Overwater Bungalows Near Cuba: The Closest Options Worth Booking
Cuba doesn’t have overwater bungalows β but its neighbours do. Here’s where to find them, what they cost, and how to combine them with a Cuba trip.
Cuba has a lot going for it β extraordinary colonial architecture, one of the most interesting food cultures in the Caribbean, diving that rivals anywhere in the region, and a rhythm to daily life that most tourists find genuinely addictive. What it doesn’t have is overwater bungalows. The infrastructure, the private resort development, and the specific kind of shallow lagoon geography that makes the classic overwater-room experience possible simply aren’t part of what Cuba offers.
The good news is that Cuba sits at the centre of a region that has some of the best overwater accommodations in the Western Hemisphere. The Bahamas are a short flight from Havana. Jamaica is directly south. Belize, Mexico’s Riviera Maya, and Turks and Caicos are all within two hours by air. This guide covers the closest and most worthwhile options β what to expect, what it actually costs, and how to piece them together with a Cuba trip if that’s the kind of itinerary you’re building.
Why Cuba Doesn’t Have Overwater Bungalows
The overwater bungalow concept requires a specific combination of conditions: shallow, calm lagoon water clear enough to see through, a protected reef or atoll structure that keeps waves down, and the kind of private resort development that Cuba’s state-controlled tourism model has never supported. Cuba has spectacular coral reefs β some of the best in the Caribbean β but the coastal geography runs mostly to open water and rocky shoreline rather than the sheltered lagoons where overwater structures make sense.
The development piece matters too. An overwater bungalow isn’t a standard hotel room built over water; it requires serious marine engineering, constant maintenance in a salt environment, and the kind of intensive capital investment that private resort developers make. Cuba’s tourism sector has always been dominated by state-owned and joint-venture hotels operating within strict restrictions on private development. That’s changing slowly, but overwater accommodation isn’t part of the near-term picture.
None of this is a criticism. Cuba does things that overwater bungalow destinations cannot β you don’t go to Havana for a minimalist water villa, and you don’t go to the Bahamas for jazz in an 1890s courtyard. They’re different experiences for different reasons, and the region’s geography means you can feasibly access both on the same trip.
Cuba’s diving is among the best in the Western Hemisphere β particularly along the southwestern coast near MarΓa la Gorda and the Jardines del Rey archipelago. If you’re combining a Caribbean trip with underwater ambitions, the Cuba diving leg can be more rewarding than anything you’ll find at the overwater bungalow destinations nearby. The reefs are largely undisturbed by the mass tourism that has damaged reef systems in Jamaica and parts of Mexico. See our full Cuba scuba diving guide for the specifics.
The Bahamas β The Closest Option to Cuba
Nassau sits roughly 300 kilometres from Havana β the closest capital to capital distance in the region. Flights run under an hour, and there are enough routing options through Miami, Cancun, and direct charter services that getting between Cuba and the Bahamas is significantly less painful than most Caribbean inter-island connections. This makes the Bahamas the most logical overwater bungalow add-on to a Cuba itinerary.
Sandals Royal Bahamian β Nassau
Sandals Royal Bahamian is the name that comes up first in any Bahamas overwater bungalow conversation, and for good reason. The resort offers offshore overwater bungalows β discrete structures built over the water on their own private island connected to the main resort β with glass-floor panels, direct ladder access into the sea, and the full Sandals all-inclusive model. The all-inclusive price covers meals, drinks, watersports, and transfers. It’s a closed system that suits some travelers perfectly and feels too curated for others. Rooms start around $700/night for two during peak season; shoulder season brings this into the $450β550 range.
Bimini Resort β The Out Islands
Bimini is the island closest to Florida but also to a completely different Bahamas from Nassau’s cruise-ship intensity. The Resorts World Bimini has overwater bungalows in a more relaxed setting with better access to open-water sport fishing and diving than you’ll find in Nassau. Rates are lower β overwater rooms from around $380/night β and the atmosphere is genuinely laid-back. The drawback is logistics: Bimini requires an extra hop from Nassau, which adds half a day to your travel if you’re connecting from Cuba.
