This post was originally published on this site.
Some islands give you a beach and a bar. Others give you an entire culture built around them.
Across the Caribbean, there are places where the beach bar isn’t a stop — it’s the reason you booked the flight. You land with a short list, a loose plan, and the understanding that most of your time will be spent moving from one stretch of sand to the next, chasing good rum, good food, and the particular feel each shoreline delivers.
We’ve spent years on the ground doing exactly that — walking beaches, tracking down both the famous names and the quiet fixtures, returning to the ones that hold up. This is not a ranking of individual bars. This is something more useful: the islands where beach bars define the experience — where you can beach bar hop to your heart’s content.
These are the Caribbean’s true beach bar capitals.
Barbados’ Exciting Beach Bar Landscape
Barbados blends local fixtures with newer beach clubs, and it’s the most exciting beach bar destination in the Caribbean right now.
On the west coast, hotspots like the John Moore Bar remains one of the island’s most consistent stops — direct access to the sand, simple drinks, and a steady local presence — a beach bar and rum shop hybrid. On the south coast, Deia Beach Club is a hip addition next to the Bougainvillea hotel with great food, service, and delicious cocktails.
But the Caribbean’s most exciting beach bar haven might be Speightstown, which has a surprisingly large number of great bars all on just a few blocks of coastline. That includes the rustic Little Bristol and the hip, sleek Local & Co add more options, each with its own following.
‘And did we mention the “rum beach club?”
The post These 15 Caribbean Islands Are the Ultimate Beach Bar Destinations appeared first on Caribbean Journal.