All-Inclusive Resorts in Turks and Caicos

Grace Bay Beach, zero sargassum, and some of the clearest water on earth. Turks and Caicos is the Caribbean's most exclusive all-inclusive destination — with just six true AI resorts and a tiny handful of optional full-board packages on private islands.

2 resorts reviewed · 6+ covered in guide From $300/night Best months: December, January, February

Why Turks and Caicos for All-Inclusive in 2026?

Let’s get the important thing out of the way first: Turks and Caicos is not like Jamaica, Mexico, or the Dominican Republic. You will not find 40 all-inclusive resorts lining the beach, competing on price, undercutting each other with flash sales. The entire territory has exactly six true all-inclusive resorts. That is not a typo. Six.

This scarcity is actually the point. Turks and Caicos has positioned itself as the Caribbean’s premium destination — a place where the water is impossibly turquoise, Grace Bay Beach is routinely voted the best in the world, sargassum seaweed is virtually nonexistent, and the island government has kept overdevelopment in check. The all-inclusive options that do exist here range from the sprawling Beaches mega-resort (750+ rooms, 21 restaurants, a full waterpark) to a 13-room lodge on a private island where they turn off the electricity at night so you can see the stars.

If your budget can handle it — and we will be honest, Turks and Caicos is expensive — the all-inclusive experience here is unmatched in the Caribbean. The beach quality alone justifies the premium. Grace Bay’s 12-mile crescent of powdery white sand sits on the protected north shore of Providenciales, shielded from the Atlantic swells and sargassum that plague east-facing Caribbean coasts. The water is shallow, warm, and so clear you can see your toes in chest-deep water.

The big news for 2026 is the Beaches Treasure Beach Village, a $150 million expansion that opened on March 1, adding 101 suites, six new dining concepts, and a 15,000-square-foot infinity-edge lagoon pool to the already massive Beaches property. More on that below.

Quick Comparison: All-Inclusive Resorts in Turks and Caicos

ResortStarsBest ForPrice Range/NightLocationOur Take
Beaches Turks & Caicos5-starFamilies, groups$700-$1,200 ppGrace Bay, ProvoThe dominant family AI — nothing else comes close
Club Med Turkoise4-starAdults only, couples$300-$550 ppGrace Bay, ProvoBest value AI on the island by a wide margin
Alexandra Resort4-starCouples, small families$500-$900/roomGrace Bay, ProvoBoutique charm with dine-around at two properties
Blue Haven Resort4-starCouples, families$500-$850/roomMarina, ProvoQuieter sister property to Alexandra; marina setting
Ambergris Cay5-starUltra-luxury, honeymoons$1,500-$4,000/roomPrivate island (SE TCI)Private island seclusion for 30 guests max
Meridian Club, Pine Cay5-starUltra-luxury, nature lovers$1,200-$2,500/roomPrivate island (15 min from Provo)13 rooms on 800 acres — eco-luxury at its purest

Also worth knowing: COMO Parrot Cay and Salterra (South Caicos) offer optional full-board and all-inclusive packages, but neither is a default all-inclusive resort. We have included notes on both below for completeness.

Best for Families: Beaches Turks & Caicos Resort Villages & Spa

There is no contest here. Beaches Turks & Caicos is the only family all-inclusive in TCI with a waterpark, kids’ club, teen programs, and the sheer scale to keep every age group entertained. It is also the largest resort on the island at 750+ rooms spread across five themed villages — Italian, French, Caribbean, Key West, and the brand-new Treasure Beach.

What Makes It Special

The numbers tell the story: 21 restaurants, 14 bars, 45,000-square-foot Pirate’s Island Waterpark with 12 waterslides, certified nannies, Xbox Play Lounge, a Sesame Street character program for small children, and scuba diving included for certified divers. Beaches operates on a strict no-tipping policy, which removes one of the awkward friction points that other Caribbean all-inclusives never quite solve.

The resort sits directly on Grace Bay Beach. You walk out of your village, cross a manicured garden, and step onto what is genuinely the best beach in the Caribbean. No rocks, no seaweed, no vendors hassling you for braids. Just absurdly clear water and white sand for miles.

