French Guiana – CARNAVAL OF SAINT-LAURENT DU MARONI 2026: an explosion of color in the heart of West Guiana

CARNAVAL DE SAINT-LAURENT DU MARONI

CARNIVAL OF SAINT-LAURENT DU MARONI is officially launched. Since yesterday, Sunday January 11, with the arrival and crowning of the King of the Carnaval de l’Ouest, the town has been living to the rhythm of the 2026 edition, under the theme “Haut en couleurs”. Until February 18, 2026, Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni will be one of the major centers of the Guiana Carnival, alongside Cayenne and Kourou, with a dense, popular program deeply rooted in local history.

CARNIVAL OF SAINT-LAURENT DU MARONI

Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni, a city of heritage and living memory

Located on the banks of the Maroni River, on the border with Suriname, Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni occupies a singular place in Guyana’s cultural landscape. Labelled Town of Art and History, the town has a complex history, marked by its penitentiary past and a cultural diversity shaped by migration.

Founded in 1857, Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni became the administrative center of Guiana’s penal colony in 1880 with the establishment of the Transportation Camp. Today, it has been converted into the Centre d’Interprétation de l’Architecture et du Patrimoine (Architecture and Heritage Interpretation Centre). This major site, listed as a historic monument, still structures the city’s urban and symbolic identity.

The penal colony left a lasting demographic imprint: African, European, Indian, Chinese and Amerindian populations all contributed to forging a plural society. This diversity is fully reflected in local carnival practices, which combine Creole heritages, popular traditions and contemporary expressions.

CARNIVAL OF SAINT-LAURENT DU MARONI
©Ville de Saint-Laurent du Maroni
CARNIVAL OF SAINT-LAURENT DU MARONI
©Ville de Saint-Laurent du Maroni

Carnival in French Guiana: a long-standing social and deeply symbolic tradition

The CARNIVAL OF SAINT-LAURENT DU MARONI is part of the wider French Guiana’s Carnival, considered to be one of the longest in the world. It traditionally runs from Epiphany to Ash Wednesday, over six weeks of continuous festivities.

Beyond the festive aspect, the Guyanese carnival is a total social event. Heir to European traditions transformed by enslaved and then emancipated populations, over time it became a space for freedom, social satire and role reversal. Hierarchies are erased, bodies speak, masks are liberated.

CARNIVAL OF SAINT-LAURENT DU MARONI
©Ville de Saint-Laurent du Maroni : carnaval 2025
CARNIVAL OF SAINT-LAURENT DU MARONI
©Ville de Saint-Laurent du Maroni : carnaval 2025

Emblematic figures at the heart of Carnival

Impossible to mention the CARNIVAL OF SAINT-LAURENT DU MARONI without mentioning its mythical characters.

  • – The Touloulou a fully masked female figure, embodies anonymity, elegance and emancipation. In masked balls, she wields a unique power: that of inviting men to dance, symbolically overturning social codes.
  • – The Jé Farin, dressed in white and covered in flour, it harks back to the rural traditions and popular roots of carnival. Very much in evidence at Mardi Gras, it has been making a strong comeback in Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni for several years now.
  • – The King Vaval an ephemeral sovereign, reigns over the entire carnival period before being symbolically “put to death” on Ash Wednesday, bringing the festive cycle to a close.

Around them gravitate other strong figures: Diables rouges, Mariages burlesques, Nèg Marrons, Tololos, each carrying a symbolic charge linked to history, resistance and transgression.

CARNIVAL OF SAINT-LAURENT DU MARONI
©Ville de Saint-Laurent du Maroni : carnaval 2025

2026 edition: the carnival is underway

The 2026 edition of the CARNIVAL OF SAINT-LAURENT DU MARONI is well and truly underway.
Yesterday, Sunday January 11, the town officially opened the season with the arrival and crowning of the King of Carnaval de l’Ouest, between 4pm and 7pm at La Roche Bleue, a founding moment that marks Saint-Laurent-du-Maroni’s entry into carnival time.

Since then, events, balls, parades, and cavalcades have been a regular feature of local life, and the program is set to intensify right up to the Jours Gras in February.

Complete official program - Carnival 2026

CARNIVAL OF SAINT-LAURENT DU MARONI
©Ville de Saint-Laurent du Maroni 
CARNIVAL OF SAINT-LAURENT DU MARONI
©Ville de Saint-Laurent du Maroni 

A structuring event for tourism and the identity of West Guiana

The CARNIVAL OF SAINT-LAURENT DU MARONI plays a central role in attracting tourists to Western Guyana. Accommodation, catering, river transport, crafts and local commerce all benefit directly from this busy period.

