You don’t need to leave the country to find turquoise water, white sand, and that unmistakable Caribbean breeze. For U.S. citizens, several Caribbean destinations offer a full island experience—with no passport required. Whether you’re looking for a weekend escape or a longer tropical recharge, these places combine accessibility with island charm.
Here are six Caribbean destinations where you can go passport-free.
St Croix: The Art of the Vibe
St. Croix has always had its own vibe (that’s actually now part of the island’s branding). It’s quieter than its siblings, maybe less flashy—but if you know, you know. This is the island of old-world charm and new-world flavor.
The food scene is the secret weapon here: bold, fresh, and rooted in culture. Think ocean-to-table mahi at Savant in Christiansted, the perfect fish tacos in Frederiksted. You can follow it all with a rum tour at the legendary Cruzan distillery or simply a bottle of the island’s own Mutiny vodka on ice.
St Croix is filled with uncrowded beaches like this.
Add in Buck Island’s underwater trails, an untouched forest on the west end, and days that end with fried johnnycakes and sunset over Frederiksted — and you’ve got an island escape with real soul. No passport needed. Where to stay? Right now, we love smaller options like The Fred in Frederiksted and the historic Company House Hotel in Christiansted.
St. Thomas: Big Fun, Bold Flavors
St. Thomas is the energy island. Beaches? Of course. But it’s the beach and the bar. The boat and the rum punch. It’s where things happen—and the pulse is real.
St Thomas teems with beautiful beaches.
Start with Magens Bay, a stretch of calm blue water perfect for lazy swims and paddleboarding. Then head to Red Hook for a mix of beach bars, fresh-caught seafood, and music that plays until the last drink is poured. Looking for luxe? Head up to the hilltop villas with panoramic views or book a suite at Frenchman’s Reef.
This island doesn’t sleep early. It’s built for beach days and late nights. All with no passport required.
Trunk Bay in St John is one of the best beaches in the Caribbean.
St John: Villas, Views and Toes in the Sand
The island of St. John is stunning—it’s one of the most beautiful islands in the entire Caribbean, in my view. Two-thirds of it is national park, and you feel it: wild beaches, quiet hikes, nothing overbuilt. But there’s also a layer of low-key luxury here that makes it endlessly livable.
Villas are the name of the game—hillside homes with infinity pools and Coral Bay views. It’s villa culture, island style. But finding your villa isn’t always easy — that’s why we recommend working with Blue Sky Luxury Travels — think of them as your personal villa concierge.
And now, there’s the newest hotel, the adults-only The Saint, bringing a boutique hotel vibe right into Cruz Bay with just the right blend of energy and intimacy.
You can spend the day beach-hopping across Cinnamon, Trunk, and Maho Bays, stop at a beach bar with your feet in the sand, and head back to your villa for grilled fish under the stars. It’s untamed and elevated all at once.
The colorful, historic streets of Old San Juan.
Puerto Rico, The Whole Caribbean, Wrapped Into One
Puerto Rico is where everything comes together: the music, the mountains, the flavors. You don’t need a passport—and you don’t need a plan, either. This island gives you everything.
Start in San Juan, where centuries-old Spanish forts shadow buzzing nightlife and oceanfront dining. Then head out: to El Yunque’s rainforest trails, to coffee farms in the hills, to the surf towns of the west coast. Want luxury? Book Dorado Beach. Want soul? Hit La Placita for salsa and rum.
Puerto Rico has its own rhythm, and once you’re in it, you’re hooked. It’s not just a place to visit—it’s a place to return to. This island is big and boasts all kinds of hotels; if I had to pick a favorite, it would almost certainly be the O:LV hotel in Condado — from the lagoon-view bathrooms to the sexy vibe. When I first stayed there, it changed everything I thought about Puerto Rico’s hotel sector. And it still does.
A golden sand beach in Vieques, Puerto Rico.
Vieques: The Untamed Island
Vieques feels like the Caribbean before the world found it. Wild horses roam the hills, the beaches are often empty, and the boutique hotels are tucked into nature like they’ve always been there.
This is where you go to let go. Spend the day swimming at Playa La Chiva or Sun Bay, take a sunset ride along the coast, and then—if you’re lucky—kayak into the glowing waters of the bioluminescent bay under a moonless sky. At night, retreat to a villa-style stay like El Blok or Finca Victoria, where the rooms are as offbeat as the island itself.