The Treasure Beach Village Expansion (March 2026)

The biggest development in TCI hospitality in years. On March 1, 2026, Beaches opened Treasure Beach Village — a $150 million fifth village with 101 new suites. The standout additions:

  • ClearSky Villas with private rooftop decks and plunge pools
  • A 15,000-square-foot infinity-edge lagoon pool — the largest pool on the property
  • Butch’s Island Chop House — an upscale steakhouse named after Sandals founder Butch Stewart
  • Pinta Food Hall — a casual multi-station dining concept
  • Starfish Cinema — an outdoor movie screening venue
  • Three new waterslides added to the existing Pirate’s Island Waterpark

Treasure Beach rooms start at $1,060 per person per night. That is a premium over the older villages, but the product is genuinely a generation ahead — the rooms are more spacious, the finishes are modern, and the dedicated pool area means you escape the crowds that plague the main pool complex.

The Honest Downsides

Beaches is expensive. A family of four for seven nights will easily run $14,000 to $20,000 or more, depending on room category. The older Caribbean and French Village rooms feel dated — some furniture is worn, bathrooms are showing their age, and the gap between these rooms and the new Treasure Beach suites is jarring. Lines at popular restaurants can be long, and the resort’s sheer size (you will walk a lot) can feel more like a small town than a relaxing getaway. Request a golf cart if mobility is a concern.

Price range: $700-$1,200 per person per night (Treasure Beach Village from $1,060 pp/night)

Best for Couples: Club Med Turkoise

Club Med Turkoise is the only dedicated adults-only all-inclusive in Turks and Caicos, and it is also the best value on the island. At roughly half the nightly rate of Beaches, you get a prime stretch of Grace Bay Beach, a recently renovated infinity pool, and a social atmosphere that leans more toward active fun than quiet relaxation.

What We Love

The activity program is outstanding. Sailing, windsurfing, kayaking, paddleboarding, snorkeling — all included. But the signature experience is the flying trapeze, operated by Club Med’s own circus school instructors. It sounds absurd. It is absurd. You will love it. The resort also runs sunrise yoga on the beach, sunset yoga by the pool, aqua-gym classes, tennis, and pickleball.

The recent full renovation brought a new infinity pool overlooking Grace Bay, redesigned ocean-view rooms, the Blue Coral bar (the best sunset cocktail spot on the property), and upgraded dining areas. If you book, specifically request a renovated ocean-view room — some older rooms on the garden side still feel dated.

Nightlife is real here. Club Med Turkoise brings in DJs, runs themed parties, and the bars stay open late. If you want a quiet, contemplative couples’ retreat, this is not it. If you want to learn trapeze in the morning, snorkel at lunch, and dance until midnight, this is your place.

The Honest Downsides

Food quality is good but not exceptional by luxury standards. The buffet is serviceable, the specialty dining is a step up, but nobody is coming to Club Med Turkoise for a culinary journey. Also, the mandatory 7.5% government accommodation tax and 10% service charge are added on top of the listed rate — a $400/night room becomes closer to $470 after these additions. Factor that into your budget.

Price range: $300-$550 per person per night (before taxes and service charge)

Best Boutique All-Inclusive: Alexandra Resort

If Beaches is too big and Club Med is too social, the Alexandra Resort hits a sweet spot that nothing else in TCI matches. With just 41 suites — studios, one-bedrooms, two-bedrooms, and a four-bedroom penthouse — this is a boutique property where staff actually learn your name.

The Dine-Around Advantage

The Alexandra’s best feature is the Stay-at-1-Play-at-2 program with its sister property, Blue Haven Resort. Your all-inclusive rate covers dining at both properties — five restaurants and six bars across the two resorts, connected by a complimentary shuttle. This gives you variety that a 41-room hotel could never offer on its own. On Monday you have dinner at the Alexandra’s beachside grill; on Tuesday you shuttle to Blue Haven for marina-view fine dining. It works.

The resort was extensively renovated in October 2024. All 41 suites received contemporary furnishings, modern kitchens, and updated bathrooms. Children 12 and under stay and eat free with parents, and the all-inclusive rate includes non-motorized water sports, kayaks, stand-up paddleboards, sailboats, and even a water trampoline.

The Honest Downsides

There is a minimum four-night stay to access the all-inclusive rate. The AI package does not include room service, spa treatments, motorized water sports, diving, or airport transfers — so the “all-inclusive” label requires an asterisk. The pool and beach footprint are smaller than what you get at Beaches or Club Med, and the entertainment options are limited. This is a resort for people who want a beautiful room, good food, and a quiet beach — not a full-service entertainment complex.

