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Marriott’s New W All-Inclusive in Punta Cana Has Huge Suites, Swim-Up Pools, and a Global Food Hall
W Hotels have always been about atmosphere — the music-driven lobby bars, the bold interiors, the sense that every space is meant for both gathering and performance. Since its start in 1998, the brand carved out a niche as the hotel where design and nightlife converged.
Now, for the first time, those same hallmarks — from oversized suites to scene-stealing social spaces — have landed inside an all-inclusive. The new W Punta Cana, Adult All-Inclusive, just held its grand opening, and it is the brand’s debut in a category that has long defined Caribbean travel.
It’s a shift that takes the signature W energy and drops it directly into the rhythms of Punta Cana, where the all-inclusive model itself is reimagined with private pools, speakeasy bars, and curated cultural programming. (And it’s part of a growing trend of typically adult-focused brands getting into the all-inclusive space, including SLS).
Design and Rooms
The 340-room resort doesn’t follow the standard template. Suites start at 700 square feet — unusually large for the region — and every unit is built around king-size beds. Many suites come with their own swim-up decks or full private pools. The look comes from Spain-based Zanobia Arquitectura, a firm known for layering local textures into modern frameworks. Here, colonial motifs and Caribbean stone mix with contemporary lines and bright accents. The design cues draw on the island’s heritage: larimar stone patterns, tobacco references, and tropical fauna integrated into the interiors.
The result is less like a typical resort corridor and more like a creative village, where winding jungle paths link clusters of rooms to social spaces, landscaped with endemic flora that emphasize the resort’s low-density approach.
Dining and Bars
The all-inclusive promise is pushed further here with 13 restaurants, bars, and lounges. Instead of a single buffet, there’s a food hall called Trade Market, serving live-action street food stalls with global flavors. Scena presents a more formal approach, spotlighting Dominican cuisine with chef-driven flair. Italian plates come out of Sensazioni, while the Noodle Bar brings Pan Asian flavors into the mix.
Bars are equally ambitious. The Taproom reimagines the island beer hall, the Living Room Bar reinvents the classic W lobby cocktail experience with Dominican twists, and the 33 1/3 Speakeasy layers mixology onto a vinyl soundtrack. At the shoreline, Taman Beach Club blends spritzes, DJs, and sunsets into a day-to-night social hub.
Social Life and Entertainment
True to W’s DNA, the soundtrack matters. The resort’s music program was curated by Colombian producer Sinego, in collaboration with Dominican electronic collective Chinese Laundry, ensuring the vibe is equal parts local and global. That plays out in nightly rooftop sessions, beachside silent discos, and even DJ-led sound baths. The WET Deck — an 80-meter infinity pool larger than Olympic size — anchors the social scene, while a Chill Pool offers quieter sunbathing and spritzers.
Programming balances nightlife with cultural immersion, moving from dance parties and artist residencies to wellness-centered sound sessions. The result is an adults-only social hub that shifts in energy from day to night.
Wellness
The AWAY Spa brings in local ingredients — turmeric, arnica, and the moringa seed oil often called “miracle oil” on the island — across ten treatment rooms. Guests can rotate between a Himalayan salt room, steam, sauna, and an indoor pool. A full-service salon and 24-hour gym extend the wellness footprint, while sunrise yoga and paddleboarding offer outdoor balance.
Meetings and Events
W Punta Cana also adds a business layer. The resort has more than 14,000 square feet of event space, including a 5,380-square-foot ballroom, six breakout rooms, and flexible meeting areas — designed for both corporate retreats and social gatherings.
A Milestone for W
The opening of W Punta Cana is more than just another addition to the Dominican Republic’s luxury lineup. It’s the first time W Hotels has brought its signature brand identity — bold design, nightlife edge, and insider access — into the Caribbean all-inclusive market. Two more all-inclusive W properties are already planned in Mexico in the next four years, but Punta Cana is where the experiment begins.
For the Caribbean, it’s another signal of how the all-inclusive model is shifting: increasingly defined by design, lifestyle, and storytelling, not just unlimited dining. And for W Hotels, it’s a chance to reframe what all-inclusive can look like when seen through their lens.
What a Room at the W Costs
An entry-level room with a “tropical view” starts at $594 right now. For an ocean-view rom, it’s $670 per night. A swim-up, which I always love, is about $721 — a premium I’d suggest is decidedly worth it.
Interestingly, the hotel has some large rooms that actually come with two king beds — even of the swim-up variety.
For a bigger splurge, you can actually choose a room with its own private pool, with rates starting at $806 right now.