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Port Royal sits at the tip of the Palisadoes peninsula, roughly 8 km (5 miles) from central Kingston. By private transfer the drive typically takes around 30 minutes, depending on traffic. Because the distance is short, Port Royal works perfectly as a standalone day trip or as a stop on the way to or from Norman Manley International Airport, which sits along the same peninsula road.
A focused visit to the main sites — Fort Charles, the Maritime Museum inside the fort, and the Giddy House — takes roughly 2 to 3 hours. If you add a walk through the quiet fishing village, time at the waterfront, and a seafood lunch at one of the local spots, a comfortable half-day is ideal. There is no need to rush, but Port Royal is compact enough that you will not need a full day to see its highlights.
The three anchor attractions are Fort Charles, the Giddy House, and the Port Royal Maritime Museum. Fort Charles is a 17th-century military fortification where Henry Morgan and later Horatio Nelson once stood watch, offering sweeping views of Kingston Harbour and the Caribbean. The Maritime Museum inside the fort displays colonial-era artifacts recovered from the surrounding seas. The Giddy House is an 1888 artillery store dramatically tilted by the 1907 earthquake — walking inside genuinely throws off your balance. Together, these three sites tell the full arc of Port Royal's rise, ruin, and slow resurgence.
Port Royal is one of the most historically charged places in the Caribbean. Once the wealthiest and most notorious city in the New World, it was ruled by the pirate Henry Morgan and then swallowed by the sea in the catastrophic 1692 earthquake. Today you can walk the ramparts of Fort Charles, stand inside the tilted Giddy House, and look out over the very waters hiding an entire 17th-century city beneath 40 feet of sea. It is compact, dramatic, and unlike anything else in Jamaica — a genuine open-air history lesson that doubles as one of the island's most distinctive half-day experiences.
Port Royal is located at the end of a single peninsula road, which means your arrival and departure options are limited. A private Daytrip transfer gives you a professional driver, door-to-door convenience, and the flexibility to set your own pace rather than timing your visit around a bus schedule. It also makes it easy to combine Port Royal with other Kingston-area stops — like the Bob Marley Museum or Devon House — on the same journey, turning a single transfer into a fuller day of discovery.