Beaches’ New All-Inclusive in Turks and Caicos Has Three Waterslides, “ClearSky Villas,” and a Food Hall 


For years, Beaches Turks and Caicos has been one of the best family all-inclusive resorts in the Caribbean, a place that consistently delivered on beach, breadth, and ease in a way few large resorts ever manage. Grace Bay set the bar. The resort’s sheer range of dining, activities, and room options kept families coming back. 

Now, the renowned all-inclusive on Grace Bay is expanding, with a major new addition set for next month: Treasure Beach Village at Beaches Turks and Caicos. 

The new Treasure Beach is officially opening for stays beginning March 1, adding a new resort-within-a-resort to the Beaches Turks and Caicos campus, and it’s one of the most exciting new debuts in the Caribbean in 2026 — and a new kind of luxury family-friendly resort. 

Where Treasure Beach Is

Treasure Beach Village is positioned to the left of the Caribbean and Seaside Villages (if you’re walking towards the beach), closer to the western end of the property. The walk to the beach is direct, with no road crossings and no visual barriers between the buildings and the water. The water park remains accessible on foot, though the route takes longer than from the central villages, reinforcing the sense that Treasure Beach operates as its own contained corner of the resort.

The Suites and Villas

Treasure Beach introduces 11 new accommodation categories, ranging from two-bedroom club-level suites to large butler-serviced villas built for extended families. Several room types incorporate bunk beds set into alcoves, along with separate living areas that allow kids to spread out without overtaking the entire room. Bathrooms are generous, with double vanities and walk-in showers that handle post-beach cleanup without bottlenecks.

At the top end, ClearSky Reserve Villas rise three stories, with rooftop terraces overlooking the water. Chairman’s Butler Suites sit closer to ground level and lean into size rather than height, giving families multiple bedrooms, dining areas endless space and programing to explore and have their TCI adventure.

Your Own Personal ClearSky Villas  

The ClearSky Reserve Villas are the largest and most private accommodations at Treasure Beach, designed as true beachfront residences rather than oversized hotel rooms. EAch three-story villa spans more than 2,600 square feet and includes four bedrooms and three bathrooms arranged vertically, with the beach directly in front. Guests step from the villa to their own private pool, then out onto the sand, with a rooftop deck above that opens to wide ocean views across Grace Bay. Butler service is included, but the draw here is the layout itself: multiple levels that separate sleeping, gathering, and outdoor time, giving larger families space to spread out while staying rooted at the edge of the water.

The Pool and Outdoor Areas

The village centers on a zero-entry lagoon pool with an infinity edge facing the sea. The pool widens gradually, allowing younger swimmers to stay shallow while older kids move outward toward deeper sections. Cabanas line the perimeter. Staff circulate with drinks and towels, keeping service present.

You can find three new water slides, sized for children rather than thrill-seekers, and positioned so parents can keep them in sight from the pool deck. A private cinema area, Starfish Cinema, adds a shaded evening option without pulling families away from the village.

Dining at Treasure Beach

Treasure Beach will have seven new dining options, led by The Pinta Food Hall. Inside, multiple stations handle Italian, Mexican, Asian dishes, salads, and grilled items, allowing families to split up and reconvene at shared tables. The setup keeps wait times short and meals flexible, particularly for families juggling different preferences and appetites.

Butch’s Island Steakhouse makes its debut here as the first of its kind within Beaches Resorts. The room has a menu built around prime cuts and structured service, an homage to the legendary Butch Stewart, founder of both Sandals and Beaches.

Brü coffee bar anchors mornings with espresso drinks and pastries, while Calypso’s Snow Cone Station handles the afternoon rush with quick, cold treats steps from the pool. Staying at Treasure Beach also grants full access to the resort’s wider dining lineup, including food trucks and established restaurants across the property.

How Families Use the Village

Beaches has turned the family all-inclusive into an art form, and that covers both younger and older guests. There are even teen-focused room configurations give older kids defined sleeping areas. Younger children stay within eyesight at nearly every turn, whether splashing in the shallows or moving between slides and loungers.

Access to the Rest of the Resort

Guests staying at Treasure Beach get full access to Beaches Turks and Caicos as a whole. You can walk to other villages, book water sports, attend Sesame Street shows, or spend a full day at the water park. The difference is that Treasure Beach offers a clear home base to return to, one that stays consistent.

What Treasure Beach Means

Treasure Beach marks a shift toward more segmented experiences within large family resorts. Instead of adding volume, it adds definition. It’s a sparkling, even more luxurious enclave at what is already one of the best family resorts in the region — and one of the best all-inclusive options in Turks and Caicos already.

Turks and Caicos’ Pipeline

Turks and Caicos is in the middle of one of its most active development periods in years. New resorts are reshaping the destination’s upper end, from the upcoming Kempinski on Grace Bay to Andaz to St. Regis, and several other branded and independent projects now moving through the pipeline. Treasure Beach fits squarely into that moment, adding momentum on the family side of the market while reinforcing why Providenciales continues to attract new investment. The destination’s hotel landscape is growing deeper and more varied.

Getting There

Beaches Turks and Caicos is located on Providenciales, with arrivals through Providenciales International Airport from a growing number of cities across the United States and Canada. From the airport, transfers to the resort are straightforward and short. Treasure Beach Village sits within the existing resort footprint, requiring no additional travel once on property. You can fly for about $459 from Miami to Providenciales in April, according to what we found on Google Flights.

Prices at Treasure Beach 

The hotel is pretty much sold out of most of the opening weeks; in April, you can find a Concierge Suite with two bedrooms and a very cool, family-friendly layout for about $3099.40 per night, all-inclusive. 



Karen Udler

2026-02-04 03:02:00