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Sargassum in Martinique: where to swim today, beach by beach

Most beaches in Martinique stay swimmable — even a light or moderate amount of sargassum is fine for a dip; only the really heavy landings spoil it. FanGass aggregates the official bulletins every morning and gives you the day’s score, beach by beach, from the Caribbean (leeward) west coast (the Anses-d’Arlet, Trois-Îlets — often the calmest) to the windward Atlantic side and the south (Tartane, Le Vauclin, Les Salines, a bit more exposed). A live map, a 0-to-5 score, and a plain verdict: go, or pick another spot.

Sargassum in Martinique today

Updated June 21

Biomass is more scattered but the steady east trade keeps pressure on the Atlantic side and the south. The current points straight at the south Atlantic and Le Diamant: Salines, Trabaud, Cap Macré, Le Diamant all hit. North Caribbean stays calm, plan B is Anses-d'Arlet and Sainte-Luce.

19 clear0 to avoid

The live sargassum map of Martinique

The map below shows today’s status for every monitored beach, from green (clear) to black (evacuated zone). Turn on the “Offshore sargassum” layer to see the satellite-detected rafts off the island — handy to anticipate landings over the next few days depending on currents and trade winds.

Beach status today

Plage du Carbet· Le Carbet

Clear Clean

Plage de Madiana· Schoelcher

Clear All good

Plage de la Française· Fort-de-France

Clear Clean

Anse Mitan· Les Trois-Îlets

Clear All good

Anse à l'Âne· Les Trois-Îlets

Clear Clean

Anse Dufour· Les Anses-d'Arlet

Clear All good

Grande Anse d'Arlet· Les Anses-d'Arlet

Clear Clean

Anse Noire· Les Anses-d'Arlet

Clear All good

Petite Anse d'Arlet· Les Anses-d'Arlet

Clear Clean

Anse Mabouya· Sainte-Luce

Clear All good

Anse Gros Raisin· Sainte-Luce

Clear Clean

Plage du Bourg· Sainte-Luce

Clear All good

Pointe Marin· Sainte-Anne

Clear All good

Anse Désert· Sainte-Luce

Clear All good

Anse Corps de Garde· Sainte-Luce

Clear Clean

Anse Figuier· Rivière-Pilote

Clear All good

Anse Collat (Lido)· Schoelcher

Clear All good

Plage du Bakoua· Les Trois-Îlets

Clear Clean

Anse Turin· Saint-Pierre

Clear All good

Anse Couleuvre· Le Prêcheur

Light All good

Plage de Sainte-Marie· Sainte-Marie

Light Some weed

Anse Charpentier· Le Marigot

Light Some weed

Plage des Rochers· Macouba

Light A few traces

Plage de Grand-Rivière· Grand-Rivière

Light It's fine

Anse Caritan· Sainte-Anne

Light It's fine

Anse Meunier· Sainte-Anne

Light Some weed

Plage du Diamant· Le Diamant

Moderate Visible piles

Anse Cafard· Le Diamant

Moderate Visible piles

Plage des Salines· Sainte-Anne

Moderate Visible piles

Anse Trabaud· Sainte-Anne

Moderate Visible piles

Cap Chevalier· Sainte-Anne

Moderate Visible piles

Cap Macré· Le Marin

Moderate Visible piles

Anse Michel· Sainte-Anne

Moderate Visible piles

Plage du Vauclin· Le Vauclin

Moderate Visible piles

Pointe Faula· Le Vauclin

Moderate Visible piles

Anse Esprit· Le Vauclin

Moderate Visible piles

Plage de Cap Est· Le François

Moderate Visible piles

Anse Bonneville· La Trinité

Moderate Visible piles

Anse l'Étang· La Trinité

Moderate Visible piles

Anse Tartane· La Trinité

Moderate Visible piles

Anse Spoutourne· La Trinité

Moderate Visible piles

Plage de Cosmy· La Trinité

Moderate Visible piles

Baie Coco (Pointe la Rose)· Le Robert

Moderate Visible piles

Îlet Madame· Le Robert

Moderate Visible piles

Understanding sargassum in Martinique

The most common questions about the phenomenon, where it lands, the season and the risks — so you can pick your beach with confidence.

Is there sargassum in Martinique right now?