It’s peaceful, raw, and deeply beautiful. No lines, no stress, no passport. We like the island’s smaller places to stay, from the strikingly-designed El Blok to the off-the-grid Hix Island House.
Playa Resaca in Culebra.
Culebra: It’s All About That Beach
Culebra isn’t big. And that’s the point. It’s a place you whisper about, not post about. But those who’ve walked Flamenco Beach know—it’s one of the best in the Caribbean, period.
The water here is glass-clear. The sand is white and soft. And the island itself? Simple. Quiet. No big resorts. No cruise ships. Just a few guesthouses, a handful of beach bars, and the sound of water hitting shore.
There’s Club Seaborne, a breezy hideaway with a marina view, and a tiny airport where the planes land low enough to rattle your Piña Colada. It’s part dream, part time capsule—and all yours.
It began at the end of 2019, when all-inclusive giant Club Med opened its new Club Med Miches Playa Esmeralda.
The launch of the resort was the first for the burgeoning tourism destination of Miches, a beach community on the southern coast of Samana Bay that the Dominican Republic believes is its next big destination.
And now the Club Med is not alone.
Part of a wave of resorts planned in Miches, adults-only operator Temptation has opened two new resorts in Miches: the Temptation Miches Resort and Temptation Grand Miches Resort.
Temptation Miches has 382 suites, while the Temptation Grand Miches, the more upscale resort at the property, has 114 rooms.
The $180 million all-inclusive resort has seven restaurants, eight bars, two pools, a gym.
The adults-only resorts, which include a clothing optional pool, is in the vein of properties like Jamaica’s Hedonism — adult-themed, rather than just adults-only.
Or, as Temptation describes it, a “conceptual vacation experience for adults only where you can feel comfortable in your own skin while you party day and night.”
They’re the second and third Caribbean resorts for the Temptation brand, which is best known for its colorful Temptation Cancun Resort.
Temptation Cancun.
The latter is best known as the only resort conceived by globally renowned designer Karim Rachid, who oversaw the reimagining of the resort in 2017, one that resulted in one of the Caribbean’s most innovative resort designs.
A new luxury all-inclusive resort has opened its doors on the island of Saint Lucia.
For the first time, Hyatt’s Zoetry brand has opened in the Eastern Caribbean, with the debut of the Zoëtry Marigot Bay St Lucia.
The property is the result a transformation of the former Marigot Bay Resort into an ultra-luxe all-inclusive.
“St. Lucia’s beautiful Caribbean landscape is a natural fit for the Zoëtry Wellness & Spa Resorts brand, and we are thrilled to collaborate with the hotel owner to bring this new idyllic vacation option to the island,” says Gonzalo del Peón, Group President of AMResorts Americas and Global Commercial. “The Inclusive Collection’s entry into St. Lucia reflects our commitment to grow in markets that matter most to our guests, World of Hyatt members and customers.”
The 124-room property, set on what has long been considered one of the most beautiful bays in the Caribbean, is a mix of junior suites, master suite residences and penthouses.
The new Zoëtry has seven different dining concepts, from the upscale 1461 to the Caribbean-inspired, marina-front Le Bateau.
Le Bateau.
As with all Zoëtry resorts, wellness is paramount, and the wellness center includes The Spa Village, cabin style treatment rooms with plunge pools, sauna cabanas and a “fitness sanctuary” that is open 24 hours.
“Zoëtry Marigot Bay St. Lucia is intended to create a guest experience that cultivates moments which matter most, from personal enrichment experiences to holistic wellbeing programming for self-fulfillment that extends beyond the journey,” said Erica Doyne, Senior Vice President at Hyatt. “The Zoëtry brand’s philosophy of the ‘Art of Life,’ blends the Greek word Zoe, or life, and Poetry, or artful creations, and is expected to deliver guests unhurried pleasures with the highest level of personal service.”
Inside a room.
The resort is an addition to what is one of the most impressive collections of all-inclusive resorts in the Caribbean, from boutique options like the boutique Calabash Cove to Sandals’ trio of hotels on the island.
It is the Sth Zoetry in the Caribbean, joining properties in the Riviera Maya, Jamaica, the Dominican Republic and Curacao.
