Beaches Turks & Caicos Opens $150 Million Treasure Beach Village on Grace Bay

Beaches Turks & Caicos Opens $150 Million Treasure Beach Village on Grace Bay

The family all-inclusive resort has opened its sixth on-property village, adding 101 multi-bedroom beachfront suites to Grace Bay Beach.

Published on Mar 6, 2026 (Updated on Mar 6, 2026)

Beaches Turks & Caicos Resort Villages & Spa has opened Treasure Beach Village, a $150 million beachfront expansion on the west end of its Grace Bay property. The new village is the sixth at the resort and adds 101 multi-bedroom suites across seven dedicated beachfront acres.

The expansion is the latest in a long-running capital investment program at the resort, which consistently ranks among the Caribbean's top all-inclusive family destinations. Beaches Resorts, the family arm of the Sandals portfolio, positioned Treasure Beach as purpose-built for multi-generational travel, with oversized suite configurations designed to accommodate families and groups traveling together.

Rates and Availability

Published rates for Treasure Beach Village start at $1,060 per person per night for adults, with children's rates from $47 per night. The resort is running a grand opening offer through May 31, 2026, providing up to $500 in instant credits for bookings made during that window.

The village joins five existing themed villages at the property, each offering distinct room styles, dining options, and pool configurations. Guests can move freely between villages, with access to the resort's full facilities — including its waterpark, Sesame Street character experiences, and reserved adults-only sections — regardless of which village they book.

Context

Grace Bay Beach has repeatedly appeared in top-beach rankings, and the Turks & Caicos property is the flagship of the Beaches brand. The expansion comes as demand for family-oriented all-inclusive travel continues to climb, particularly at resorts where the programming and facilities are scaled to hold attention across age groups.

The $150 million price tag underscores how capital-intensive the premium all-inclusive segment has become, with major brands investing heavily in differentiated villages and suite categories as a way to capture higher per-night rates.