything you need β cash, sunscreen, a fully charged phone, water β from the ship.
Distance to Matthew Town center: About a 15β20 minute walk (roughly 1 mile) from the dock north along the waterfront. The town is small enough that once you’re there, everything is on foot.
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Getting to the City

Once you’ve cleared the tender and stepped onto the dock, you have a handful of options for getting oriented:
- On Foot β Matthew Town is entirely walkable. The dock to the center of town is about 1 mile along a flat, mostly shaded road running parallel to the shoreline. You’ll pass the Morton Salt facility, simple wooden homes, and the occasional free-range goat before reaching the main cluster of shops and government buildings near Gregory and Queen Streets. Allow 20 minutes each way and wear comfortable shoes β the road surfaces are uneven.
- Taxi β A small number of local taxi drivers park near the dock when cruise ships are in. Expect to pay roughly $5β10 USD for a ride into town, and $40β80 USD for a negotiated half-day guiding tour of the island by private vehicle. There are no meters β always agree on the price before you get in. These drivers are your best local resource; many double as informal guides who know the flamingo ponds and salt flats intimately. Tip generously.
- Rental Car/Scooter β There is no formal car rental agency operating on Inagua in the traditional sense. Occasionally a local will offer a vehicle for informal hire β ask your taxi driver or check at the dock. Realistically, most cruisers pair up with a local driver rather than self-driving, partly because road signage is minimal and partly because knowing where the flamingo access points are requires local knowledge.
- Bus/Metro β There is no public bus system on Inagua. None.
- Hop-On Hop-Off β Does not exist here.
- Ship Shore Excursion β If your cruise line offers a Bahamas National Trust flamingo tour or a guided island overview as a ship-organized excursion, seriously consider booking it. Inagua is one of the few ports in the Caribbean where the ship’s excursion may genuinely offer access β specifically to the interior of the national park β that is difficult to arrange independently at the last minute. That said, if you’re an experienced independent traveler who has done research ahead of time, a locally hired taxi-guide will cost less and offer more flexibility. Browse what’s bookable in the broader Bahamas region [on Viator](https://www.viator.com/search/Inagua+Island+Bahamas) and [on GetYourGuide](https://www.getyourguide.com/s/?q=Inagua+Island+Bahamas¤cy=USD&partner_id=MHU0UHU) β though Inagua-specific tours are rare, Nassau-based operators occasionally run private charter options.
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Top Things to Do in Inagua Island Bahamas, Matthew Town
Inagua rewards slow travelers β this is not a port for collecting souvenir magnets and returning to the pool deck by noon. Here’s what genuinely merits your time ashore.
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Must-See
1. Inagua National Park & the West Indies Flamingo Colony (Free park entry with guide; guide fee ~$20β40 USD) β This is the entire reason Inagua belongs on a bucket list. The Bahamas National Trust manages the 287-square-mile Inagua National Park, which protects the largest breeding colony of West Indian flamingos in the world β approximately 80,000 birds. Standing at the edge of Lake Windsor or the flamingo ponds with thousands of those absurdly pink birds filling your entire field of vision is a genuinely profound wildlife experience. You must hire a licensed BNT warden-guide to enter the park β this is non-negotiable and actually enforced. Contact the Bahamas National Trust in advance of your cruise if possible, as wardens need notice. Allow 3β4 hours minimum; the park is not a quick photo stop.
2. The Bahamas National Trust Warden Station, Matthew Town (Free) β The BNT maintains a small base in Matthew Town where you can learn about the flamingo conservation program and arrange your park guide. It’s an excellent first stop when you arrive in town β the staff here are passionate, knowledgeable, and will orient you to current flamingo viewing conditions (water levels and weather affect where birds congregate on any given day). Allow 20β30 minutes.
3. Morton Salt Company Facility (Exterior viewing, free) β Inagua’s economy runs on salt, and Morton Salt has operated here since 1954. The massive salt pans stretch across much of the island’s interior and are visible from various points around Matthew Town. The pink hue of some ponds β caused by halophilic microorganisms β is striking, and the scale of the operation is genuinely impressive. You can view the facility from the road; tours inside are not offered to independent visitors. Allow 15β20 minutes for a drive-past.