Exuma Cays β Most Beautiful Water in the Bahamas
The Exumas are where the Bahamas’ infamous turquoise-over-white-sand water is at its most surreal. The Four Seasons Ocean Club Great Exuma has overwater villa options, and several smaller boutique properties in the cays have their own version of overwater or over-lagoon accommodation. Getting there from Cuba requires Nassau as a hub and then a small-plane connection, but if your Cuba itinerary is already built around the west of the island, the Bahamas overwater experience in the Exumas is worth the routing complexity.
Direct CubaβBahamas flights exist but are limited. Most practical routing goes Cuba β Miami (or Cancun) β Nassau, with the total journey taking 4β6 hours depending on layover. If you’re coming from the US, the Cuba leg typically ends your trip (given OFAC restrictions on direct CubaβUS routing for Americans), so a Cuba β Bahamas β US sequence works cleanly for American travelers. Check the cheapest routing guide for Cuba flights before you book β the flight combinations that look obvious on Google Flights often aren’t the cheapest once you factor in baggage and connections.
Jamaica β Most Popular Overwater Option in the Region
Jamaica is directly south of Cuba and has developed the most extensive overwater bungalow scene in the wider Caribbean β primarily through the Sandals group, which has built overwater accommodations at multiple Jamaican properties. The island also has independent options that don’t come with an all-inclusive attached, which suits travelers who prefer choosing their own meals and experiences rather than staying within a resort bubble.
Sandals Royal Caribbean β Montego Bay
This is the Jamaica property most associated with the overwater bungalow concept. The Royal Caribbean has offshore overwater bungalows on a private island that’s a short boat ride from the main resort β giving the experience a genuine isolation quality rather than feeling like a room that happens to be over water. The bungalows have butler service, private plunge pools, and direct water access. All-inclusive rates run $700β1,100/night for two during peak season (DecemberβApril). The all-inclusive covers virtually everything, which makes the price easier to absorb when you factor out the cost of food and drinks separately.
Sandals Ochi β Ocho Rios
Ocho Rios is on Jamaica’s north coast, further from Montego Bay’s airport but with a different atmosphere β more jungle-facing, with better access to Dunn’s River Falls and the interior. The Sandals Ochi property has overwater bungalows that are arguably better positioned than the Royal Caribbean’s, sitting directly over calmer water and with more privacy. Rates are comparable. It’s a longer transfer from the airport (roughly 90 minutes), which matters if you’re piecing this together with Cuba flights.
Independent Options β Negril and the South Coast
Not everyone wants an all-inclusive. Jamaica has some smaller independent resorts with overwater or over-lagoon rooms, particularly around Negril’s seven-mile beach area. These are fewer and harder to find than the Sandals properties, but they exist β and they typically allow you to eat and drink where you choose, which for anyone who takes food seriously is a meaningful distinction. Rates are lower, sometimes starting around $280β350/night for an overwater room without the all-inclusive attached.
The Sandals all-inclusive model works best for travelers who genuinely want to spend most of their time at the resort. If you’re the type who wants to explore local food, take day trips, and not feel like you’re “wasting” the all-inclusive by going off-property, the value calculation changes quickly. Jamaica outside the resort gates is genuinely interesting β the food, the music scene in Negril and Kingston, the waterfalls β and you lose access to it when you’re paying for meals you’re not eating at a resort restaurant. Think honestly about how you travel before committing to the AI model.
Belize β The Most Authentic Overwater Experience Near Cuba
Belize is the destination that overwater bungalow enthusiasts with strong opinions tend to favour β not because it has the biggest or most glamorous properties, but because the setting is genuinely unparalleled. The Belize Barrier Reef is the second longest in the world, the atolls off the coast create the shallow, protected water conditions that make overwater accommodation spectacular, and the development density is low enough that the experience doesn’t feel manufactured. You’re not on an artificial private island surrounded by other resorts; you’re on an actual atoll in the actual Caribbean Sea.
