Stand on a strip of sand at the end of Princess Juliana airport's runway as widebody jets thunder in just meters over your head on final approach, then brace as departing jet blast literally blows beachgoers across the sand into the surf. Check the 'WiFi' surfboard flight board at the Sunset Bar to time the big arrivals — peak action is roughly 11:30am to 4pm, 50+ planes a day. A first-timer who skips this has missed the one thing St. Maarten is famous for worldwide.
What to expect
You'll stand directly on the sand at the end of Princess Juliana airport's runway as widebody jets descend just meters overhead, the noise and roar immense as aircraft thunder toward landing. Watch the WiFi flight board at Sunset Bar & Grill to time the major arrivals—peak action runs 11:30am to 4pm with 50+ planes daily—then brace as departing jet blast literally sweeps beachgoers across the sand toward the surf. The rhythm alternates between tense anticipation and explosive physical sensation, a signature St. Maarten spectacle that no cruise passenger should miss.
The ship's 'Scenic Highlights / Best of St. Maarten' tour ($69–95) is mostly free viewpoints plus this beach — you're paying a big premium for transport. Bernard's gets you here for $32, and a $20 zone taxi gets you the identical free spectacle. There is no version of this where the ship's $69–95 land tour is the better deal just for Maho. Save $40–60 by going direct.
Good to know
Book Bernard's Tours 'Maho Beach Blast' ($32/person, ~4-hr round trip from port) or catch a shared zone taxi (~$8–20 each way) to save $40–60 versus the ship's $69–95 'Best of St. Maarten' tour for identical access. Peak jet activity is 11:30am–4pm, so time your arrival to align with this window; allow at least 2–3 hours on the beach to experience multiple arrivals and departures. Budget $10–15 for drinks at the Sunset Bar to access the flight board, and bring sunscreen, a towel, and secure footwear—jet blast is powerful and sand can be scorching. Leave yourself a solid 90-minute buffer before all-aboard to account for taxi queues and port re-entry lines.