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Delta Air Lines Just Launched New Nonstop Flights to the Island of Grenada
The flight from Atlanta leaves in the morning, and by early afternoon you’re already ordering your first rum punch at Aquarium, just off the runway near Point Salines. You sit close to the water, with planes lifting off quietly in the distance and swimmers moving in and out of the sea. The breezes keep the heat comfortable, and you have time to linger before heading out.
A few minutes later, the drive to Grand Anse takes you past low houses set back from the road, roadside shops open to the breeze, and palms angled toward the coast. When the beach comes into view, it runs long and wide, a pale curve of sand with space to spread out and no sense of urgency. You check in, drop your bags, and decide whether to head straight to the water or sit down for a late lunch with your feet in the sand, knowing you didn’t lose the day getting here.
The New Flights
Delta has launched daily nonstop service from Atlanta to Grenada, operating from December 20, 2025 through April 12, 2026. The route runs once daily during the winter season, creating a direct connection between the Southeast and the Spice Isle.
The schedule works in your favor. You leave Atlanta in the morning (before 10am) and arrive in Grenada early enough to start the trip the same day rather than writing it off to travel. On the return, afternoon departures from Grenada get you back to Atlanta that evening, without overnight flights or long layovers.
If you’re planning a shorter stay, that timing matters. You don’t need to pad the itinerary to justify the journey, and you can focus on how you want to spend your time once you arrive.
Why It Matters
Grenada gives you options beyond a single beach. You can spend part of a day on the sand and still have time to explore, eat well, and move around without watching the clock. The island’s layout makes it easy to shift between different parts of the coast, while the interior remains close enough to reach without committing to a full day on the road.
Daily nonstop service makes that flexibility easier to use. You arrive with energy instead of fatigue, and you can start moving between places right away. That changes how much you can realistically do during a short winter trip, and in Grenada, there’s a lot to do.
Being There
You can plan each day around a different experience without pushing the schedule.
One day, you can head inland and chase waterfalls. Drive toward the Grand Etang area, where the temperature drops slightly and the roads narrow under thick greenery. You can stop at Annandale Falls without much planning, then continue higher for shaded trails and crater-lake views. Swim beneath the falls, take your time, and head back toward the coast with room to pull over for fresh juice or roadside snacks along the way.
Another day, you can take to the water and head to Carriacou (make sure you stop at Tim’s!). Ferries and small planes make the trip straightforward, letting you spend the day on Grenada’s smaller sister island without committing to an overnight stay. You can swim in calm, clear water, walk long stretches of beach, and sit down for a relaxed lunch before returning later in the afternoon.
Set aside another day for food. Visit local chocolate makers (I recommend Belmont Estate) and walk through the process from cocoa beans fermenting and drying on-site to finished bars ready for tasting. You can sample different styles, learn how cocoa shapes local cooking, and leave with a clearer sense of why chocolate plays such a central role here.
Save another afternoon for rum. At Clarke’s Court, you can tour the distillery and taste a range of rums that highlight different styles and aging methods. You can pair the visit with beach time afterward or head straight to dinner nearby.
You don’t need to stack these days tightly. Distances stay manageable, and you can adjust plans as you go.
Where to Stay
On Grand Anse Beach, Spice Island Beach Resort offers a polished all-inclusive experience with a strong sense of place. You stay in spacious suites with wide verandas, step directly onto the sand, and eat meals built around local ingredients served in open-air settings. If you want a trip where everything is handled quietly and efficiently, this works as an easy base. The resort also has some beautiful garden rooms with private plunge pools.
Also on Grand Anse, Silversands Grand Anse delivers a more contemporary stay. The infinity pool, the longest in the Caribbean, runs straight toward the sea and anchors the property visually. You stay in light-filled rooms with open layouts and water views, spend afternoons by the pool, and find more energy around the property as evening approaches. This is a modern, almost impossibly luxurious hotel, with one of the most amazing spas we’ve ever seen.
On Portici Beach, Silversands Beach House gives you a smaller, more private setting. You stay close to the sand or in stunning perches on the cliffs above, with generous rooms and private terraces. You can take breakfast by the water, swim whenever you feel like it, and let dinner stretch without interruption. The quieter location suits travelers who want privacy without giving up beach access.
These are just a few options on an island with one of the Caribbean’s coolest hotel portfolios.
Exploring Beyond the Resort
You can also spend time away from Grand Anse without straying far from the water.
A visit to St. George’s fits easily into a half day. You can walk the narrow streets above the harbor, stop into small shops, and spend time at the market, where vendors sell spices, fruit, and fresh fish throughout the morning. The setting stays compact and walkable, with views over the Carenage that make it easy to linger before heading back toward the coast.
For beach-hopping, Grenada makes it simple. You can drive north to BBC Beach, just beyond the airport, where the water stays calm and the sand feels quieter than Grand Anse. It’s an easy stop for a swim or lunch, especially if you’re already near Point Salines.
On another day, you can head south to La Sagesse, where the beach curves gently along a protected bay. The water stays shallow, the setting feels removed from the main resort areas, and the pace runs slower. You can spend a full afternoon swimming, walking the length of the sand, or sitting down for a long, unhurried meal nearby.
The Takeaway
With daily nonstop flights from Atlanta, Grenada fits more naturally into a winter travel schedule. You arrive early enough to use the day, move easily between beaches, and leave without stretching the trip just to justify the journey.
You can plan a shorter stay and still experience more than one side of the island, or you can stay longer and move at a pace that feels right. Either way, the trip starts smoothly and stays that way.
And it usually begins the same way: with a cold drink, the sea in front of you, and no reason to rush.
Delta’s Grenada Fares
You can find roundtrip fares in January on Delta from Atlanta to Grenada for about $483 roundtrip; that’s the price I found searching on Google Flights.
