An immersive visit
A trip inside Antigua and Barbuda.
Five stops. Five places. Before you decide on a programme, see the country.
Stop 01 / 07
Nelson's Dockyard
The only continuously working Georgian-era dockyard in the world. UNESCO World Heritage, and the heart of English Harbour. The yachts that anchor here mark the start of every Caribbean sailing season.
Stop 02 / 07
Government House, St. John's
Residence of the Governor-General. An enduring colonial-era estate, maintained as part of the country's working political architecture.
Stop 03 / 07
Falmouth Harbour
The deepest natural harbour in the Caribbean — the staging ground for Antigua Sailing Week, one of the most established events on the global yachting calendar.
Stop 04 / 07
Curtain Bluff
The quietest five-star in the Caribbean. Set on a private peninsula, no televisions in the rooms, no mobile signal on the beach. Considered. Restrained.
Stop 05 / 07
Barbuda's pink sand
Seventeen miles of empty coastline, the sand tinted pink by crushed conch shell. Barbuda is one of the least visited destinations in the Caribbean — by design.
Stop 06 / 07
St John's
The capital city. A working harbour first, a destination second — the place where the island's commercial and civic life actually happens. Georgian frontages along the waterfront, a deep-water cruise berth, and the small streets that run inland to St John's Cathedral.
Stop 07 / 07
A quieter interior
Antigua's built heritage extends inland: estate houses, plantation churches, archived documents. The architectural detail of the colonial era survives quietly across the island — in the kind of room where the country's record was kept.
Beyond the visit
When you're ready, we'll walk it with you.
A private conversation. No commitment. We'll answer your questions about Antigua and Barbuda specifically, and surface the trade-offs honestly.