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Four Seasons Nevis Rolls Out Caribbean Summer Deal

There’s a particular kind of travel magic that happens when you discover a world-class resort practically in your own backyard. For Caribbean residents who’ve long whisked past St. Kitts and Nevis on the way to somewhere else, Four Seasons Resort Nevis is sending a clear message this summer: it’s time to stop and stay.

The resort has unveiled an exclusive Caribbean Residents’ Rate for Summer 2026, opening its doors to regional visitors at prices that make one of the Caribbean’s finest addresses genuinely accessible—without sacrificing an ounce of the experience. It’s a savvy, welcome move that speaks to a growing trend across the luxury hospitality sector: courting the regional traveler who is well-traveled, discerning, and increasingly choosing closer-to-home escapes over transcontinental flights.

What’s Actually on Offer

Starting from USD 395 per room, per night, Caribbean residents can book a Nevis Peak View Room at the resort, with the promotional window running from June 6 through October 31, 2026. These rooms frame the island’s iconic volcanic peak and lush green hills—a perspective that, once seen, is hard to forget.

The rate isn’t just a number. It opens access to one of the Caribbean’s most comprehensive resort experiences. Three infinity-edge pools overlook the Caribbean Sea. Two miles of undeveloped beachfront invite mornings of complimentary non-motorized water sports—kayaking, paddleboarding, snorkeling—without the hassle of renting gear or booking in advance. The Robert Trent Jones II championship golf course is available to guests who want to pair their beach days with a round in one of the region’s most scenic settings. Eight tennis courts, four pickleball courts, and a full basketball court round out the recreational lineup for those who prefer their relaxation with a little competition.

Dining, too, is a serious affair here. Seven venues range from the laid-back, flip-flops-welcome energy of the Kastawey Beach Bar to the refined island cuisine at Mango. Whether you want a rum punch at sunset or a carefully composed dinner, the resort has a table waiting.

And for Caribbean residents specifically, the perks go further. A 10% savings applies across select resort experiences—spa treatments, private pool and beach cabana rentals, food and drinks at the resort’s restaurants and bars, and even shopping at the on-site boutiques, including the Mandala boutique, Dulcina gift shop, and L’Elegance jewellery shop. These aren’t afterthought add-ons; they’re the kinds of extras that meaningfully elevate a multi-day stay.

Why Nevis, Why Now

Nevis occupies a curious position in the Caribbean travel landscape. It’s frequently cited as “one of the region’s best-kept secrets”—a phrase that, admittedly, gets overused—but in this case, it genuinely applies. The island has no cruise ship pier, no casino strip, no high-rise hotel blocks crowding the beach. What it does have is an extraordinary sense of calm, a lush volcanic interior, a rich colonial and cultural history, and one of the finest luxury resorts in the entire hemisphere sitting right on its coast.

“Our island remains one of the Caribbean’s best-kept secrets, and we enjoy welcoming our regional neighbours to experience what makes Nevis so special,” said Avi Phookan, General Manager of Four Seasons Resort Nevis. “This offer provides an ideal opportunity for residents across the Caribbean to relax and reconnect during the summer season.”

That framing—”relax and reconnect”—resonates with a particular post-pandemic shift in travel behavior that has only deepened in recent years. Travelers are increasingly drawn to depth over distance: fewer destinations, longer stays, more meaningful engagement with a place. Nevis, with its intimacy and authenticity, is ideally positioned to deliver exactly that.

A Summer Calendar That Makes the Case

One of the most compelling arguments for visiting Nevis this summer isn’t the resort itself—it’s everything happening just outside its gates. The federation of St. Kitts and Nevis hosts a remarkably rich events calendar between June and October, and for regional visitors already in the neighborhood, timing a stay around these moments adds serious cultural depth to the trip.

The St. Kitts Music Festival runs June 25 to 27, drawing regional and international artists for one of the Eastern Caribbean’s most beloved annual celebrations of sound. The Nevis Mango Festival follows closely, July 2 to 5—a jubilant, food-forward event that showcases the island’s agricultural heritage and culinary creativity. St. Kitts-Nevis Restaurant Week, scheduled July 16 to 26, offers a broader canvas of local gastronomy. Then comes Nevis Culturama, the island’s signature cultural festival, stretching from late July into early August with music, pageantry, folklore, and community pride that has no equivalent elsewhere in the region. And for those who like to close out a summer trip on foot, the Nevis Marathon and Running Festival in early September offers one of the Caribbean’s most scenic race routes.

Running alongside all of this—from June through October—is the Sea Turtle Conservation Season, during which the resort actively engages guests in conservation efforts tied to the nesting and hatching of sea turtles on the island’s beaches. It’s the kind of experience that transforms a holiday into something you actually talk about for years.

Getting There Is Easier Than You Think

One of the quiet barriers to visiting Nevis for regional travelers has always been the perception that it’s hard to reach—a two-stop journey through a major hub. That’s increasingly not the case. Direct flights currently operate to St. Kitts from St. Maarten, Barbados, Antigua, St. Thomas, St. Lucia, Dominica, San Juan, and several other neighboring islands. For the vast majority of Eastern Caribbean residents, a nonstop flight of an hour or less is well within reach.

From St. Kitts, a short ferry crossing to Nevis completes the journey—a scenic, uncomplicated connection that locals have been making for decades.

The Traveler’s Calculus

For Caribbean residents evaluating their summer travel options, this offer invites a natural comparison. A long-haul flight to Europe or North America—factoring in airfare, accommodation, currency differences, and sheer logistics—versus a short regional hop to one of the world’s most awarded luxury resorts, where you arrive already knowing the culture, the cuisine, and the rhythms of island life.

The Four Seasons brand needs little introduction in luxury travel circles. Its Nevis property, consistently ranked among the finest resorts in the Caribbean and frequently appearing on global “best resort” lists, delivers the full Four Seasons experience: impeccable service, thoughtfully designed spaces, and an attention to guest comfort that removes friction from every moment of a stay. At USD 395 per night as an entry point—and with 10% off spa and dining spending stacked on top—the value proposition is difficult to dismiss.

To qualify, guests need proof of Caribbean residency at check-in: a local passport, national ID, or driver’s licence will do. The rate is subject to availability, and it’s worth noting that service charges, taxes, and the nightly coastal protection levy are additional.

A Region Looking Inward

This offer from Four Seasons Nevis arrives at a moment when intra-Caribbean tourism is gaining real momentum. Regional governments, airlines, and tourism boards have spent the better part of the past decade trying to make it easier and more appealing for Caribbean people to travel within the archipelago—and the hospitality sector is increasingly following suit. Offering residents a reason to discover Nevis isn’t just good business for the resort; it’s a small but meaningful contribution to the broader project of regional integration and travel identity.

Nevis has always been there, quietly extraordinary, waiting to be properly discovered. This summer, for those who call the Caribbean home, there’s no better excuse to finally make the crossing.

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