Why This Caribbean Island Is Suddenly Everywhere on American Travelers’ Radars

By: - October 13th, 2025
antigua beach
Pigeon Beach in Antigua.

The beaches. All 365 of them. The food scene, where waterfront fish shacks and polished fine dining live side by side. The warm, unhurried schedule of island days. Antigua and Barbuda has always had the right ingredients for a perfect Caribbean escape, and in recent years it’s been getting hotter than ever. 

Through June 2025, arrivals from the United States climbed nearly ten percent year over year, rising from 91,556 to 100,395. That steady surge is pushing Antigua and Barbuda to the top of the travel wish list for more and more American travelers. And it’s not just the beaches drawing them in. It’s the way the destination has quietly positioned themselves at the very center of the region’s luxury all-inclusive movement.

The Capital of Caribbean Luxury All-Inclusive Resorts 

Antigua has built its reputation on understated elegance, and nowhere is that more evident than in its luxury all-inclusive scene. This isn’t the mass-market version of all-inclusive. It’s private plunge pools, sunset cocktails on quiet terraces, and service that feels personal.

Hammock Cove Antigua sets the tone with a modern, adults-only experience defined by sleek design and butler-attended villas overlooking deep blue water. A short drive away, Galley Bay Resort & Spa blends barefoot romance with old Caribbean charm, wrapped around one of the island’s most spectacular beaches.

beach at this all-inclusive caribbean authentic vacation
One of the beaches at The Verandah Antigua.

For travelers who want privacy and immersion, Hermitage Bay offers tucked-away hillside suites, all with panoramic sea views and private plunge pools. And at Keyonna Beach Resort, the experience is stripped down to what matters most: sand, sea, and intimate connection.

Together, these resorts have made Antigua the unofficial capital of Caribbean luxury all-inclusive travel — a place where sophistication doesn’t require crowds.

A Culinary Scene with Personality

Antigua’s food scene punches well above its weight. At Sheer Rocks, a cliffside perch overlooking the turquoise sea, the island’s easy elegance meets inventive Mediterranean-Caribbean cuisine. Down on the sand, Catherine’s Café delivers effortless Riviera charm with long lunches under almond trees. Le Bistro, the island’s first fine dining restaurant, continues to set the standard with classic French flavors, while Mamma Mia brings casual authenticity to the table. And did we mention the new-look Rokuni

Even food shopping can be an experience here. The gourmet aisles of Epicurean Fine Foods  are a local institution — a kind of market-meets-meeting-place that reveals just how much the island values good food. It’s one of the best markets in the Caribbean, something that’s particularly important if you’re staying in a villa. 

Floating Bars and Barefoot Afternoons

Some of Antigua’s best moments unfold offshore. Out on the water, Kon Tiki Bar bobs gently in the bay, serving cold rum punches and perfect sunset views to travelers who arrive by boat or swim right up. And just offshore from Jumby Bay Island, The Hut delivers that unmistakable barefoot-luxury feeling — a rum-forward, toes-in-the-sand kind of place that’s pure Caribbean escape.

It’s this blend of casual indulgence and natural beauty that gives Antigua its easygoing charm.

caribbean island beach hut
The Hut on Little Jumby.

Where History Is Alive

Antigua isn’t just sun and sea — it’s also home to one of the Caribbean’s most significant heritage sites: Nelson’s Dockyard. A UNESCO World Heritage Site, the dockyard is a beautifully preserved 18th-century naval base built by the British, now transformed into a lively cultural hub.

Wandering its cobblestone paths feels like stepping into another time. Historic buildings now house elegant inns, restaurants, and galleries, while yachts drift in and out of English Harbour just as they have for centuries. It’s a rare blend of living history and modern island life.

Boutique Hotels with Character

Beyond the headline resorts, Antigua has mastered the art of intimate hospitality. The Inn at English Harbour channels the island’s heritage with colonial-style elegance and sweeping views over the historic harbor. A few steps away, Admiral’s Inn places travelers directly inside history — set within 18th-century naval buildings, with rooms that look out onto one of the Caribbean’s most storied anchorages.

On the island’s north side, Weatherills Hotel blends stately plantation architecture with a quiet, contemporary sensibility. These kinds of stays are part of Antigua’s appeal — boutique properties that trade scale for atmosphere and soul.

The Epicenter of Pickleball 

The island may be steeped in history, but it’s also perfectly in step with the present. Pickleball has taken off here, with more luxury resorts adding dedicated courts and hosting friendly tournaments under the Caribbean sun. Travelers can play a morning match at places like The Verandah Antigua, St James’s Club or the Pineapple Beach Club, then cool off in the turquoise sea just steps away.

It’s become a new kind of social ritual on the island — active, sun-soaked, and surprisingly fun — adding yet another layer to the Antigua experience.

A Different Kind of Escape

Antigua isn’t trying to be the biggest destination. It’s aiming to be the most effortless. Here, the best moments happen quietly — floating off Half Moon Bay, walking through English Harbour at golden hour, or sipping a rum punch as pelicans skim the surface of the bay.

Across the channel, Barbuda offers something even rarer: unspoiled pink-sand beaches and the kind of remoteness that feels almost impossible to find. It’s an escape in the purest sense — and it’s getting some serious buzz, with the new Barbuda Ocean Club and Robert De Niro’s highly-anticipated project. 

Why Americans Are Coming

Better airlift has made getting to Antigua and Barbuda easier from major U.S. cities. But what’s fueling the island’s rise is the kind of travel experience it promises: elegant, calm, and authentically Caribbean. And the space to feel at home. 

Americans aren’t just looking for another resort — they’re looking for places that still feel like places. Antigua’s scale, its mix of intimacy and polish, and its elevated all-inclusive scene make it exactly that.

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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