If 2021 in the Caribbean was a year of recovery, 2022 has been a year of unmistakable, unprecedented rebirth. The Caribbean has never been hotter, with just about every destination nearing (or now exceeding) its pre-pandemic travel totals, and the region cementing its position as the world’s greatest warm weather destination.
The pandemic was a lesson for the Caribbean; it reminded the region that all of its strongest assets: the beauty of its natural environment, the dynamism of its people, the vibrance of its culture, were the things travelers were seeking out — as global stress reminded all of us — and travelers worldwide – about the things that really matter. It was also a reminder of the importance of protecting all of those assets.
It’s hard to believe it’s been almost a decade since Caribbean Journal first launched the Caribbean Travel Awards, the region’s authoritative celebration of travel excellence. And while the region has changed immensely in that time, the people and places driving the Caribbean’s tourism product have only been emboldened. Caribbean travel has never been richer, stronger or more interesting, including a truly magnificent portfolio of hotels across the Caribbean Basin.
“The 2023 edition of the CTA celebrates honorees in 21 different categories, highlighting the hotspots, the difference makers and the reasons why we all love the Caribbean so very much, as selected by the CJ editorial staff,” said Alexander Britell, editor and publisher of Caribbean Journal. “Congratulations to all of the winners: you have received the highest annual honors in all of Caribbean travel and your work is at the pinnacle of Caribbean excellence.”
CaribbeanDestination of the Year: St Kitts
Experiences. Sustainability. Community. The Natural Environment. These are some of the biggest draws for the 21st century traveler, and they form the core of St Kitts’ new tourism identity. The island has been buliding a new brand centered around its essential, authentic qualities, and, well, it’s been succeeding, with unprecedented buzz and a new prime position on the global travel radar, buoyed by a new pipeline of hotels, new airlift and a travel identity powered by its people.
Caribbean Hotel of the Year: Casa De Campo, Dominican Republic
It isn’t just the best resort in the Dominican Republic by a wide margin. Casa de Campo just may be the most complete resort in all of the Caribbean, with an almost impossibly wide offering that extends from the best golf in the Caribbean to an exquisitely recreated 16th century Mediterranean village. Lots of resorts say they have something for everyone — Casa de Campo actually does, and with remarkably attentive, warm service, spectacular scenery and an overarching commitment to its local community.
Small Hotel of the Year: Sweetfield Manor, Barbados
This 10-room gem, set in the heart of Barbados’ Upper Garrison Historic District, is the quintessence of the boutique hotel: endlessly charming, historic, inextricably tied to the community with an overarching focus on wellness and authenticity. From the scores of peacocks roaming the property to its bold Caribbean-fusion cuisine, it’s what the modern traveler is yearning for.
New Hotel of the Year: ROK Hotel Kingston, Tapestry Collection by Hilton
If you haven’t been watching, the city of Kingston, Jamaica is in the midst of a full-fledged renaissance, with new energy, a thriving arts movement (led by Kingston Creative) and a new identity as the Caribbean’s next great urban travel destination. At the center is a major new addition: the ROK, a hip, sleek hotel that is helping to define the new Kingston.
Caribbean Tourism Minister of the Year: Kenneth Bryan, Cayman Islands
The Cayman Islands is already nearing its pre-pandemic tourism totals, a rather impressive feat since the destination was one of the final Caribbean destinations to reopen for tourism after the onset of the pandemic. Leading the destination’s rebirth has been Minister Bryan, who skillfully navigated the balance of public health and the economy and deftly led Cayman’s phased reopening process. Now, Cayman is on the cusp of eclipsing its all-time records in 2023, with a focused, sustainability-minded growth push spearheaded by its top tourism official.
Caribbean Tourism Executive of the Year: Joseph Boschulte, Commissioner, US Virgin Islands Department of Tourism
No Caribbean destination has seen more growth in the last three years than the US Virgin Islands, which kicked off a full-fledged tourism renaissance just after the onset of the pandemic and hasn’t looked back. And so much of that growth can be directly tied to the expert stewardship of Boschulte, who helped craft an innovative, flexible response to the challenges of the pandemic and has continued to drive the USVI’s performance with a data-driven, creative approach to modern tourism.
