The Bahamas Is the Top Caribbean Destination for Gen Z and Gen Alpha, According to a New Report

By: - June 15th, 2026
bahamas gen z
The Bahamas is number one for Gen Z.

A new report from Amadeus and the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Association shows the islands pulling ahead with the travelers every destination is now chasing.

The Bahamas has emerged as the Caribbean’s leading destination for Gen Z and Gen Alpha travelers, according to the newly released 2026 Caribbean Travel Trends Report from Amadeus and the Caribbean Hotel and Tourism Association.

Travelers under the age of 26 now account for 22 percent of all tourist arrivals to the Caribbean, a cohort spanning both Gen Z and the older edge of Gen Alpha. And no destination is capturing them quite like The Bahamas.

The country leads the entire region with a 26 percent share of those arrivals, putting it well ahead of the field for a demographic that destinations across the Caribbean are increasingly competing to win.

It is a notable distinction at a moment when the region’s travel picture is in flux. The same report found that overseas demand to the Caribbean grew just 1 percent year over year, a sharp moderation from the 21 percent and 8 percent gains posted in the two prior years.

That slowdown has pushed the conversation toward who is traveling, not just how many. Gen Z and Gen Alpha represent the next decade of demand, and a strong share of them today signals a destination with real staying power.

The Bahamas has plenty working in its favor with this group. Its proximity to the United States makes it one of the most accessible Caribbean destinations from major gateways, an outsized advantage for younger travelers booking shorter, more spontaneous trips.

That accessibility matters more than it might seem. A traveler in their early twenties is far likelier to commit to a quick getaway when the flight is short and the connection count is zero, and few destinations deliver that combination from the eastern United States like The Bahamas.

The country has also leaned hard into the experiences that resonate with a social-first generation. From the swimming pigs of Exuma to the pink sands of Harbour Island and the buzzing energy of Nassau and Paradise Island, The Bahamas offers exactly the kind of shareable, photo-ready moments that drive discovery on social feeds.

Those moments are not incidental to how this cohort travels. Younger travelers increasingly choose destinations they have already encountered through video and imagery, and The Bahamas has a deep bench of instantly recognizable settings that translate effortlessly to a phone screen.

Its hotel landscape spans the full range of what these travelers might want, too. Atlantis Paradise Island and Baha Mar anchor the high-energy, resort-driven end of the market, while the country’s Out Islands deliver the quieter, design-led stays that have become catnip on travel feeds.

That breadth lets The Bahamas capture young travelers at very different price points and trip styles. A first big international trip and a milestone celebration can both happen within the same archipelago, which keeps travelers returning as their budgets and tastes evolve.

The findings arrive from the 2026 Caribbean Travel Trends Report, unveiled at the Caribbean Travel Forum in Antigua and Barbuda. The report draws on Amadeus Travel Intelligence data covering air travel, hospitality and traveler behavior across a full 12-month window.

That methodology gives the youth numbers weight. Rather than relying on surveys or stated intent, the report tracks actual booking and arrival behavior, making the Bahamas’ lead a reflection of where young travelers are genuinely going rather than where they say they might.

Beyond the demographic numbers, the report painted a region entering a more strategic phase, one increasingly defined by data-driven targeting and the hunt for higher-value travelers. Latin American demand has surged, premium travel from South America has spiked, and smaller destinations are quietly outpacing the region’s biggest names.

Demand from Latin American source markets climbed 24 percent year over year, with premium travel from South America surging an extraordinary 117 percent. Markets like Peru and Argentina posted some of the steepest premium-travel gains in the region, opening a powerful new diversification channel beyond the traditional North American and European base.

The report also found momentum shifting toward the region’s challengers. While top-tier destinations held essentially flat, second-tier destinations grew, a sign that growth is increasingly being driven by smaller markets expanding from a lower base.

Against that backdrop, the Bahamas’ youth lead reads as a competitive edge rather than a footnote. Winning a demographic that the rest of the region is only beginning to court positions the country to convert early loyalty into decades of repeat travel.

For The Bahamas, the distinction adds another layer to an already strong run. The country has posted standout growth from the Canadian market, welcoming more than 121,000 Canadian travelers in a single recent year, the biggest such jump of any Caribbean destination.

It remains the undisputed powerhouse of Caribbean cruising as well, a position that introduces enormous numbers of first-time visitors to the country every year. Many of those cruise passengers are themselves young travelers sampling the destination before returning for a longer land-based stay.

That cruise-to-stayover pipeline could prove especially valuable with this cohort. A teenager or twenty-something who first experiences Nassau on a cruise becomes a prime candidate for a future resort or Out Island trip, and the Bahamas’ youth numbers suggest that conversion is already happening at scale.

The challenge now is sustaining the lead. Capturing a generation’s attention is one thing, and holding it as travelers age into higher spending power, more complex trips and growing brand loyalty is another, and that is where the country’s range of hotels and experiences becomes its greatest asset.

The takeaway for the rest of the Caribbean is clear enough. The destinations that win the under-26 traveler today are positioning themselves for the bookings that matter most tomorrow, and right now, The Bahamas is leading that race by a comfortable margin.

It is a lead built on access, imagery and variety, the three things this generation prizes most in a destination. And as the region recalibrates around higher-value, year-round demand, the country that already owns its youngest market may find itself owning its future one as well.

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