This Overwater Bar in Bonaire Has Cold Beer, Fish Tacos, and Front-Row Ocean Views

By: - February 2nd, 2026
bonaire overwater
Karel's in Bonaire is a fave.

We love overwater bars. There’s something visceral about walking out over the sea, ordering your drink and looking all around you and seeing only sea. Our favorites range from Turks and Caicos to Nevis, but there’ also a rather special one on the island of Bonaire (a place in the news during this cold patch as the warmest place in the Caribbean). 

It’s called Karel’s, and it should be on your bucket list. 

The walk to Karel’s begins on land and ends over water. A narrow wooden pier extends from the waterfront in Kralendijk, carrying you away from the street and out into the Caribbean, where the sea runs clear beneath the boards and small fish move in and out of the shadows cast by the bar above. By the time you reach the end of the dock, the town has dropped away. What remains is water on all sides, open sky, and a bar built directly into the sea.

Karel’s stands fully offshore, supported by pilings driven into the seabed, its deck hovering just high enough above the surface to keep the water close. From the edge, you can look straight down into the shallows or out across the channel toward Klein Bonaire. Boats idle nearby, and the island’s water taxi ties up alongside, delivering beachgoers throughout the day and picking them up again when the sun lowers and the deck fills.

This is one of the most visible gathering places on the island of Bonaire, positioned at the heart of the capital yet removed from it by a few dozen feet of water. The setting hasn’t been dressed up or hidden behind landscaping. It remains open, exposed, and unmistakably part of the working waterfront.

The Deck and the Crowd

The layout is straightforward. A long bar runs parallel to the water, backed by shelves of bottles and shaded by a simple roof. Tables spread across the deck, some pushed right to the rail so close to the edge that feet hover above the sea. Umbrellas offer cover from the sun, and the wood underfoot shows years of use, softened by salt air and traffic.

The crowd changes constantly. Divers arrive still marked by sun and salt, rinsed and relaxed after time offshore. Locals stop in for a drink because it’s on the way and because it’s always there. Cruise passengers drift in from the pier, drawn by the sight of tables set over open water. Conversations overlap in multiple languages, and the bar absorbs them easily, never shifting its pace to match any single group.

Music plays quietly enough to leave room for the sound of glasses, the scrape of chairs, and the water moving below. From almost every seat, the view stays wide and uninterrupted.

What You Eat and Drink Here

The menu leans into island standards and casual favorites, built for long stays rather than quick stops. Seafood plays a central role. Fish burgers arrive on soft rolls, simply dressed and meant to be eaten by hand. Tacos filled with tuna. There are great burgers and even paella.

It works just as well after a day in the water as it does with a second or third drink. Dutch snacks appear too, including bitterballen, a nod to the island’s European ties and a reliable companion to the uber-popular Polar beer from nearby Venezuela. 

Behind the bar, the pours are uncomplicated and generous. Amstel Bright flows steadily, cold and light in the heat. Rum punches come mixed with fruit and ice, sweet enough to linger without overpowering. Mojitos are built with fresh mint and lime, and margaritas arrive sharp and cold, served without excess garnish. The drinks match the setting: practical, refreshing, and designed to be reordered.

Nothing about the food or cocktails demands attention on its own. Together, they keep you in your seat longer than expected.

A Fixed Point on the Waterfront

As the light changes, the bar doesn’t shift its posture. Boats settle offshore. The water darkens beneath the deck. Small lights switch on along the pier and reflect in broken lines across the surface. The water taxi makes its final runs, its engine fading as it pulls away toward Klein Bonaire.

Karel’s remains exactly where it is, holding a mix of people who arrived for different reasons and ended up sharing the same stretch of wood over the sea. The appeal isn’t novelty or reinvention. It’s the simple fact of sitting offshore, drink in hand, with Bonaire visible behind you and water on every other side.

On an island known for what lies below the surface, Karel’s offers a rare vantage point directly above it, steady and unchanged, a bar built out into the Caribbean

About the author

Guy Britton is the managing editor of Caribbean Journal. With more than four decades of experience traveling the Caribbean, he is one of the world's foremost experts covering the region.
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