Caribbean Hotelier of the Year: Shernette Crichton, Half Moon, Jamaica
It’s no easy task to run a legend, and that’s precisely what the iconic Half Moon resort in Jamaica is. But Crichton, who was named GM of Half Moon in 2019, has helped lead the resort in unprecendented times, first with the debut of Half Moon’s new Eclipse resort and through the endless challenges of the pandemic, excelling on both counts. Today, Eclipse has become one of the hemisphere’s most sought after hotels, helping to take the storied Montego Bay resort into the new age of travel.
Long Bay Beach in Antigua.
Caribbean Tourist Board of the Year: Antigua and Barbuda Tourism Authority
These awards have long celebrated individuals excelling in the stewardship. But tourism is about more than just indidivudals. It’s about teams. That’s why we are proud to add a new category to the Caribbean Travel Awards: Caribbean Tourist Board of the Year, a celebartion of a tourist board or authority setting the standard with their work. This year, it’s the Antigua and Barbuda Tourism Authority, which has so expertly navigated the changing travel landscape, leading to record-breaking tourism numbers while mastefully delivering an authentic, truly Antiguan and Barbudan, travel identity, all under the outstanding direction of CEO Colin C. James.
Hammock Cove in Antigua.
All-Inclusive of the Year: Hammock Cove, Antigua
The exemplar for what a Caribbean all-inclusive should be. It begins with the rooms, designed for just about every Caribbean traveler’s dream specifications, with private infinity plunge pools, wet bars and expansive sea-view decks, and continues to spectacular food, a vibrant watersports offering and even a terrific all-inclusive rum bar. Lots of hotels say they’re luxury all-inclusives. This one is that and more.
The new Sandals Royal Curacao.
New All-Inclusive of the Year: Sandals Royal Curacao
We’ve called it the “Sandals Effect,” the impact on an island when all-inclusive leader Sandals enters. It’s often significant, leading to new tourism energy and, most importantly, an almost instant wave of new airlift. When the sparkling new Sandals Royal Curacao debuted this summer, the impact was even broader. The Dutch Caribbean destination almost immediately began setting new records for stayover arrivals, including from the all-important US market. The resort itself is a stunner, with remarkable design, some wonderful new amenities (including a cool new dine-around option) and new concepts for the Sandals brand.
A suite at the Keyonna Beach Resort in Antigua.
Small All-Inclusive of the Year: Keyonna Beach Resort, Antigua
We’ve written often in these pages of the almost staggering growth in all-inclusive — as more and more brands recognize travelers’ increasing love affair with the convenience of the concept. Keyonna, the brainchild of veteran hotelier Andrew Michelin, is as much a love letter to Antigua as it is to all-inclusives, a boutique, toes-in-the-sand resort that marries locally-focused food and culture with wallet-free convenience. This win is also a testament to the destination’s unmatched portfolio of high-quality all-inclusive resorts.
The BodyHoliday.
Wellness Hotel of the Year: BodyHoliday, Saint Lucia
It’s most famous for being the all-inclusive that comes with a spa treatment every day of your stay. But the BodyHoliday is far more than that. This venerable Saint Lucia resort, one that arguably put Saint Lucia on the map as a wellness destination, has helped redefine the Caribbean wellness resort, with a holistic, integrated approach that ranges from an annual calendar chock full of fitness and yoga events to an impressive culinary program that marries balance and indulgence.
Dive Resort of the Year: Fort Young Hotel and Spa, Dominica
The signature place to stay in Dominica’s fascinating capital of Roseau is a beautiful historic hotel that’s long been a favorite of both leisure and business traevlers. But it’s also something else: a world-class dive resort, with a broad dive offering that includes a stocked dive shop, a wide-ranging menu of diving options from unguided tours to regular dive boat schedules and a gateway to some of the best diving in the Caribbean.
The Delfins Beach Resort in Bonaire.
Innovative Destination of the Year: Bonaire
There’s a reason it’s been one of the hottest destinations in the region since the pandemic, but this Dutch Caribbean hotspot isn’t resting on its laurels. The island has embarked on a broad push toward sustainability and modernity, from its new streamlined visitor entry tax, one that did away with cumbersome levies on hotels and rental cars, to its completely unique Bonaire Bond, one that asks each visitor to pledge their commitment to maintaining the island’s bond to the environment and iits unique identity and people. (That’s without mentioning a cutting-edge new tourism branding effort).