Price range: $500-$900 per room per night (not per person; 4-night minimum for AI rate)

Also Consider: Blue Haven Resort

Blue Haven is the Alexandra’s sister property, and if you book the all-inclusive here, you get the same dine-around access in reverse — eat at Blue Haven and shuttle to the Alexandra for variety. The setting is different, though. Blue Haven sits on the marina, not on Grace Bay Beach. The marina is beautiful, the pool area is lovely, and the atmosphere is more peaceful than the Grace Bay strip. But if beachfront is non-negotiable, the Alexandra is the better base. Blue Haven provides a beach shuttle to Grace Bay, but it is not the same as walking out your door onto the sand.

Price range: $500-$850 per room per night

Best Ultra-Luxury: Ambergris Cay Private Island

If money is not a factor and you want complete seclusion, Ambergris Cay is one of the most exclusive all-inclusive experiences in the entire Caribbean. This is a private island in the remote southeast corner of the Turks and Caicos chain, accessible only by air — the resort has its own 5,700-foot private airstrip that can handle jets up to 92 feet long.

What You Get for the Price

Seventeen beachfront bungalows and 11 privately owned villas share over three miles of pristine white sand beach. At full capacity, you might share the island with 30 other guests. All meals are prepared to order at Calico, the single restaurant, with top-shelf spirits poured freely. The air transfer from Providenciales is included in the rate. Snorkeling off the fringing reef is exceptional — the kind of reef you rarely see outside marine reserves.

The Honest Downsides

Ambergris Cay costs $1,500 to $4,000 per room per night for bungalows, and villas start north of $7,000. The island is remote — a medical emergency means air evacuation. There is no nightlife, no entertainment program, no kids’ club, no spa to speak of. You are paying for seclusion, pristine nature, and service. If you need more than that, this is the wrong choice. If seclusion is exactly what you need, there is nothing better in the Caribbean.

Price range: $1,500-$4,000 per room per night (villas from $7,000+)

Best Eco-Luxury: The Meridian Club at Pine Cay

The Meridian Club is, in the best possible way, the opposite of everything Beaches represents. Thirteen beachfront rooms on an 800-acre private island shared with just 38 private homeowners. No motorized vehicles. No television in the rooms. Electricity is turned off at night — partly for sustainability, partly so you can see the Milky Way without light pollution.

The island-inclusive rate covers all meals at the Bistro restaurant, boat transfers from Providenciales (about 15 minutes), snorkeling trips to the fringing reef, all non-motorized water sports, bicycles, and tennis. The Tiki Beach Bar is the social hub — and at 13 rooms, “social” means you will know everyone on the island by dinner on day two.

This is the right resort for nature lovers, readers, snorkelers, and anyone who thinks luxury means the absence of noise rather than the presence of marble. It is the wrong resort for anyone who wants a spa, nightlife, activities programming, or reliable air conditioning after dark.

Price range: $1,200-$2,500 per room per night

Optional All-Inclusive: Two More to Know About

COMO Parrot Cay

COMO Parrot Cay is one of the Caribbean’s most celebrated luxury retreats — a private island 35 minutes by ferry from Providenciales with about 60 rooms, suites, and villas. The COMO Shambhala spa is world-renowned for wellness programs. The cuisine is health-focused gourmet. The guest list has historically included the kind of celebrities who own islands rather than rent them.

However, COMO Parrot Cay is not a default all-inclusive. The standard rate is room-only (European Plan). You can book the “Island Inclusive Getaway” package, which bundles full-board dining, round-trip transfers, and selected wellness activities. But the full-board plans do not include alcohol — beverages are charged separately. If you want a true all-inclusive experience with drinks included, this is not it. If you want one of the world’s best wellness retreats with the convenience of prepaid meals, the Island Inclusive package is worth exploring.

Price range: $1,500-$3,500 per room per night (before Island Inclusive surcharge)

Salterra, South Caicos

Salterra opened on March 8, 2025, as the first Marriott Luxury Collection property in TCI. Travel + Leisure named it the No. 1 resort in Turks and Caicos on its 2025 It List. The resort sits on South Caicos — a remote, undeveloped island accessible only by domestic flight from Providenciales — with 100 rooms, six dining concepts (including Brine for fine dining and Cobo Bar & Grill for Latin-inspired dishes), four pools, and an eight-treatment-room spa.

All-inclusive packages are reportedly available, but the property is primarily marketed as a standard luxury hotel. South Caicos itself is virtually undeveloped — there are no off-resort restaurants or activities. This is an advantage if you want seclusion and world-class diving; it is a disadvantage if you want to explore. Confirm AI availability directly with the resort before booking.

