This Under-the-Radar Caribbean Island Just Landed a Major Luxury Hotel Brand — Right Next to Its Hottest New Resort

This Under-the-Radar Caribbean Island Just Landed a Major Luxury Hotel Brand — Right Next to Its Hottest New Resort

IHG has announced a 120-room InterContinental resort on Grenadas La Sagesse Bay, set to open in November 2026 alongside Six Senses.

By Resort Flock Staff·May 28, 2026·Updated May 28, 2026

Grenada just added another major luxury flag to its growing hotel pipeline. InterContinental Hotels and Resorts, part of IHGs luxury portfolio, has announced plans to open InterContinental Grenada-La Sagesse, a 120-room resort on the islands southeastern coast. The property is expected to debut in November 2026.

The resort will sit directly adjacent to Six Senses La Sagesse, which opened in 2024 and quickly became one of the most talked-about luxury openings in the eastern Caribbean. Together, the two properties will form a dual-brand luxury destination sharing one of Grenadas most striking stretches of coastline. Guests at either resort will have access to dining, activities and amenities across both properties.

InterContinental Grenada will feature five distinct restaurants, including Mosaic for Caribbean-focused all-day dining, Coralie for Mediterranean cuisine, and Solara, a rooftop bar with ocean views and craft cocktails. The property will also include more than 20,000 square feet of event space, which IHG says will be the largest of its kind on the island.

The opening marks the first InterContinental-branded resort in Grenada, following the brands Caribbean expansion that began with InterContinental Dominica Cabrits Resort and Spa in 2023. Both projects are partnerships with developer Range Developments.

Grenada has been steadily gaining momentum as a luxury destination, with improved airlift from American, JetBlue and British Airways, plus a growing culinary tourism scene built around the islands nutmeg, cocoa and rum heritage. The InterContinental opening adds significant branded inventory to an island that has traditionally relied on boutique properties and independent luxury hotels.