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Aruba Has a Secret Overwater Bungalow Resort With See-Through Plunge Pools, Thatched Roofs, and Outdoor Showers
Aruba is known for long beaches, bright trade winds and a coastline shaped for full days in the sun. But in Savaneta, far from the high-rise corridor, there is a part of the island most visitors never experience — and a resort many don’t realize exists. Aruba Ocean Villas, the island’s only overwater bungalow retreat, sits tucked among mangroves and calm shallows, offering an intimate, low-profile alternative to the energy of Palm Beach. It has become a place travelers discover almost by accident, and one that quickly becomes the highlight of their trip.
The Experience
From the moment you arrive, the pace changes. The villas rise over the water on wooden stilts, surrounded by quiet coves and soft breezes. Mornings start slowly on the deck with breakfast delivered to your bungalow. You descend a private ladder into the sea, snorkel along the edge of the reef shelf, or drift on a paddleboard between pockets of mangrove. Afternoons settle into long stretches of shade and sun on your terrace, and evenings open with warm light across the water and the sound of waves beneath the floorboards. It feels like the opposite of Aruba’s resort corridor — intimate, calm and built around the water.
The Restaurant
Old Man and the Sea, the resort’s signature restaurant, adds a defining element to the stay. Tables sit just above the shoreline, lit by lanterns and framed by the bay. The menu centers on fresh seafood and coastal cooking, shaped by local fishermen and the flavors of Savaneta. Dinners unfold slowly, with the water moving under the deck and the pace set by the breeze rather than the clock. For many guests, an evening here becomes the most memorable moment of the trip.
Why It Stands Apart
Aruba Ocean Villas remains one of the island’s most distinctive places to stay because it offers something found nowhere else on Aruba: true overwater living. Each of the eight overwater villas (that’s along with some on land, too) feels handcrafted, with canopied beds, open-air showers and deep soaking tubs that face the sea. The experience is adults-only and deliberately small, designed to feel like a hidden corner of the island rather than a traditional resort. And the setting in Savaneta gives guests access to one of Aruba’s most authentic coastal communities, where local restaurants, fishing boats and neighborhood beaches shape the rhythm of daily life.
What Makes It Special
The resort succeeds because it offers a version of Aruba defined by privacy, water and immersion in place. You can kayak along mangrove-lined edges, walk to casual waterfront restaurants, or spend hours on your deck watching pelicans skim across the bay. The villas feel like floating sanctuaries, removed just enough from the island’s busier areas to create a sense of escape without feeling remote. It is a quieter, softer interpretation of Aruba — one that many visitors don’t expect and quickly come to love.
How To Get There
Aruba Ocean Villas is a 15–20 minute drive from Queen Beatrix International Airport. Most guests arrange a private transfer or rent a car for the stay, allowing easy movement between Savaneta, the nearby beaches and the island’s wider culinary scene. Once at the resort, the focus naturally shifts to the water — and to the calm that defines this side of the island.
Prices at Aruba Ocean Villas
Rates at Aruba Ocean Villas start at around $549 per night.
