Luxury Travel to Bermuda
Bermuda at its finest. Bermuda is closer to New York than most people realize — and further from ordinary than anywhere else. The island's pink coral sand beaches, crystal-clear turquoise water, and impeccably maintained colonial architecture create a setting that feels like a fairy tale.
Pink sand between your toes, a rum swizzle in hand, and two hours from New York — Bermuda's the best-kept secret in the Atlantic.
Luxury travel isn't just about expensive hotels — it's about access, exclusivity, and experiences that aren't available through ordinary booking channels. The Wedding Unicorn's luxury travel planning for Bermuda means private villa arrangements, access to chef's tables and exclusive dining experiences, private guides with genuine expertise, and relationships with properties that translate into upgrades, amenities, and early check-in/late checkout that standard guests don't receive.
Bermuda is a destination that rewards luxury spending with extraordinary experiences — known for pink sand beaches, pastel-colored houses, shipwrecks, mopeds. We match you to the right properties and experiences rather than defaulting to whatever has the highest rate.
- Best time to visit: May–October
- 2 hours from New York City
- Language: English
- Visa: No visa required for US citizens
- Currency: Bermudian Dollar (= USD)
- Private villa and suite arrangements
- Private guides and exclusive access
- Chef's table and exclusive dining
- VIP arrivals and airport meet-and-greet
- Complimentary upgrades via partner relationships
- Bespoke day-by-day itinerary
7 Nights in Bermuda — Pink Sand, Pastel Cottages & the Atlantic's Most Romantic Island
Horseshoe Bay's legendary beach, crystal caves, and an island that invented the Bermuda Triangle mystique
Bermuda is the most unlikely honeymoon destination in the Atlantic — a British Overseas Territory in the North Atlantic, 1,070km from North Carolina, with a climate maintained mild by the Gulf Stream. The island is famous for three things: its extraordinary pink sand beaches (the sand is tinted by the red shells of foraminifera, the same source as the Bahamas's pink sand), its pastel-painted limestone cottages with white stepped roofs (designed to collect rainwater), and its remarkable clarity of ocean water that divers rate among the best in the Atlantic. For honeymooners, Bermuda offers a distinctly civilized Caribbean experience — afternoon tea at the Hamilton Princess, moped exploration of the island's 21 square miles of coastal road, the Crystal Caves and Fantasy Caves beneath the hillsides, and a food scene that mixes British colonial tradition with Caribbean fish and international cuisine. The combination of Atlantic coast dramatic scenery and South Shore's calm turquoise waters creates an island of extraordinary variety for its tiny size.
1Arrival — Hamilton & the Pink City of the Atlantic
L.F. Wade International Airport is 10km from Hamilton. Hamilton, Bermuda's capital, is one of the most charming small cities in the Atlantic — a grid of pastel-painted colonial buildings, the Front Street waterfront (where the city's best shops and restaurants face the Great Sound), and the Cathedral of the Most Holy Trinity with its 46-meter tower visible across the city. The Hamilton Princess — Bermuda's grande dame hotel, open since 1885 and named for Princess Louise, Queen Victoria's daughter, who honeymooned in Bermuda — has a beautiful harbor-facing terrace for the first sunset Dark and Stormy (the national cocktail: dark rum and Gosling's ginger beer over ice). Walk Front Street and the Royal Gazette Building for the character of Bermuda's colonial commercial heart, then the waterfront for the distinctive pastel-on-white architecture that makes every Bermuda street a painting.
- ✦ Hamilton Front Street — pastel colonial buildings on the Great Sound
- ✦ Hamilton Princess hotel terrace — first Dark and Stormy cocktail
- ✦ Cathedral of the Most Holy Trinity tower views
- ✦ Great Sound sunset over the western islands
2Horseshoe Bay — Bermuda's Most Famous Beach
Horseshoe Bay on the South Shore is consistently named one of the world's top ten beaches: a crescent of the famous Bermuda pink sand between two rocky headlands, with cave formations in the rocks and extraordinary turquoise water that is genuinely warm (25°C in summer, the Gulf Stream maintaining it warmer than Atlantic latitudes would suggest). The adjacent Port Royal Cove is a smaller, more secluded beach accessible by a path through the rocks with equally beautiful water. Snorkeling off the Horseshoe Bay rocks reveals a rich reef community — sergeant major fish, parrotfish, and the occasional green turtle. Rent a moped (the standard Bermuda transport) for the day and ride the South Shore Road — the most scenic road on the island, passing Warwick Long Bay, Jobson's Cove (the most photogenic beach in Bermuda, a small cove surrounded by pink rock), and the Gibbs Hill Lighthouse at the island's southwestern tip.
- ✦ Horseshoe Bay — one of the world's top ten beaches, pink sand, calm turquoise water
- ✦ Port Royal Cove — the secluded neighboring beach
- ✦ Jobson's Cove — the most photogenic small cove in Bermuda
- ✦ South Shore Road moped ride — the most scenic route on the island
3Crystal Caves, Fantasy Caves & Bermuda's Underground
Bermuda's limestone geology creates an extraordinary network of caves. Crystal Cave, discovered in 1907, is the most spectacular: a vast underground cavern extending beneath the hillside, with a clear lake of extraordinary transparency and formations of stalactites and stalagmites reflected in the still water. The cave is illuminated at night for a spectacular effect. Fantasy Cave, adjacent, is smaller but has more elaborate formations including rare cave pearls (perfect limestone spheres formed in shallow pools) and "cave flowers" of crystallized calcite. Both caves are UNESCO-recognized natural heritage and easily the most extraordinary natural feature on the island. The Bermuda National Museum at the Royal Naval Dockyard at the island's western tip has the most complete collection of Bermuda history, from the wreck of the Sea Venture in 1609 (the Shakespeare inspiration for The Tempest) to the island's modern history.