Today’s beach-by-beach status is shown on the map and list above, updated every morning. Green dots mark the clear beaches, orange or red dots the ongoing landings. Conditions can change within 48 hours depending on the wind, so check again on the day of your outing.

What is sargassum?

Sargassum is a floating brown seaweed (genus Sargassum) that drifts in huge rafts across the sea. The phenomenon has surged since 2011: pushed by tropical Atlantic currents, it crosses the ocean from a vast belt between Africa and Brazil — the great sargassum belt — before washing ashore.

Out at sea it shelters useful marine life; the problem is the massive landings: piling up on the shore, the seaweed rots and becomes a health and economic headache. Natural processes, then, but on an unprecedented recent scale.

Which beaches in Martinique are most affected?

Landings mainly hit the windward Atlantic coast and the south: the Caravelle peninsula (Tartane, La Trinité), Le Robert, Le François, Le Vauclin, and the far south — Les Salines, Anse Trabaud and Cap Chevalier in Sainte-Anne, Cap Macré in Le Marin.

But "affected" doesn’t mean "off-limits": outside a heavy landing, these beaches are often still swimmable. The Caribbean (leeward) west coast is simply the calmest more often. The day’s per-beach score is the only real judge.

Which beaches in Martinique are free of sargassum?

Often on the Caribbean (leeward) west side: the Anses-d’Arlet (Grande Anse, Anse Dufour, Anse Noire), the Trois-Îlets (Anse Mitan, Anse à l’Âne), Le Carbet and Anse Couleuvre in Le Prêcheur are generally spared, sheltered from the Atlantic currents.

That said, you don’t have to chase "zero sargassum": a beach with light or moderate seaweed is perfectly swimmable. No coast is guaranteed 100 % — confirm on the map on the day.

When is sargassum season in Martinique?

Landings mostly occur from March to October, often peaking between April and August — but the season varies a lot from year to year. Some years are nearly spared, others break records. A landing can last from a few days to several weeks, and a clean beach one morning can get a landing 48 hours later: which is why a daily update beats a seasonal average.

Is sargassum dangerous?

As it decomposes, sargassum releases hydrogen sulfide (H₂S) and ammonia, a rotten-egg smell. This mainly concerns heavy, prolonged landings and sensitive people (asthma, infants, pregnant women) — a beach with light to moderate seaweed is generally no problem for a swim. Knowing the day’s risk is the best protection, which is why a smell index accompanies every beach.

Forecast, tips & data

Anticipating landings, reading a score at a glance and planning your outings: how it works.

Can sargassum landings be forecast?

Partly. Forecasts rest first on satellite monitoring of the offshore rafts: imagery spots the mats tens of kilometres from shore, giving a few days’ warning depending on currents and trade winds. Longer term, monthly bulletins (NOAA, University of South Florida) estimate how much seaweed is in the Atlantic. FanGass combines these with the official weather bulletins to anticipate, beach by beach — no forecast being 100 % reliable, hence the daily update.

How do you read a beach’s score and colors?

Each beach gets a 0-to-5 score and a color. Green (0-1): clear, go for it. Yellow (2): some seaweed, perfectly swimmable. Orange (3): a moderate, visible amount — but still swimmable; plenty of people go in, your call depending on the day’s smell. Red (4): heavy landing, it stinks, skip it. Black (5): evacuated zone. In short, only red and black beaches are really to avoid; below that, a swim is fine. A smell index (none / light / strong) completes the score.

Should I cancel my holiday over sargassum?

No need to cancel a holiday in Martinique: there’s almost always a swimmable beach, and most stay swimmable even with light to moderate sargassum. The Caribbean west coast — Anses-d’Arlet, Trois-Îlets — is often the calmest on heavy days; but there’s no need to write off the whole south or Atlantic side. Best move: check the day’s per-beach score.

Where does FanGass’s data come from?

Every day, FanGass reads the official monitoring bulletins (Météo-France Martinique, NOAA AOML, the University of South Florida monthly outlook, regional bulletins), cross-checks them against satellite imagery of the offshore rafts, then distills it all into a clear per-beach score. On-the-ground user reports adjust the scores live when several agree. The service is free, offered by the Katchak agency.

The live sargassum map, beach by beach