This Caribbean Island Filled With Jaw-Dropping Beaches Just Got Three New Nonstop Flights

By: - January 19th, 2026
caribbean island beaches flights anguilla
Rendezvous Beach is almost indescribably beautiful.

Rendezvous Bay. Meads Bay. Shoal Bay. Maundays Bay. In just about any other destination, each of these would be the best beach on the whole island. In Anguilla, they’re all here.

They run long and pale, edged by calm water and just enough development to make a day feel complete without ever feeling crowded. You move between them easily, sometimes by design, sometimes just because the light looks better a few miles down the road. This is what Anguilla does better than anywhere else: space, consistency, and beaches that never feel overused.

Getting here has always been the tradeoff. That’s now changing.

The News

Anguilla has added three new nonstop flights from the northeastern United States, with AnguillAir, operated by BermudAir, launching direct service from Boston, Newark, and Baltimore/Washington. The inaugural flights began rolling out in mid-December, adding new nonstop gateways from the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic into the heart of the winter season.

Each route operates twice weekly, expanding access to an island that has traditionally required a connection through nearby hubs. The new flights also arrive at a pivotal moment, coinciding with the opening of Anguilla’s new Clayton J. Lloyd International Airport terminal, which officially began welcoming passengers just days before the first arrivals touched down.

Together, the routes and the terminal represent one of the most meaningful upgrades to Anguilla’s arrival experience in years.

Why This Matters Now

Anguilla’s appeal has never been about volume. Fewer flights helped protect the island’s calm, but they also made travel days longer and shorter stays harder to justify. These new nonstops change how the island fits into your travel calendar.

If you’re coming from the northeastern United States, you now spend less time stitching together connections and more time on the island itself. Five-night trips feel natural instead of tight. Long weekends become possible without turning travel days into endurance tests. The journey begins to match the pace of the place.

The timing matters, too. Winter is Anguilla’s prime season, when humidity drops, the water clears, and the beaches look almost unreal in clear light. Demand is strong, but the island never tips into chaos. Easier access during this window doesn’t change the atmosphere. It simply removes friction.

The Arrival Experience

The flights are operated by BermudAir using Embraer 190 aircraft, configured without middle seats, so you always have either an aisle or a window. It’s a small detail, but it sets the tone. Boarding feels calmer. The cabin feels less compressed. The flight feels like the beginning of a vacation rather than something to get through.

On arrival, the experience is noticeably smoother. The new terminal is modern and efficient without feeling oversized for the island. You move through quickly, collect your bags, and step straight into warm air. Taxis are waiting just outside, and because Anguilla is compact, you’re usually at your hotel within minutes.

You don’t lose half a day arriving here anymore. That changes how the trip feels from the start.

What the Island Gives You

What I love about Anguilla is that you’re never locked into one version of the island. Beaches stay wide and uncrowded, even in high season, and you don’t need a plan for every hour. You can move easily from Shoal Bay East to Meads Bay to Maundays Bay without changing the pace of the day or the feel of the trip.

Shoal Bay East stays bright and shallow, ideal for swimming and long walks along the waterline. Meads Bay runs wide and steady, with room to settle in without feeling watched or managed. Maundays Bay feels almost sculpted, framed by low development and calm water that holds its color throughout the day. Rendezvous Bay stretches long and open, with a way of slowing you down without asking.

Distances are short. Traffic never defines the day. You’re free to let the island guide the rhythm.

The Food Scene

Food is one of Anguilla’s quiet strengths, and it reveals itself slowly. For an island just over 30 square miles, there are roughly 100 restaurants, a number that surprises most first-time visitors once they start eating.

Seafood anchors the menu culture (hello, Jacala), but the range is broader than you expect. You’ll find beach shacks serving grilled lobster steps from the water, casual lunches built around snapper and rice and peas, and dinners where Caribbean flavors meet French, Italian, and Asian influences. Many of the best meals happen in small, owner-run restaurants, where consistency and reputation matter more than scale. Of course, then there’s Veya (if you know, you know).

Beachfront dining is part of daily life here. Tables sit close to the sand. Shoes stay optional. You can decide where to eat without locking in plans days ahead, especially outside the busiest holiday weeks. Meals stretch. Conversations linger. The sound of the sea does most of the work.

Where to Stay

Aurora Anguilla anchors the island’s resort offering on the southwest coast. The property combines a long stretch of beach with one of the Caribbean’s most complete resort setups, including a championship golf course, multiple pools, and a wellness program designed around actually slowing down. It’s a strong choice if you want room to settle in and the option to stay largely on property without feeling boxed in.