- ✦ Crystal Cave — underground lake with extraordinary stalactite reflections
- ✦ Fantasy Cave — cave pearls and calcite flowers
- ✦ Royal Naval Dockyard and Bermuda National Museum
- ✦ Sea Venture story — Shakespeare's inspiration for The Tempest
4St. George's — UNESCO Colonial Town
St. George's on the eastern end of Bermuda is a UNESCO World Heritage Site and the oldest continuously inhabited English-speaking town in the New World, founded in 1612. The town and its fortifications — Fort St. Catherine, Fort George, and the extraordinary Fort Hamilton — preserve 400 years of British colonial military architecture. St. George's Town Square, with the pillory and stocks still in their original positions, and the Unfinished Church (the 19th-century cathedral whose congregation's ambition exceeded their resources, abandoned with only walls standing and now one of the most atmospheric ruins in Bermuda) are the highlights. The Town of St. George has the most intact Bermudian colonial streetscape — the Water Street wharves, the King's Square, and the surrounding lanes of Georgian architecture are very different from the resort atmosphere of the South Shore.
- ✦ St. George's UNESCO colonial town — the oldest English-speaking town in the New World
- ✦ Unfinished Church — the abandoned 19th-century cathedral
- ✦ Fort St. Catherine — the largest British fort on the island
- ✦ Town Square pillory and stocks still in their original position
5Snorkeling & the Blue Hole Park
Bermuda's waters have some of the clearest in the Atlantic Ocean — visibility of 30+ meters in the right conditions. The Bermuda Triangle's reputation for mysterious disappearances is actually the result of the extraordinary density of 300+ shipwrecks on the island's barrier reef — the most extensive in the North Atlantic. The Constellation and Montana wrecks off West Whale Bay are among the most accessible for snorkelers. Blue Hole Park in Hamilton Parish is a natural limestone water-filled cenote — a deep blue hole in the rock with extraordinarily clear water. Tobacco Bay Beach on the north shore near St. George's has excellent snorkeling around limestone formations with sergeant majors, wrasse, and blue tang. Rent a boat or join a guided snorkeling tour from the Dockyard. A sunset sail on the Great Sound is the most romantic Bermuda evening.
- ✦ Bermuda shipwreck snorkeling — 300+ wrecks on the barrier reef
- ✦ Blue Hole Park — natural limestone cenote with clear blue water
- ✦ Tobacco Bay north shore snorkeling
- ✦ Great Sound sunset sailing
6Moped Day, Railway Trail & Final Beach
Bermuda's Railway Trail is a 35km walking and cycling path along the entire length of the island, following the route of the old Bermuda Railway (closed 1948) through fields, village lanes, and clifftop sections with spectacular views. Rent bicycles or mopeds and follow sections of the trail through the central parishes — the Paget Marsh (a 12-hectare nature preserve of original Bermudian wetland forest, one of the most ecologically important on the island) and Spittal Pond Nature Reserve (the largest on the island, with migratory birds in winter). Final afternoon at Elbow Beach — a long, quiet South Shore beach with excellent snorkeling off the western end and the Elbow Beach Hotel's beach club for sun beds and cocktails. Final dinner at Barracuda Grill in Hamilton for the finest fish restaurant on the island.
- ✦ Bermuda Railway Trail sections by moped or bicycle
- ✦ Paget Marsh nature preserve — original Bermudian forest
- ✦ Elbow Beach south shore and hotel beach club
- ✦ Barracuda Grill — Bermuda's finest fish restaurant
7Final Morning & Departure
L.F. Wade International Airport has direct flights to New York (2.5 hours), Boston (2 hours), Miami (2.5 hours), Atlanta, and Toronto, as well as London Gatwick. A final Bermuda morning: afternoon tea at the Hamilton Princess's Crown & Anchor bar (the most traditional British experience on the island), a final browse of the Front Street shops for Bermuda rum cake (the standard take-home), Gosling's rum, Bermuda shorts (the official business wear for Bermudian men, worn with knee-high socks and a jacket), and Bermuda cedar crafts. The Bermuda cedar tree — nearly wiped out by blight in the 1940s and slowly recovering — is the island's endemic tree and its wood is used in traditional Bermudian crafts of extraordinary beauty.
- ✦ Hamilton Princess afternoon tea — the British colonial tradition
- ✦ Gosling's rum and Bermuda rum cake to take home
- ✦ Front Street shopping — Bermuda cedar crafts and proper Bermuda shorts
- ✦ Direct flight home from L.F. Wade International
Where to Stay
Bermuda's grande dame hotel since 1885, on Hamilton Harbour with a yacht marina, beach club at the South Shore, Nobu restaurant, and the most storied address in Bermuda.
Bermuda's finest resort, on a peninsula above Tucker's Point Cove with a private beach, championship golf course, and spa — the most complete luxury resort experience on the island.
Bermuda's most historic cottage colony, on a private 25-acre peninsula in the Great Sound with five private beaches, a spa, and the most complete sense of traditional Bermudian hospitality available anywhere on the island.
This is a sample — your actual itinerary is fully custom.
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