Beaches Turks & Caicos Resort Villages & Spa
Review
Character and identity
This is a 758-room all-inclusive sprawl on Grace Bay, organised as five themed villages with architecture nodding to France, Italy, the Caribbean, and Key West. The scale is the point: a 45,000-square-foot waterpark, ten pools (several with swim-up bars), 21 restaurants and 15 bars, and direct access to the twelve-mile sweep of Grace Bay Beach. Kids' clubs are stratified by age, with Sesame Street characters for the youngest, an Xbox Play Lounge in the middle, and a teen disco. With 43 room categories across the villages, the layout reads more small town than boutique retreat.
Who's it for
Best for:
Families with children across multiple age groups who want everything paid up front and a programme that keeps every kid occupied independently. Multi-generational groups benefit from the room-category range, and the beach plus waterpark combination suits parents who want pool days and ocean days without leaving the property.
Should look elsewhere:
Couples seeking a quiet, design-led Caribbean escape, honeymooners, and anyone allergic to crowds, queues, or themed-village kitsch. If you want intimate service, a refined culinary scene, or adults-only calm, the scale and family focus here will work against you.
Bottom line
The defining feature is breadth of family infrastructure: waterpark, age-tiered kids' clubs, and dozens of dining rooms mean nobody in a mixed-age group is bored. Book a suite in the village that matches your party size, target school-holiday windows if you need the full kids' programming running, and skip it entirely if your trip is for two.