Price range: $800-$2,000 per room per night

How to Choose the Right All-Inclusive in Turks and Caicos

The decision tree here is simpler than most Caribbean destinations because you have so few options. Ask yourself three questions:

1. Are you traveling with kids? If yes, Beaches is your only realistic option for a full-service family all-inclusive. The Alexandra Resort works for families who want something smaller and quieter, but it lacks the waterpark, kids’ club, and entertainment scale. If your kids are teenagers who just want a beautiful beach and good food, Alexandra could work. If they are under 10, Beaches is the answer.

2. What is your budget? Club Med Turkoise is the entry point at $300-$550 per person per night — roughly half the cost of Beaches and a third of the private island options. The Alexandra and Blue Haven sit in the middle at $500-$900 per room. Beaches starts at $700 per person and climbs quickly. The private islands (Ambergris Cay, Pine Cay) start where most people’s budgets end.

3. Do you want action or solitude? Club Med Turkoise is the social, active option. Beaches is the everything-included family machine. The Alexandra and Blue Haven are quiet boutique escapes. Pine Cay and Ambergris Cay are complete seclusion. There is no wrong answer, but these are fundamentally different experiences dressed in the same “all-inclusive” label.

Best Time to Visit Turks and Caicos

High Season (December-April)

This is when everyone wants to be here, and the pricing reflects it. Rates at every resort can double compared to low season. Average temperatures sit in the low 80s, humidity is manageable, rain is rare, and the trade winds keep things comfortable. If your travel dates are flexible, March and April offer high-season weather with slightly lower rates than the December-February peak.

Shoulder Season (May-June, November)

The sweet spot for value. Weather is still excellent — warmer and more humid than winter, but before hurricane season peaks. You will find rates 20-40% lower than high season, fewer crowds at Beaches’ waterpark, and easier restaurant reservations.

Low Season (July-October)

Hurricane season. Insurance aside, the weather is often perfectly fine — hot, humid, with occasional afternoon thunderstorms. But the risk of tropical weather is real, and some smaller properties (Pine Cay, Ambergris Cay) may reduce operations. Club Med Turkoise and Beaches run year-round. Rates bottom out during this period, and if you are flexible with dates and comfortable with the hurricane risk, you can save 40-50%.

Grace Bay’s sargassum advantage: Unlike Cancun, Playa del Carmen, and many east-facing Caribbean beaches, Grace Bay is virtually sargassum-free. Providenciales sits on the north shore of the Caicos Bank, protected from the Atlantic sargassum belts that have plagued Caribbean tourism since 2011. This is a year-round advantage and one of the strongest reasons to choose TCI over Mexico or the eastern Caribbean for a beach-focused trip.

Getting to Turks and Caicos

Providenciales International Airport (PLS) is your gateway. Direct flights operate from:

  • New York (JFK/EWR): 3.5 hours — multiple daily flights on JetBlue, American, Delta, United
  • Miami (MIA): 1.5 hours — American Airlines, JetBlue
  • Charlotte (CLT): 3 hours — American Airlines
  • Atlanta (ATL): 3.5 hours — Delta
  • Toronto (YYZ): 4 hours — Air Canada, WestJet (seasonal)
  • London (LHR): 9.5 hours — British Airways (seasonal, direct)

From the airport, Grace Bay resorts are a 15-25 minute taxi ride. Beaches and Club Med both sit along the Grace Bay strip. The private island resorts (Ambergris Cay, Pine Cay, Parrot Cay) arrange their own transfers — boat or private plane — from Providenciales.

Important: Turks and Caicos charges a 7.5% government accommodation tax and most resorts add a 10-12% service charge. These are not included in quoted room rates. On a $500/night room, that is an extra $87-$100 per night. Budget accordingly.

Turks and Caicos vs. Other Caribbean All-Inclusive Destinations

If you are comparing TCI to other Caribbean all-inclusive hotspots, here is the honest assessment:

vs. Cancun / Riviera Maya: Mexico offers 10 times more all-inclusive options at half the price, but Grace Bay Beach is in a different league — no sargassum, clearer water, and far fewer crowds. TCI is the upgrade for people who have done Mexico and want something more exclusive.

vs. Jamaica: Jamaica has 40+ all-inclusive resorts and invented the concept. It offers more variety, more authentic culture, and significantly lower prices. But Grace Bay Beach makes every beach in Jamaica look second-tier (sorry, Negril). TCI is quieter, safer, and more polished.

vs. Dominican Republic: Punta Cana offers excellent all-inclusive value, but the beach and water quality at Grace Bay is meaningfully superior. TCI is what people picture when they imagine the Caribbean — DR is the affordable version of that fantasy.