Tamarind Hills in Antigua.
Luxury Destination of the Year: Antigua
From the helicopters bringing celebrities to beach lunches at Nobu Barbuda to the growing portfolio of world class resorts in Antigua, this twin-island destination continues to grow as the essence of the upscale, elegant Caribbean hideaway. It’s also a model for the kind of vacation travelers are seeking out — with the luxury of space, of refinement, of seclusion, and sustainability.
Wahoo picatta at Too Chez in Christiansted.
Culinary Destination of the Year: St Croix, US Virgin Islands
Spend a week on St Croix and you’ll marvel at the sheer diversity of the island’s eateries, from Christiansted to Cane Bay to Frederiksted and everywhere in between, where farm-to-table, sustainbility and culinary creativity are a way of life. The quality is pervasive and exceptional, with a focus on locally-sourced, authentic, unforgettable food.
Grenada.
Yachting Destination of the Year: Grenada
It starts with the outstanding Port Louis Marina, but Grenada has quietly become an in-demand yachting hotspot in recent years, both for the tri-island state (including nearby Carriacou and Peitte Martinique) and for its place as an easy-to-reach hub for exploring the wonders of the islands of the Grenadines. Even better? The Moorings is here, too.
Lynden Pindling International Airport.
Caribbean Airport of the Year: Lynden Pindling International Airport, The Bahamas
Nassau’s air hub continues to lead the pack when it comes to the Caribbean’s airports, home to great duty-free shopping, friendly and welcoming immigration, a pair of world-class departure lounges, great food and a palpable sense of cleanliness you don’t often find at airports anywhere in the world. Even better? The US departure terminal has both TSA Pre Check and Global Entry.
Caribbean Airline of the Year: Bahamasair
Bahamasair just broke new ground with its landmark service from Raleigh to Grand Bahama, but it’s easy to forget just how broad a network the Bahamian national flag carrier now reaches, both in the United States and, even more importantly, in connecting 16 different island destinations in The Bahamas. It’s an example for what a Caribbean airline can be, with reliable, extensive service, serving both nationals and visitors equally well.
The Brass Boer in Bonaire.
Caribbean Restaurant of the Year: Brass Boer, Bonaire
It’s no secret that Bonaire has become a heavyweight culinary destination, and Brass Boer is the crown jewel: the first Caribbean outpost of Holland’s three-Michelin-star eatery Die Librije is at the forefront of what’s possible at a Caribbean restaurant, and one of the world’s great culinary experiences.
Caribbean Bar of the Year: Graycliff Sky Bar, Nassau Downtown Nassau has been changing significantly in recent years, and the new Graycliff Sky Lounge is right at the forefront: it’s a hip, sleek, energetic rooftop bar that almost certainly wouldn’t have existed downtown five or 10 years ago. Even better? It’s also home to a full humidor, a great rum selection and easily the best views in all of New Providence.
Even in a traditionally slow time of year in the Caribbean, one airport continues to post blazing tourism growth: Cancun.
The Mexican Caribbean hotspot has seen dramatic growth in 2022, particularly in the second half of the year, as passenger traffic at Cancun International Airport keeps posting significant growth, both over 2021 and, importantly, 2019 numbers.
In November, Cancun reported passenger traffic of 2.594 million, a 16.4 percent increase over November last year, and, more notably, a 27.1 percent increase over the same month in 2019.
For the year, passenger traffic in Cancun has posted a sensational growth rate of 18.2 percent compared to the first 10 months of 2019, before the onset of the pandemic, with a total of 27.408 million so far this year. (This year’s total is also 38 percent ahead of last year at this time).
The numbers were released by ASUR, or Grupo Aeroportuario del Sureste, the Mexican company that manages a collection of airports in Mexico, Colombia and Puerto Rico’s Luis Munoz Marin International Airport.
The comparison with Puerto Rico, which has seen excellent traffic growth over the last two years, makes Cancun’s surge even more notable.
Puerto Rico, for example, is reporting passenger traffic of 9.31 million in San Juan this year — at 9.4 percent compared to 2019, that is about half the growth rate witnessed in Cancun.