Top Spots
Grenada's resort scene leveled up fast. Silversands Grand Anse brought minimalist marble and a 100-meter infinity pool to the island's famous two-mile beach. Six Senses La Sagesse opened on its own double bay with the brand's full wellness arsenal. The old guard holds: Spice Island Beach Resort is family-run all-suite luxury directly on Grand Anse, Calabash (Relais & Châteaux) does drawing-room elegance on L'Anse aux Épines, and Laluna remains the bohemian-Italian hideaway on its own cove.
High-End Dining
Rhodes Restaurant at Calabash is the island's white-tablecloth benchmark. Laluna's Italian kitchen flies in burrata to pair with just-caught tuna. For the real Grenada, book a bean-to-bar lunch at Belmont Estate, a working 17th-century cocoa plantation, and finish with chocolate tastings at the House of Chocolate in St. George's. BB's Crabback, overlooking the Carenage harbor, plates the definitive callaloo and crabback.
Little-Known Gems
- Underwater Sculpture Park (Molinere Bay) — the world's first, a snorkel-depth gallery of life-cast figures slowly becoming reef.
- River Antoine Rum Distillery — running on a water wheel since 1785; the overproof rum is too strong to fly with, which is the best souvenir story on the island.
- Seven Sisters Falls — a chain of rainforest waterfalls in Grand Etang; go early and you'll have the pools alone.
- Levera Beach — leatherback turtles nest here March–July; guided night watches are intimate and lightly trafficked.
- Carriacou — Grenada's sister island, a 90-minute ferry to wooden-boatbuilding villages and the empty sands of Anse La Roche.
Best for
Couples who want a serious beach with substance behind it — hiking, chocolate, rum, reef — and travelers hedging hurricane season (Grenada sits at the belt's southern edge). It's the rare island where the fifth day is more interesting than the first.