The tradeoff is always price. A week at Club Med Turkoise costs what two weeks at a good Cancun all-inclusive would. A week at Beaches TCI costs what a month at a Dominican Republic resort would. You are paying for the best beach in the western hemisphere and the exclusivity of a destination that has chosen quality over quantity.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Turks and Caicos worth it for all-inclusive?

Yes — if your budget allows it and beach quality is your top priority. Grace Bay Beach is genuinely the best beach most people will ever see, the water clarity is unmatched in the Caribbean, and the absence of sargassum seaweed is a massive advantage over Mexico and the eastern Caribbean. The tradeoff is price and limited choice. If you need 20 restaurants, a water park, nightlife, and off-resort excursions, Cancun gives you more for less. If you want the most beautiful beach in the western hemisphere with premium service, TCI delivers.

How many all-inclusive resorts are in Turks and Caicos?

Six true all-inclusive resorts: Beaches Turks & Caicos, Club Med Turkoise, Alexandra Resort, Blue Haven Resort, Ambergris Cay, and The Meridian Club at Pine Cay. COMO Parrot Cay and Salterra (South Caicos) offer optional full-board packages but are not default all-inclusives. This is a tiny market compared to Jamaica (40+), Cancun (100+), or the Dominican Republic (60+).

What is the cheapest all-inclusive in Turks and Caicos?

Club Med Turkoise, starting at approximately $300 per person per night before taxes and service charges. After the mandatory 7.5% accommodation tax and 10% service charge, expect closer to $350-$360 per person per night at the low end. A seven-night stay runs approximately $2,000-$4,000 per person depending on season and room type. This is the “budget” option in TCI — which tells you everything about the island’s pricing.

Does Grace Bay Beach have sargassum?

No. Grace Bay is virtually sargassum-free year-round. Providenciales sits on the north shore of the Caicos Bank, which protects it from the Atlantic sargassum belts that affect east-facing Caribbean coastlines. This is one of the biggest advantages Turks and Caicos has over destinations like Cancun, Playa del Carmen, and many eastern Caribbean islands, where sargassum has become a serious issue since 2011.

What is the Beaches Treasure Beach Village?

Treasure Beach Village is a $150 million fifth village at Beaches Turks & Caicos that opened on March 1, 2026. It adds 101 new suites (including ClearSky Villas with private rooftop decks), six new dining concepts (Butch’s Island Chop House, Pinta Food Hall, and others), a 15,000-square-foot infinity-edge lagoon pool, three new waterslides, and the Starfish Cinema outdoor movie venue. Rates for Treasure Beach rooms start at $1,060 per person per night. It is the most significant expansion in TCI hospitality in years.

Is Club Med Turkoise really adults-only?

Yes. Club Med Turkoise is the only adults-only all-inclusive resort in Turks and Caicos. The minimum age is 18. The atmosphere is social and energetic — DJ parties, late-night bars, and a flying trapeze — so it suits couples and solo travelers who want activity and nightlife rather than quiet seclusion. If you want adults-only in a quieter setting, Ambergris Cay or Pine Cay are the alternatives, though at a significantly higher price.

Final Recommendations

Turks and Caicos is the Caribbean’s quality-over-quantity all-inclusive destination. You will not find bargain rates, massive resort complexes competing for your attention, or the volume of options available in Mexico, Jamaica, or the Dominican Republic. What you will find is the best beach in the western hemisphere, water so clear it looks photoshopped, and a small collection of resorts that range from legitimately excellent to once-in-a-lifetime extraordinary.

For families: Book Beaches Turks & Caicos. If budget allows, spring for the new Treasure Beach Village — the rooms and pool are a generation ahead of the older villages. If Treasure Beach is sold out, the Key West or Italian villages are the next best options. Avoid Caribbean and French Village rooms unless you are on a tight budget.

For couples on a budget (by TCI standards): Club Med Turkoise. Request a renovated ocean-view room. Bring your sense of adventure — the trapeze alone is worth the trip.

For couples wanting boutique charm: Alexandra Resort with the dine-around access to Blue Haven. The October 2024 renovation made the suites genuinely attractive, and the four-night minimum is easy to meet.

For honeymooners and celebration trips: Ambergris Cay if you can afford it. Three miles of empty beach shared with 30 people. Nothing in the Caribbean compares.

For nature lovers and digital detoxers: The Meridian Club at Pine Cay. Thirteen rooms, no cars, no television, electricity off at night, stars you have never seen. This is what luxury meant before anyone invented the word.