Thatch Caye Resort β South Water Caye Marine Reserve
Thatch Caye is a 2.5-acre private island within the South Water Caye Marine Reserve β a UNESCO World Heritage Site β with overwater bungalows that sit directly above the reef system. The resort is solar-powered, the meals use local produce and reef-caught fish, and the whole operation has an intentionality that larger resort chains don’t match. The diving from the dock is exceptional. Rates run $380β520/night depending on season and room type, with meals typically included. Not all-inclusive in the resort-bubble sense β more like a full board lodge that happens to be in a spectacular location.
Coco Beach Resort β Ambergris Caye
Ambergris Caye is the most visited part of Belize and San Pedro town on its southern end is well-developed by Belizean standards. Coco Beach Resort has overwater cabanas that are more accessible and less remote than the atoll properties, which makes it a better fit if this is your first overwater experience and you want a safety net of restaurants and services nearby. Rates start around $310/night. The snorkelling from the dock is excellent β the Hol Chan Marine Reserve is a short boat trip away.
El Secreto β Lagoon-Side Luxury
For those who want the water villa experience without the overwater structure specifically, El Secreto on Ambergris Caye has lagoon-fronting villas that put you on the water’s edge with private docks and the same visual effect at lower rates than the true overwater properties. From around $280/night, this is the most accessible entry point into the Belize water-villa category without compromising on quality.
If your trip has a diving focus, the CubaβBelize combination is genuinely outstanding. Cuba offers the wall dives and pristine reef at MarΓa la Gorda and the Jardines de la Reina. Belize gives you the Blue Hole β one of the world’s most famous dive sites β plus excellent shark encounters at Shark Ray Alley. Together, they represent two of the best diving destinations in the region. Flying Cuba β Belize (via Cancun or Miami) is the standard routing, taking roughly 3β4 hours total.
Mexico’s Riviera Maya β Widest Selection of Overwater Rooms
The Riviera Maya stretching south of Cancun has the largest concentration of overwater accommodation options in the region, with properties ranging from true budget-luxury ($350/night all-inclusive) to ultra-high-end private villas at $3,000+/night. The water in this part of Mexico β particularly in the protected lagoon systems around Tulum and Holbox Island β is extraordinary: shallow, warm, and an almost unnatural shade of blue-green.
Holbox Island β The Underrated Option
Holbox (pronounced Hol-BOSH) sits off the northern tip of the Yucatan Peninsula and is the Mexico overwater destination that travelers who’ve already done Cancun tend to discover second. Cars aren’t allowed on the island, the beaches are long and mostly empty, and the water is shallow enough for miles β which makes the overwater bungalow structures here genuinely walkable into the sea rather than just aesthetic. Casa Takywara and CasaSandra are the two standout properties, both with overwater or over-lagoon rooms from around $380β600/night depending on season.
Grand Velas Riviera Maya β Large-Scale Luxury
If you want the all-inclusive overwater experience at proper scale, Grand Velas Riviera Maya near Playa del Carmen has overwater suite options within its broader resort complex. The AI model here covers genuinely good food β multiple restaurants with different chefs β which separates it from most all-inclusive properties where the food is the weak link. Rates for overwater accommodation run $700β1,200/night for two. It’s expensive but the value calculus is real if you’d otherwise be spending $150/day on food and drinks separately.
Tulum Area β Eco-Luxury Positioning
Tulum has built an entire aesthetic identity around eco-luxury positioning β natural materials, no neon, solar power, cenote access, and the word “holistic” appearing in every brochure. Several properties here have overwater or lagoon-adjacent rooms that lean into this aesthetic convincingly. Azulik is the most famous, with treehouse-style rooms over the lagoon. It’s genuinely unusual and genuinely beautiful, though the no-electricity-in-rooms positioning can feel like a novelty that wears thin by the second night. From around $500/night.
Havana to Cancun is one of the better-served Cuba international routes β direct flights operate several times weekly, taking under 90 minutes. Cancun as a Mexico hub means you can be on the Riviera Maya or connecting to Holbox within three hours of leaving Havana. For American travelers, the Cuba β Mexico β US sequence is particularly clean: end your Cuba trip in Havana, fly to Cancun for three or four nights of overwater bungalow time, then fly home via any US gateway. This is the itinerary structure that works best logistically for most travelers combining both destinations.
