St. George's, Grenada

Evergreen city guide with quick facts, travel, business, and culture.

Overview

St. George's is one of the Caribbean's most picturesque capitals — a compact harbor town where pastel-painted colonial buildings climb steep hillsides above a horseshoe-shaped natural port, where the Saturday morning spice market fills the air with nutmeg and cinnamon, where Fort George commands panoramic views from its 18th-century ramparts, and where the Carenage waterfront blends working fishing boats with visiting yachts in a scene that has changed remarkably little in two centuries.

Harbor Town

The Carenage's colonial waterfront, fishing boats, yachts, and hillside architecture create one of the Caribbean's most photogenic capitals.

Colonial History

Fort George, Fort Frederick, Georgian churches, and the National Museum trace 350 years of French, British, and independent Grenadian history.

Spice Capital

Saturday market overflows with nutmeg, cinnamon, cloves, cocoa, and tropical fruits at prices that make European spice shops look absurd.

Beach Gateway

Grand Anse Beach (10 min), Morne Rouge Bay, Magazine Beach, and the underwater sculpture park are all within easy reach.

Yachting Hub

Port Louis Marina, sailing festivals, and Grenada's position below the hurricane belt make St. George's a premier Caribbean yacht destination.

History

St. George's was founded as Fort Royal by the French in 1650, becoming the capital of their colony of La Grenade. The British captured it in 1762 and renamed it after King George III. The town's strategic harbor made it a valuable Caribbean port through centuries of colonial competition. In 1983, a military coup and the execution of Prime Minister Maurice Bishop at Fort George prompted a US-led invasion (Operation Urgent Fury) — the most significant military intervention in the Eastern Caribbean. Hurricane Ivan devastated the town in 2004, destroying 90% of structures including the historic roofscape, but St. George's has been rebuilt while preserving its colonial character. Today it serves as Grenada's administrative, commercial, and cultural capital.

Culture

St. George's dining splits between harbor-view restaurants (The Nutmeg for seafood with Carenage views, BB's Crabback for upscale Grenadian cuisine) and local spots for authentic food. Oil-down — Grenada's national dish of breadfruit, salted meat, callaloo, and dumplings in coconut milk — is found at local restaurants and Saturday market stalls. Roti shops serve excellent curried fillings in flatbread for EC$12-18. The fish market on the eastern Carenage sells the morning catch. Street vendors at Market Square offer fish cakes, coconut drops, and fresh fruit juice. For evening drinks, the Victory Bar at Port Louis Marina and Dodgy Dock at True Blue Bay draw yachting and expat crowds. Festivals: Grenada Carnival (August — Spicemas: mas bands, soca, J'ouvert, calypso monarch), Grenada Chocolate Festival (May — estate tours, tastings, bean-to-bar workshops), Grenada Sailing Week (January/February — racing and cruising fleets), Carriacou Regatta (July/August — traditional boat racing). Museums: Grenada National Museum (Carenage — Amerindian to modern history), Fort George (1705 — colonial fortifications and panoramic views), House of Chocolate (Young Street — cocoa history and tastings).

Practical Info

Safety: St. George's is generally safe for visitors. Take normal precautions — avoid poorly lit areas around the Esplanade after dark, don't leave valuables unattended on beaches, and agree taxi fares before departure. The steep streets can be slippery when wet. Summer heat (28-32°C) makes midday walking tiring — carry water. Emergency: 911 (police), 434 (ambulance), 440 (fire). Language: English (official). Grenadian English has a distinctive accent and local expressions. Some older residents speak a French-influenced creole (patois). Communication is effortless for English speakers. Currency: Eastern Caribbean Dollar (EC$, XCD). US dollars widely accepted. Cards accepted at hotels, restaurants, and larger shops. Cash preferred at the market, street vendors, and local restaurants. ATMs at Republic Bank and CIBC FirstCaribbean on the Carenage.
Travel Overview

St. George's rewards exploration on foot despite its steep terrain — the compact center packs colonial architecture, working harbor life, a vibrant market, historic forts, and waterfront dining into a walkable area that reveals itself in layers. The Carenage, the inner harbor, is the heart: colorful warehouses (many converted to restaurants, shops, and the National Museum) line the waterfront where traditional wooden boats unload fish alongside luxury yachts. The Saturday morning market at Market Square is essential — vendors sell tropical fruits, ground spices (buy nutmeg, cinnamon, and cocoa for a fraction of supermarket prices back home), handmade baskets, and local produce while the town comes alive with social energy. Fort George (1705, originally French Fort Royal) sits on the headland above the Carenage with cannons pointing seaward and 360-degree views across harbor, town, coastline, and mountains. The town serves as the gateway to Grand Anse Beach (10 minutes south by taxi), the underwater sculpture park in Molinere Bay (15 minutes north), and the rainforest interior with its waterfalls and spice plantations. Port Louis Marina on the Lagoon has transformed St. George's into a premier Caribbean yachting destination, and the cruise ship terminal at the Esplanade brings visitors who discover a working capital rather than a tourist facade.

Discover St. George's

The Carenage — St. George's inner harbor — is the town's defining feature and one of the Caribbean's most photogenic waterfronts. The horseshoe-shaped natural harbor shelters everything from brightly painted traditional fishing boats to gleaming charter yachts, with a backdrop of colonial-era warehouses painted in terracotta, yellow, blue, and green climbing the steep hillside behind. The waterfront promenade connects restaurants (The Nutmeg for harbor views and fresh seafood), shops, the Grenada National Museum (housed in a former French barracks and prison, tracing history from Amerindian settlement through slavery, colonialism, and the 1983 US intervention), and the public library. Early morning brings fishermen unloading catches at the fish market on the eastern Carenage, while evening fills the waterfront bars with locals and visitors watching the sun set behind the harbor entrance. The Sendall Tunnel (1894), carved through the headland connecting Carenage to the Esplanade (outer harbor), creates a unique pedestrian shortcut that doubles as a local landmark.

Diplomatic missions in St. George's

5 embassies based in this city, grouped by region.