Costa Rica is a lovely nation, which will appeal you whenever of year. Costa Rica attractions are visited by numerous explorers mostly on the dry season, while others will need to exploit the off-season arrangements and less-group amid the stormy season.
Costa Rica's temperature is unfaltering all through, averaging somewhere around 71 and 81 degrees Fahrenheit. Higher rises are cooler than lower parts of Costa Rica. Mid-level heights are generally 5 or 10 degrees cooler, while high rises, for example, Volcanos Poas, Irazu and Chirripo (the second most elevated mountain in Central America) can plunge into the 50s.
Dry season
By and large, Costa Rica's tropical atmosphere is driest in the middle of December and April. In some northwestern parts of Costa Rica, for example, Guanacaste and Nicoya, the air dries out totally and the atmosphere gets to be hot and dry, to the point that supporting farming obliges watering system.
Shorelines in those locales are extremely prominent amid the dry season, and can get swarmed all through December and mainstream school occasions like spring break.
On the Caribbean side of the mountains, one thing to watch out for in January and early February is the temporales del Atlantico. At the point when polar air pushes south over the Gulf of Mexico, it gets a considerable measure of water. This can bring about a few persistent days of overwhelming rain in the upper east.
Green season
Costa Rica's stormy season falls in the middle of May and November, with the heaviest downpour falling in October. As the month progressed, the downpour is persistent. Luckily, notwithstanding amid the stormy season, it doesn't rain constantly. Up until late June, it's typically generally sunny. Whatever is left of the time, most days will be sunny and exceptionally sticky, with a few hours of evening precipitation.
The heaviest rain ordinarily tumbles toward the upper east and southwest of Costa Rica. On the Pacific coast, so much rain falls on the Osa Peninsula and Drake Bay amid September and October that a few hotels briefly close.
Neighborhood conditions
Getting away from the downpour can be as basic as intersection the nation. In September and October, while the west bank of Costa Rica is soaked with downpour, the east Caribbean side is regularly sunny and dry. At the point when the wind goes the inverse route in January and February and cuts the polar air down along the Caribbean coast, the inverse is valid.
All that wet climate is typically limited to the other side of Costa Rica by the spine of mountains running down the center. The Tilaran and Cordillera mountain reaches are a piece of the Continental Divide. At the point when the tempests begin coming in off the Pacific, the mountain reaches keep the majority of the precipitation just toward the west. At the point when overwhelming hurricanes roll in from the Caribbean Sea, the mountains keep the downpour from intersection the nation.
Then again, on the off chance that you anticipate investigating Costa Rica's reality popular downpour woods, you are going to get wet, regardless of what time of year you go. Downpour backwoods blossom with downpour. The higher you go in the mountains, the wetter it will be. It might be somewhat drier on the off chance that you visit in the middle of December and April, however it won't be dry.
High in the Tilaran Range, it is wet to the point that the Monteverde nature safeguard gets all its water straightforwardly from the mists. In this cloud woodland, the dampness from the mists continually consolidates onto the leaves above you, so your decisions range in the middle of dribbling and splashed. In the wet season, cloud woodlands get around 10% more precipitation than lower height downpour woods. In the dry season, the measure of precipitation can be multiplied!