The Best Room at Cayo Espanto in Belize Is an Overwater Bungalow at the End of a 150-Foot Dock, With a Butler, a Sailboat, and Every Meal Included
This is, in our view, the most distinctive accommodation on the island. Here’s a look inside Casa Ventanas, the only over-the-water bungalow on Belize’s most exclusive private island — a room that sits alone above the reef, surrounded on every side by the Caribbean. Most rooms at a beach resort put your feet in the […] The post The Best Room at Cayo Espanto in Belize Is an Overwater Bungalow at the End of a 150-Foot Dock, With a Butler, a Sailboat, and Every Meal Included appeared first on Caribbean Journal.
This is, in our view, the most distinctive accommodation on the island. Here’s a look inside Casa Ventanas, the only over-the-water bungalow on Belize’s most exclusive private island — a room that sits alone above the reef, surrounded on every side by the Caribbean.
Most rooms at a beach resort put your feet in the sand. Casa Ventanas at Cayo Espanto puts them out over the water, at the end of a private dock that runs more than 150 feet off the island. The lone overwater bungalow on this private island off Belize runs about 1,100 square feet, sits alone above the reef, and currently starts around $2,744 a night — a rate that, this being Cayo Espanto, folds in three tailored meals a day, drinks, transfers and personal butler service. It is the rare Caribbean room where the entire structure floats on the sea, with nothing around it but turquoise water.
Start with where it sits. Cayo Espanto is a private island cast about three miles off the coast of San Pedro on Ambergris Caye, a hyper-exclusive hideaway of just a handful of villas spread across white sand and turquoise shallows.
Every other accommodation here is a beachfront villa with its feet in the sand. Casa Ventanas is the overwater outlier, perched alone at the end of a dock that stretches more than 150 feet off the island, surrounded on every side by the warm, clear water of the Caribbean Sea.
That isolation is the entire appeal. You walk the length of the pier, the island recedes behind you, and you arrive at an overwater bungalow that feels less like a hotel room than a private platform floating on the reef.
The sea is the whole show here. Guests describe being enchanted by the marine life moving right past and beneath the overwater bungalow, the kind of front-row view of the water you simply cannot get from a room on land.
Drop off the dock with a snorkel and the reef is immediately yours, alive with rays, silver baitfish and the occasional turtle drifting through. Step back up onto the verandah and the same water stretches unbroken to the horizon in every direction.
Inside, the overwater bungalow keeps the same understated luxury as the rest of the island. A king bed dressed in premium Egyptian cotton linens anchors the single bedroom, framed by custom-crafted furnishings and the kind of quiet, hardwood-and-white-linen palette that lets the water do the talking.
There is an alfresco shower for rinsing off after a swim, and a private verandah wrapping the bungalow with uninterrupted views across the sea. The 1,100-square-foot footprint is intimate by design, built for two and tuned to romance rather than square footage.
What truly separates an overwater stay here, though, is what the rate quietly includes. Cayo Espanto operates as an all-inclusive of the highest order, so the nightly figure covers a personal butler, three meals a day prepared to your tastes by the island’s chefs, snacks, and rack drinks down to the beer, juice and bottled water.
A greeting at the San Pedro airstrip is part of the arrangement, as is the scheduled daytime boat launch between the island and town. Non-motorized water toys come with the room, too, including sea kayaks and a sailboat for drifting out over the flats.
Wine, champagne and spa treatments sit outside the base rate, as do motorized excursions. Everything else is handled, which is precisely the point of a place built for switching off completely.
The location does a great deal of the work. Cayo Espanto sits within easy reach of the Belize Barrier Reef, the second-largest barrier reef system on the planet, so snorkeling and diving begin essentially at the end of the dock.
Anglers come from around the world for the fly-fishing in these flats, chasing bonefish, tarpon and permit. The island can also arrange private excursions to the Maya sites at Altun Ha and Lamanai, or a helicopter tour out over the reef and the famous Great Blue Hole.
A note on booking. There is a four-night minimum stay across Cayo Espanto outside the holidays, rising to a seven-night minimum during the December-to-January holiday window, so this is a destination that rewards settling in rather than dropping by.
Rates are quoted per villa, per night, and the all-inclusive structure means the headline number behaves very differently from a standard room rate once you factor in the meals, drinks and service. The island also packages the overwater Casa Ventanas into multi-night exclusives, including a five-night stay built around round-trip private helicopter transfers with a tour of the reef, starting around $18,495 for two guests with tax and fees included.
Who is it for? A couple celebrating a honeymoon or a milestone is the obvious fit, drawn by the overwater seclusion, the water on all sides and the sense of having an entire stretch of reef to themselves.
Travelers who want more space on the sand have other options here, from the plunge-pool beach villas to the larger two-bedroom houses near the island’s quiet center. But none of them can match the singular feeling of falling asleep over the water, with the sea lapping beneath the floorboards and not a soul in sight.
Either way, Casa Ventanas makes the case that the best room on a private island might not be on the island at all. It is the one suspended just off the edge of it, where the reef becomes the view, the butler handles the rest, and the only real decision left is whether to swim before breakfast or after.
The post The Best Room at Cayo Espanto in Belize Is an Overwater Bungalow at the End of a 150-Foot Dock, With a Butler, a Sailboat, and Every Meal Included appeared first on Caribbean Journal.