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The 26 Best Islands to Visit in the Caribbean in 2026
There’s no single right way to travel the Caribbean right now. Some islands are in the middle of hotel renaissances. Others feel unchanged in the best possible way. In a year when travelers are mixing shorter trips with longer stays, looking for places that feel usable rather than over-programmed, the region’s range has never mattered more.
What connects the places on this list is not hype or novelty. It’s momentum. These are destinations where the hotels are better, the restaurants more confident, the access easier, or the experience simply clearer than it was even a few years ago. Some are familiar names seen through a sharper lens. Others are still flying under the radar, quietly doing what they’ve always done well.
This is where to go in the Caribbean this year — places that reward curiosity, offer depth beyond the beach, and feel good to be in right now (and yes, some of them are not actually islands, but, well, you get the point).

Nassau and Paradise Island
You walk up the enchanting steps of the beautifully-restored Queen’s Staircase and you know things are different. Or you take in an exhibit at the National Art Gallery of The Bahamas, or The Current at Baha Mar, then head for a Michelin-level wine pairing dinner at Michael White’s Paranza, followed by a live jazz set at Jon Batiste’s new club.
If you haven’t been watching, Nassau and Paradise Island are better than ever. World-class hotels from Atlantis and The Ocean Club to Baha Mar anchor the destination, but the story now stretches well beyond the resorts. Downtown Nassau has real energy again; hotspots like Bon Vivants and Graycliff anchor a growing culinary and cocktail scene. Add excellent shopping, some of the region’s best golf, a first-rate airport, and beaches that remain among the Caribbean’s most stunning, and you have a place built for the kind of experiential adventure we’re all looking for. In other words, the number one place to visit in the Caribbean this year.