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Beaches & Nature
4. Matthew Town Waterfront & Iron Shore (Free) β The coastline immediately around Matthew Town features dramatic iron shore limestone formations β jagged, pockmarked, ancient-looking rock that drops into clear turquoise water. It’s not a swimming beach (too rough and rocky), but it’s beautiful to walk and photograph. The light in the morning is extraordinary here. Allow 30β45 minutes.
5. Farquharson Beach (Free) β A short drive south of Matthew Town, Farquharson Beach offers calm, shallow, clear water and a long stretch of powdery sand that you will almost certainly have entirely to yourself. Bring water and a snack from the ship because there’s no concession stand, no chair rental, no umbrella β just pristine Bahamian beach with zero infrastructure. It’s one of the most unspoiled beaches in the entire Bahamas. Allow 1β2 hours; a taxi can drop you and collect you at an agreed time.
6. Lake Windsor (Free with park guide) β The massive inland lake at the heart of Inagua National Park is the flamingo’s primary feeding ground. The water is hypersaline and rich in brine shrimp and blue-green algae β the flamingo’s diet. Seeing the lake at sunrise when conditions are still and the birds are feeding is one of those wildlife photography moments that stays with you. With a BNT guide, you’ll approach on foot downwind so as not to scatter the colony. Allow 2β3 hours including transit.
7. Henri’s Pond Flamingo Viewing Point (Free with guide) β A secondary flamingo observation spot closer to Matthew Town than the main lake, Henri’s Pond can sometimes be visited in less time, making it a viable option if your ship has a shorter port call. Bird numbers vary seasonally and by conditions, but on a good morning this spot delivers close-up flamingo views with less hiking. Ask your BNT guide about current conditions. Allow 1β1.5 hours.
8. Inagua’s Roseate Spoonbills, Ospreys & Shorebirds (Free with park access) β Flamingos get all the press, but Inagua is a serious birdwatcher’s paradise beyond the pink birds. Roseate spoonbills, brown pelicans, magnificent frigatebirds, ospreys, white-crowned pigeons, and dozens of shorebird species are all present. If you’re a birder, bring your binoculars and a field guide β this may be the most productive birding of your entire cruise itinerary. Allow 2β4 hours depending on your obsession level. Browse nature-focused Bahamas experiences [on GetYourGuide](https://www.getyourguide.com/s/?q=Inagua+Island+Bahamas¤cy=USD&partner_id=MHU0UHU) for inspiration, though you’ll likely arrange the Inagua-specific access locally.
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Day Trips
9. A Full Island Circuit by Taxi ($60β100 USD for a half-day private car) β Inagua is a big island (the third largest in the Bahamas at 596 square miles) but the road network is limited, which actually makes a half-day circuit surprisingly manageable. A local driver-guide will take you past the salt pans, to a flamingo viewing point, along the iron shore coast, and through the quiet back roads where you’re likely to spot wild donkeys, iguanas, and the occasional hutia. This is the best way to grasp the island’s scale and solitude if you don’t have time for a deep park excursion. Allow 3β4 hours.
10. Great Inagua Lighthouse (Free, exterior) β The 1870s-era lighthouse on the island’s southern tip is a handsome structure worth the drive. The lighthouse is active and not always open for interior access, but the exterior and the surrounding cliffs and sea views make the journey worthwhile. Your taxi driver will know whether access is possible on the day. Allow 30β45 minutes including transit.
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Family Picks
11. Flamingo Viewing with Kids (Guide fee ~$20β40 USD) β Children who see 80,000 flamingos in the wild do not forget it. Full stop. This is the most memorable wildlife experience most kids will have in the Bahamas β far more visceral than any resort zoo or aquarium. Keep in mind the terrain involves walking on uneven ground and potentially in warm sun, so bring hats, reef-safe sunscreen, and plenty of water. Ages 5 and up handle this well; toddlers in carriers work too. Check [Viator](https://www.viator.com/search/Inagua+Island+Bahamas) for any family-oriented Bahamas wildlife tours that might include Inagua transfers. Allow 2β3 hours.
12. Beach Time at Farquharson Beach (Free) β Calm, shallow, warm, and completely uncrowded β this is a genuinely ideal beach for kids who want to swim and explore. The absence of boat traffic and jet skis makes the water feel safe and peaceful. Pack snorkeling gear from the ship if you have it; the water clarity is exceptional. Allow 1β2 hours.