Turks & Caicos β The Most Exclusive Option
Turks and Caicos earns its reputation as the most exclusive end of the Caribbean luxury market through a combination of genuinely spectacular water (Grace Bay consistently ranks as one of the world’s best beaches, and the water colour there does live up to the photographs), low development density, and the kind of resort quality that justifies prices that would feel absurd anywhere else. It’s not the destination for travelers who want value β it’s the destination for travelers who want the absolute best version of the overwater experience in the region and are prepared to pay accordingly.
COMO Parrot Cay β Private Island Overwater
Parrot Cay is its own private island accessible only by boat from Providenciales. COMO runs the resort and has done so with remarkable consistency for years β it’s the destination that appears on every “best of the Caribbean” list not because it does something novel but because it does the fundamentals of extraordinary hospitality without any apparent effort. Overwater villas start at approximately $1,800/night in peak season. The on-site spa is genuinely world-class; the diving access through the resort is among the best organised in the Caribbean. If budget is not the constraint, this is the answer.
SALT of Palmar β East Island Reef Side
For a slightly less stratospheric version of the Turks experience, SALT of Palmar (recently rebranded but operating continuously) on the quieter East Caicos side has overwater bungalows from around $1,200/night. Less famous than Parrot Cay, equally well-positioned for the water quality, and with a smaller-scale operation that some travelers find more personal than the larger resort properties.
“The water in Turks and Caicos is the kind that makes you question every other beach you’ve ever been to. Standing knee-deep in Grace Bay and looking down at your own feet with perfect clarity thirty metres out β it’s not a photographic trick. It actually looks like that.”
Side-by-Side Comparison: All Five Destinations
| Destination | Distance from Havana | Starting Price | Best For | Water Quality | AI Available? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Bahamas | ~300km / 40β60 min flight | $380β450/night | Convenience, accessibility | Excellent | Yes (Sandals) |
| Jamaica | ~800km / 90 min flight | $280β700/night | All-inclusive couples, honeymoons | Very Good | Yes (Sandals AI) |
| Belize | ~1,500km / 2 hr flight | $310β520/night | Divers, authenticity seekers | Outstanding | Limited |
| Mexico (Riviera Maya) | ~900km / 90 min flight | $350β1,200/night | Widest choice, easy connections | Excellent | Yes |
| Turks & Caicos | ~1,200km / 2 hr flight | $1,200β3,000+/night | Ultra-luxury, honeymoons | World-Class | No (standalone only) |
How to Combine a Cuba Trip with an Overwater Bungalow Stay
The combination of Cuba and an overwater bungalow destination is more popular than it might initially seem β particularly for travelers who want the cultural depth and complexity of Cuba alongside something that’s purely beautiful and restorative. The practical question is sequencing and routing, which varies significantly depending on your home country.
For American Travelers: Cuba First, Bungalow Second
US citizens travelling to Cuba under the Support for the Cuban People OFAC category (the most commonly used legal travel pathway) typically enter and exit Cuba through Mexico or the Bahamas. This makes the logical sequence: fly to Cancun or Nassau β fly to Cuba β spend your Cuba time β fly back to Cancun or Nassau β spend 3β4 nights in an overwater property β fly home. The Cuba leg typically runs 7β10 days; the overwater leg is most satisfying at 3β5 nights. Total trip: two weeks.
For UK, Canadian, and European Travelers: Either Order Works
Non-American travelers have more flexibility. Direct connections from London, Toronto, and major European airports to Havana run frequently, and the Caribbean overwater destinations are all reachable from Cuba by air. The logical add-on sequence is Cuba β Jamaica (via Kingston gateway) or Cuba β Cancun (HavanaβCancun direct) β Riviera Maya. The Bahamas works as a bookend β start there, fly to Cuba, return via Nassau. Budget roughly $150β250 per person for the inter-Caribbean flights depending on routing and timing.
