The Venezuelan Coastal Range (Spanish: Cordillera de la Costa or Serranía de la Costa), also known as Venezuelan Caribbean Mountain System (Spanish: Sistema Montañoso Caribe), is a mountain range system and one of the eight natural regions of Venezuela, that runs along the central and eastern portions of Venezuela's northern coast.
The Cojedes River separates the western end of the Coastal Range from the Cordillera de Mérida to the southeast.
The Capital District lies in a valley between two branches of the Serranía del Litoral: with Cerro El Ávila (peak) and El Ávila National Park in the Cordillera de la Costa Central to the north, and smaller hills to the south.
The Araya and Paria xeric scrub also includes Isla Margarita and extends south onto the mainland to Cumaná.
At elevations from 600–2,675 metres (1,969–8,776 ft) lie the humid evergreen Cordillera de la Costa montane forests ecoregion of the montane tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests biome, which form eleven discontinuous enclaves across the high summits of the eastern and western portions of the range.