On Shoal Bay East, Zemi Beach House delivers a more intimate experience on one of Anguilla’s most consistently beautiful beaches. Rooms are refined without feeling formal, the dining scene is thoughtful and well-paced, and the spa draws on Thai wellness traditions in a way that feels natural rather than themed.

Tranquility Beach offers a different rhythm altogether. Set directly on Meads Bay, the 15-unit property focuses on beachfront villa-style suites that feel residential rather than resort-driven. Days unfold at your own pace, with space to spread out and a setting that feels closer to living on the island than visiting it briefly. (It’s a great family resort, as one of our editors found).

Easier to Reach, Same Anguilla

What’s changed is the journey, not the destination. With new nonstop flights and a modernized terminal, getting to Anguilla is faster and simpler. Once you arrive, the island behaves exactly as it always has.

Beaches remain uncrowded. Evenings stay quiet unless you want them otherwise. The pace never feels rushed. You’re not navigating crowds or schedules. You’re just on the island.

That balance matters. Many destinations change once access improves. Anguilla has made the trip easier without making the place busier.

The Bottom Line

With new nonstop flights from Boston, Newark, and Baltimore/Washington, Anguilla has made a meaningful move to simplify the journey while keeping the destination itself unchanged. For travelers drawn to wide beaches, understated luxury, a world-class dining scene, and a smoother arrival, these new routes open the door to one of the Caribbean’s most consistently rewarding islands.

Prices on BermudAir

So what do these flights cost? As an example, we found fares from Boston to Anguilla roundtrip for about $1,198 roundtrip. That’s pretty steep. Of course, this is the only way to get nonstop to Anguilla from any of these three cities. If you want to fly from Boston to Anguilla through Miami on American Airlines, for instance, it will only run about $594 — but it will take you about nine hours of flight and layover time. That’s the trade off. But the idea of being able to board a plane in one of these cities and arrive directly in Anguilla, well, it’s compelling.

News

Jamaica Maps Out a Major Rebuild for the Historic Town of Falmouth

falmouth jamaica

The Port Authority of Jamaica is preparing a comprehensive restoration and resilience plan for the historic town of Falmouth, a project that could shape one of the most significant reconstruction efforts in the destination’s modern history. The plan, which is expected to be completed by the end of January, is designed to guide Falmouth’s recovery […]

Stay

Caribbean on Points: How to Stay in St. Kitts For Less Than 52,000 Per Night

caribbean on points

You can feel St. Kitts in the air here: trade winds off the water, palms moving in the background, and that steady, end-of-winter light that makes the beach look almost polished. Frigate Bay is the kind of place where you can keep your days simple—pool, sand, a long lunch that becomes a second one—then let […]

News

Melia's New Dominican Republic Project Is Moving Forward

rooms club med

One of the Caribbean’s fastest-emerging resort destinations is about to add another major international name. Dominican Republic Tourism Minister David Collado said that plans for a Meliá hotel in Miches have cleared all regulatory approvals, paving the way for construction in the coastal municipality in El Seibo province. The formal investment announcement is expected later […]


Flight Watcher: We Found Toronto to Nassau Roundtrip for $361

The latest Flight Watcher brings you a nonstop flight from Toronto to Nassau, with roundtrips at $361 roundtrip on Porter Airlines, according to Google Flights. The ticket would be for travel from March 2 through March 7. For early March, when winter demand for the Bahamas is at its strongest, that fare opens up a […]

How Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr Found Inspiration on a Tiny Caribbean Island 

“He’s allowed me to go up to the mountain. And I’ve looked over. And I’ve seen the Promised Land.” It’s one of Dr. Martin Luther King’s most iconic speeches: “I’ve Been to the Mountaintop,” his address to striking sanitation workers in Memphis, Tenn. on April 3, 1968.  And it was born on the tiny island […]

Hotel Tracker: A Cliffside Negril, Jamaica Retreat for $266

The latest Flight Watcher brings you a nonstop flight from Toronto to Nassau, with roundtrips at $361 roundtrip on Porter Airlines, according to Google Flights. The ticket would be for travel from March 2 through March 7. For early March, when winter demand for the Bahamas is at its strongest, that fare opens up a […]

Exuma Is Getting Its First-Ever Culinary Festival This May

Exuma has long been known for its water first. This spring, it’s putting food on the calendar. The Bahamas’ Grand Isle Resort in Emerald Bay is set to host the inaugural Taste of Exuma, a four-day culinary festival running May 14–17, bringing together Michelin-star talent, Bahamian chefs, rum makers, and local producers for the island’s first event […]

SUBSCRIBE!

Sign up for Caribbean Journal's free newsletter for a daily dose of beaches, hotels, rum and the best Caribbean travel information on the net.


No. Thank You