The Two-Week Blueprint
π Sample Two-Week Cuba + Overwater Itinerary
- Days 1β2: Arrive Havana, settle in, Havana street-level orientation
- Days 3β4: Old Havana in depth β museums, paladares, live music
- Days 5β6: ViΓ±ales β tobacco farms, horseback riding, valley hiking
- Days 7β8: Trinidad β colonial centre, Playa AncΓ³n, evening casa life
- Day 9: Travel day β Havana β Cancun or Nassau (air)
- Days 10β11: Overwater bungalow check-in, decompress, snorkelling
- Days 12β13: Full resort days β diving, water sports, reef exploration
- Day 14: Fly home from Cancun, Nassau, or Montego Bay
Experienced travelers who’ve done both Cuba and overwater bungalow destinations consistently recommend putting Cuba first and the bungalow second. Havana’s noise, energy, and complexity is something you need to be mentally ready for β arriving at a silent overwater villa in the Bahamas after ten days in Cuba feels like an earned reward. Doing it the other way around β landing in Havana after a week of Butler service and room-service cocktails β creates a jarring transition that can make Cuba feel harder than it is. Cuba last means Cuba as your endpoint, which is rarely satisfying. Cuba first means the bungalow becomes the landing pad before you fly home. That’s the right sequence.
What Overwater Bungalows Actually Cost β Full Price Breakdown
The price of an overwater bungalow is one of those things that looks alarming at first glance and more manageable once you start disaggregating it. The headline nightly rate includes accommodation, water access, and often significant meal and drinks packages. When you price out what you’d spend separately on a comparable hotel room, all meals, drinks, and watersports access, the all-inclusive overwater rate sometimes comes out cheaper than itemised alternatives at a similar quality level.
When to Book and When to Go
The Caribbean’s peak season runs December through April β when Northern Hemisphere travelers want sunshine and the weather in the region is reliably dry and calm. This is the right time for overwater bungalows because the calm conditions matter for the experience (rough water under a bungalow is genuinely unpleasant) and for diving or snorkelling access. It’s also the most expensive time. Shoulder season β May through June before the hurricane season builds, and November before the December peak β offers rates 20β35% lower with nearly identical weather.
Hurricane season proper runs June through October, with AugustβOctober being the riskiest months. The Bahamas, Jamaica, and Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula are all within the hurricane belt. Belize and Turks and Caicos are at the southern edge where major storms are less frequent but still possible. This doesn’t mean don’t travel β the region has plenty of hurricane-free years β but it’s the reason rates are so much lower in summer, and why travel insurance with hurricane cancellation coverage is essential if you’re booking this period.
A Cuba + overwater bungalow trip is typically worth $3,000β8,000+ for two people once you factor in flights, accommodation, and food. Travel insurance that covers: hurricane cancellation or interruption, medical evacuation (crucial in Cuba specifically), trip cancellation for unforeseen reasons, and lost luggage. The standard insurance you get through your credit card rarely covers Cuba specifically β check the policy language before assuming you’re covered. See our guide to travel insurance that actually covers Cuba for the specific policies worth buying.
The Properties Worth Booking: Our Picks by Category

Frequently Asked Questions
Before You Book: A Practical Final Word
The Cuba + overwater bungalow combination makes genuine sense as a trip structure β not just because the geography allows it, but because the experiences complement each other in a way that back-to-back beach resorts or back-to-back city itineraries don’t. Cuba challenges you in productive ways; the overwater bungalow part doesn’t challenge you at all, which is exactly the point after ten days in Havana.
The practical sequence: sort your Cuba visa and entry requirements first (see the full guide here), plan the Cuba leg before the overwater leg because Cuba’s logistics require more pre-planning, and book the overwater property at least three months in advance during peak season β the best rooms at the best properties fill early and don’t discount last-minute the way urban hotels do.
If the Cuba side of the trip is still taking shape, the first-timer’s guide to Havana covers everything you need to get the Cuba leg right β neighborhoods, transport, money, food, and how to structure your days so the city makes sense rather than feeling overwhelming. Get the Cuba part right, and the overwater bungalow ending takes care of itself.