Directory
Hotels in St Barth
Every hotel on the island in one place, from the palaces and five-star resorts to the smaller hotels and guesthouses. Filter by area to find the right base. No business pays to appear here.
22 hotels
No hotels listed in this area yet.
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Auberge De La Petite Anse
A simple, good-value option on the north-west coast, near Flamands. The auberge is a row of equipped bungalows facing the sea, each with a kitchenette, so you can self-cater. There is no pool or restaurant, but Flamands beach is close and the Colombier trail starts nearby. For travellers who want the island without the five-star price.
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Auberge De Terre Neuve
A small, affordable hotel of around ten rooms in the hills above Flamands. The suites are simple, some with a sea view and some looking onto the garden, and the beach is a couple of minutes away. There is no resort apparatus here, just a quiet, well-priced base on a fine stretch of coast.
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Carl Gustaf
Five-star hotelA small five-star perched on the heights of Gustavia, with 16 suites and a villa looking down over the harbour and Shell Beach. Most rooms have a private pool. The Barrière group runs it, with a Beefbar restaurant on site and a spa working with Biologique Recherche. Quiet, polished, and a short walk from town.
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Cheval Blanc
PalaceThe only Palace-rated hotel on the island, set right on Flamands beach. Cheval Blanc has 61 rooms and suites plus a private villa, interiors by Jacques Grange and a Guerlain spa. Chef Jean Imbert is behind the cooking at La Case, with lunch by the water at La Cabane. This is the LVMH address on St Barth.
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Cottages Les Sucriers
Two self-catering cottages a short walk from Flamands beach and a few minutes from Gustavia. This is a quiet, low-key choice rather than a hotel, with no front desk or restaurant, suited to travellers who want their own space and a kitchen. Good value, especially outside the high season.
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Fleur De Lune
A small, eco-minded property in a tropical garden near Grande Saline, one of the island's wildest and best beaches. Fleur de Lune mixes a lodge, a villa and rooms, with private jacuzzis and a green-tourism certification. It puts you within walking distance of Saline while staying calm and green.
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Guanahani
Five-star hotelRosewood's resort spreads across its own peninsula between the Grand Cul-de-Sac lagoon and Marigot bay, which gives it two beaches. One of the larger hotels on the island, reopened under Rosewood after a full renovation, it runs bright with Caribbean colour and has a spa, tennis and a children's club. An easy choice for families.
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Gypsea
Five-star hotelA boutique hotel on the Colombier hillside, with around 22 rooms, suites and villas in a bohemian, plantation-style key. The look is bright and vintage, there is a Pure Altitude spa, and guests get access to the hotel's own beach club down on St Jean beach. Sea views from the heights, and a relaxed mood.
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Hotel Baie Des Anges
A family-run hotel right on Flamands beach, one of the longest and most striking stretches of sand on the island. Rooms and suites open toward the sea, and the on-site restaurant, La Langouste, is known for fresh lobster and Creole cooking. Comfortable and unpretentious, with the beach as the whole point.
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Le Barthelemy
Five-star hotelA five-star on the calm beach at Grand Cul-de-Sac, with direct access to the lagoon. Le Barthélemy has interiors by Sybille de Margerie, a spa run with La Mer, and restaurants and bars on the sand. The protected, shallow water makes it an easy choice for families and for anyone who wants to swim straight off the beach.
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Le Christopher
Five-star hotelA five-star on the rocky point of Pointe Milou, where the draw is the sea view and the sunsets rather than a beach. There are 42 rooms and suites plus a few villas, a long infinity pool, and a Sisley spa that is well regarded. Calm and grown-up in feel, on the quieter north-east of the island.
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Le Petit Morne
Fifteen simple studios on a quiet hillside in Colombier, each with a kitchenette and a terrace looking out to the sea. There is a pool, and little else in the way of services, which keeps the price down. A practical, affordable base if you want a car, a view and your own space.
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Le Sereno
A discreet, design-led five-star on the Grand Cul-de-Sac lagoon, with a contemporary, pared-back style that sets it apart from the island's more decorative hotels. The water here is shallow and calm, the service quiet and personal. There is a spa and a beachfront restaurant. It suits travellers who want modern, understated luxury.
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Le Toiny
Five-star hotelLe Toiny stands alone on the wild south-east coast, above Toiny bay and well away from the busier parts of the island. Each of its 22 suites and villas has a private heated pool. A shuttle runs down to the hotel's beach club, and the main restaurant, La Table, mixes Japanese and Latin cooking. A Relais & Châteaux member, and the choice for seclusion.
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Les Ilets De La Plage
Twelve small villas at the quiet end of St Jean beach, some right on the sand and some just up the hillside in the garden. Each has a full kitchen and a terrace, and the feel is more private cottage than hotel. Daily housekeeping, beach gear and a morning bakery delivery are included. Good for families.
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Les Ondines
A small, family-run place directly on the Grand Cul-de-Sac lagoon, with suites that each have a kitchenette and breakfast included. The shallow, protected water is right outside, with kayaks and paddleboards to borrow. Less a resort than a friendly beachfront base, and an easy one for families with young children.
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Lodge 4 Epices
A tiny boutique hotel of five suites in the hills just above Grand Cul-de-Sac, each named and styled after a spice by the owner, an interior designer. There is a pool, lagoon views from the terraces, breakfast included, and a sushi restaurant on site. Intimate and design-led, a short walk down to the beach.
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Manapany
Five-star hotelA five-star on the beach at Anse des Cayes, with a genuine environmental programme behind it. Manapany leans eco-conscious, from the building to the kitchen, and has a spa working with Dr. Hauschka. The little bay is good for snorkelling. This is a relaxed, barefoot kind of luxury rather than a formal one.
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Pearl Beach
Right on St Jean beach, Pearl Beach is built around its beach club, so the mood is social and lively rather than hushed. Rooms open close to the sand, the restaurant runs from breakfast through dinner, and the airport is a short hop away for plane-spotting. A good base for the busier, see-and-be-seen side of the island.
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Salines Garden
Five cottages set in a lush tropical garden a short walk from Grande Saline beach. There is a small pool and a quiet, grown-up atmosphere, with kitchenettes in most of the cottages. No restaurant or front-desk bustle, just a calm green hideaway close to one of the island's finest and least developed beaches.
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Tropical
Five-star hotelA small hotel of 24 rooms on the hillside above St Jean, recently brought up to a polished five-star standard. The garden setting is leafy, there is a spa and a restaurant called Romi, and the bay views run down to the beach below. Walkable to St Jean's shops and sand without sitting on the busy strip.
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Village Saint-Jean
A St Jean institution, family-owned since 1968 and still one of the island's best-value addresses. Le Village spreads cottages, rooms and villas across a hillside above St Jean bay, many with kitchens and sea views. There is a pool, a small spa and a jacuzzi. Friendly and unstuffy, and an easy walk to the beach and shops.