This Up-and-Coming Caribbean Island Has Sandals’ Newest All-Inclusive Overwater Bungalows

By: - September 6th, 2025
sandals st vincent
The Overwater Villas at the Sandals St Vincent resort.

It begins with the journey. Saint Vincent is not one of the big-name Caribbean islands, not the one with endless direct flights and resorts lined up shoulder to shoulder. It’s different, quieter, more remote. When you arrive, the mountains rise up sharply from the coast, the rainforest dripping into the sea. The roads wind slowly through fishing villages, the ocean never far from view. You feel, almost instantly, that you’re someplace apart — someplace that doesn’t fit the familiar rhythm of the Caribbean.

That’s exactly what makes Sandals Saint Vincent, which opened last year (and already transformed the country’s tourism), so remarkable. It isn’t like any other Sandals resort in the region. Yes, it’s all-inclusive, with everything folded into your stay: unlimited dining and cocktails, butler service, transfers, watersports, entertainment. But here, the concept of all-inclusive feels different—infused with the sense of remoteness, of being anchored in a setting that has remained largely untouched. You’re not just getting an abundance of amenities. You’re getting a destination that feels like it was made for seclusion.

The Rise of Overwater Villas

For years, overwater villas were synonymous with the South Pacific—romantic escapes in Bora Bora or Tahiti that felt impossibly far away. But in the last decade, that idea has transformed. These villas are no longer reserved for honeymoons in distant oceans. They’ve become one of the most sought-after experiences in global travel, a benchmark of luxury and privacy.

And in the Caribbean, no one has embraced that better than Sandals. The brand was the first to bring overwater villas to the region, taking the concept from the far reaches of the Pacific and making it accessible within a few hours’ flight of the U.S. They set the standard with their launches in Jamaica and St. Lucia — and now, in Saint Vincent, the idea has reached its most spectacular expression yet.

The Villas

Sandals Saint Vincent’s Overwater Villas are two-story, 1,248-square-foot sanctuaries suspended between rainforest and sea. With a king bed, soaking tub, premium in-room bar, and full butler service, the interiors are as indulgent as they are private. Step outside and the luxury unfolds across a hanging daybed, a sundeck perched above the waves, and a second-floor terrace designed for sunset views.

All-Inclusive Luxury

Every villa stay comes with the full Sandals all-inclusive package: unlimited dining, cocktails, and wine; in-room dining; watersports and scuba for certified divers; and complimentary transfers by both land and sea. It’s the signature Sandals experience, elevated by the dramatic setting of Saint Vincent’s private cove.

The Setting

The cove itself is untouched, with the rainforest pressing close behind and the Caribbean Sea stretching out in front. The villas float just offshore, close enough to the island to hear the tree frogs at night, far enough away to feel like you’re on your own private islet.

How Much They Cost

The Overwater Villas at Sandals Saint Vincent start at around $1,445 per person, per night, with rates varying by season and availability. The price includes all meals, drinks, activities, transfers, and butler service—positioning the villas as one of the most exclusive all-inclusive experiences in the region.

How to Get There

Saint Vincent is served by Argyle International Airport, with nonstop flights from Miami and seasonal service from New York. There are also connections through Barbados, St. Lucia, and Trinidad. From the airport, Sandals provides complimentary round-trip transfers, and boat shuttles complete the arrival to your villa. You can fly from Miami to St Vincent right now for about $414 roundtrip on American Airlines, according to Google Flights.

Why It Matters

Overwater villas once belonged only to the South Pacific. Now, they reign in the Caribbean, and Sandals has been the pioneer. With the launch of Saint Vincent’s Overwater Villas, the brand has created not just a place to stay, but a private world of seclusion and all-inclusive luxury — an experience that feels both remote and within reach.

About the author

Karen Udler is the Deputy Travel Editor of Caribbean Journal. A graduate of Duke University, has been traveling across the Americas for three decades. First an expert on Latin American travel, Karen has been traveling with CJ for more than a decade. She likes to focus on wellness, luxury travel and food.
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