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Off the Beaten Track
13. Matthew Town’s Colonial Architecture & Street Life (Free) β Matthew Town has fewer than 1,000 permanent residents, and wandering its quiet streets is a window into a Bahamian way of life that hasn’t changed much in decades. The government administrative buildings, the simple churches (Anglican and Baptist), the hand-painted shop signs, the women sitting on porches β it’s an unhurried, genuine community that sees very few visitors. Photograph with permission and with courtesy. Allow 30β45 minutes.
14. The Donkeys and Iguanas of Inagua’s Back Roads (Free) β Feral donkeys roam Inagua’s interior roads with total confidence, having outlasted the farming operations that originally brought them here. Inagua iguana populations are also thriving, and it’s not unusual to spot large specimens sunning themselves on road edges or rocky outcroppings. On a taxi tour, your driver will slow down for wildlife encounters β this is part of the island’s informal charm. Allow time within your taxi circuit.
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What to Eat & Drink

Inagua is not a culinary destination in any conventional sense, but what it does offer β fresh Bahamian seafood, conch pulled from local waters, and the warmth of being fed in someone’s actual community β has a kind of authenticity that resort ports can’t manufacture. Matthew Town has a small handful of local restaurants and lunch spots, and most operate on informal hours; if your ship is in port, someone will usually be open to feed you.
- Cracked Conch β The Bahamian national dish, breaded and fried, served with peas and rice. Found at any local eatery in Matthew Town. $8β12 USD.
- Conch Salad β Raw conch chopped and mixed with lime juice, onion, pepper, and tomato β bracingly fresh and the best thing you can eat in the Bahamas on a hot day. Ask locals where it’s being made fresh that morning. $6β10 USD.
- Boiled Fish & Johnny Cake β A breakfast staple across the Bahamas: a savory, gently spiced whole fish stew served with dense, lightly sweet cornbread. Simple, warming, and delicious. $8β12 USD.
- Steamed or Grilled Grouper β When the fishing boats have been out, fresh grouper is often available at the handful of local restaurants near the center of Matthew Town. Ask what came in that morning. $12β18 USD.
- Souse β A clear, lime-heavy broth with chicken or pig’s feet, eaten as a weekend morning restorative. Not for every palate, but deeply traditional. $6β10 USD.
- Kalik Beer β The Bahamas’ national lager, brewed in Nassau. Cold, light, and exactly right for a hot day on a remote island. Available at local shops and bars. $2β4 USD.
- Fresh Coconut Water β If you spot someone with a machete and a pile of green coconuts near the dock or in town, stop. Freshly cracked coconut water on Inagua is as good as it gets anywhere in the Caribbean. $1β3 USD.
- Rum Punch β The default celebratory drink across the Bahamas. Local bars in Matthew Town mix versions with Bahamian rum, fruit punch, and grenadine. $4β7 USD.
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Shopping
Shopping on Inagua is minimal by design β this is not a duty-free, souvenir-heavy port. Matthew Town has a few general stores along Gregory Street and the surrounding blocks where you can pick up cold drinks, snacks, and basic supplies. There may be one or two locals selling small handmade crafts or locally produced goods near the dock when a ship is in, but there’s no market, no craft bazaar, no shopping district.
What is genuinely worth bringing home: locally harvested Morton Salt (yes, the actual salt from those iconic Inagua pans β some specialty food shops in Nassau stock it packaged for tourists, but buying it here or asking a local if it’s available has a story attached to it), any locally made straw work if you spot it at the dock, and the less tangible souvenir of photographs of flamingos that you took standing in one of the most wildlife-rich places in the Caribbean. Skip the ship gift shop replicas β nothing sold on board will mean what a real Inagua experience gives you.
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How to Plan Your Day
- 4 hours ashore: Take the tender in, walk or taxi to Matthew Town center (20 minutes), stop at the BNT warden station to get oriented, then hire a local taxi for a 2-hour drive that includes a flamingo viewing point and the Morton Salt facility exterior. Return via the waterfront walk back to the tender dock with 30 minutes to spare. You won’t get deep into the park, but you’ll see flamingos and understand the island.
- **6β7 hours ashore
ποΈ Things to Book in Advance
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π Getting to Inagua Island Bahamas, Matthew Town
Use the interactive map below to explore the port area and plan your route from the terminal.

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