Beyond the festivities, carnival acts as a cultural a tool for cultural transmission a vector of identity and a lever of heritage enhancement for a city too often reduced to its prison past.

A carnival in motion, a city in celebration

The 2026 edition of the CARNIVAL OF SAINT-LAURENT DU MARONI is already well underway. Until Ash Wednesday, the town will continue to vibrate to the sound of drums, brass and dance steps, between popular traditions, contemporary expressions and intergenerational transmission.

The CARNIVAL OF SAINT-LAURENT DU MARONI is more than just a festive event: it’s a living memory, a living culture and a collective time deeply rooted in French Guiana‘s history.

Yes, the Saint-Laurent du Maroni Carnival 2026 is underway: it was officially launched with the arrival and crowning of the King of the Western Carnival, on Sunday January 11 at La Roche Bleue. The program continues until February 18, 2026.

Highlights include the Rencontre de l’Ouest (January 23), the Grande Parade de l’Ouest (February 1), and Jours Gras: Monday, February 16, Tuesday, February 17 (Jé Farin / Diables rouges) and Wednesday, February 18 (closing vide).

The major events of the Saint-Laurent du Maroni Carnival take place at La Roche Bleue, downtown (cavalcades), at Camp de la Transportation (parades/evenings), at the market (DJ entertainment), and at Gaby Place – Avenue Christophe Colomb (carnival evenings).

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

More articles from RK

WHO
FILM & VIDEO
Tolotra

WHO: behind the scenes of Wil Aime’s cinematic gamble

With WHOWil Aime signs his first feature film and returns to the West Indies with a team, a method and a story of creation. In Guadeloupe and Martinique, his tour revealed the other side of the story: that of a film that has been supported for years, between independent creation, territorial support and the desire to make his own cinema. A comeback tour The public saw the theaters, the meetings, the photos, the post-screening exchanges. Behind this tour of WHO in Guadeloupe and Martinique, there was a precise mechanism. Dates to organize. Partners to mobilize. A team to bring in. Above all, one desire: to present the film where part of its imagination took root. From May 30 to June 1, 2026, Wil Aime and his team enjoyed a series of highlights: a special screening at Cinestar, a Creative Talk at Café Papier in Jarry, a screening at Madiana, and

Read More »
Calypso Rose
HISTORY & HERITAGE
Tolotra

Calypso Rose: 86 years old, 800 songs, and still on stage

The victory that changes a name When Trinidad renamed its calypso grand prix “Calypso Monarch” in 1978, it wasn’t by chance. It was because a woman had just won the title for the first time after decades of male domination. The woman’s name was McCartha Linda Sandy-Lewis. On stage, she was known as Calypso Rose. She was 38 years old. Forty-eight years later, in 2026, she is 86, with over 800 songs, more than 20 albums, and a presence that continues to cross international stages. From Bethel to the first songs McCartha Linda Sandy-Lewis was born on April 27, 1940 in Bethel, a village in northwest Tobago. Her father was a Spiritual Shouter Baptist minister, a long-marginalized Afro-Caribbean religious tradition. He opposed his daughter’s musical career. She nevertheless began composing and singing her own calypsos as a teenager, around the age of 15. At the time, calypso was a male

Read More »
Vincy Mas
EVENT MANAGEMENT
Tolotra

Vincy Mas: why the Saint-Vincent carnival starts in June

In Kingstown, capital of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, the countdown has begun. On June 26, 2026, Vincy Mas will open a new edition under the theme “The Great Escape”. For twelve days, until July 7, the island of around 100,000 inhabitants will host its biggest cultural event. The slogan speaks of warmth, escape and celebration. But behind the poster is a story of timing. In the mas camps, the weeks leading up to the opening are rarely silent. Costumes are being adjusted, sections prepared and the sounds that will accompany the parades rehearsed. Families return from the diaspora, visitors book their places, and Kingstown prepares for a change of pace. Vincy Mas is not an island carnival. It’s an annual landmark around which St. Vincent organizes part of its cultural life. A decisive choice in 1977 The historical uniqueness of the Vincentian carnival lies in a deliberate change. Before

Read More »

conTACT RK

we'd love to have your feedback on your experience so far

Join The List

Join our Richès Karayib community!  Sign up for our newsletter.

Want To Maximize Your Business Presence On Riches Karayib?

Complete the form to start the application