St Barths has eight square miles, no mass tourism and thirty years of practice getting luxury exactly right.

There is a version of the Caribbean that involves excursions, activity desks and laminated schedules slid under your hotel room door. St Barths is not that version.

Eight square miles of French-inflected calm, exceptional beaches and an island that has spent decades learning how to look after people who know exactly what they want. The accommodation is almost entirely private villas. The restaurants take their wine lists seriously. The harbor fills with serious boats and the beaches empty out by mid-morning in ways that suggest everyone else has found their own stretch of sand and settled in.

A week here tends to produce the particular sensation of having been away for much longer than you were. Here is what a well-spent one looks like.

St Barths

About Do Not Disturb

Do Not Disturb is a luxury travel company specializing in carefully designed journeys and considered experiences. Each itinerary we build for our clients is informed by real destination knowledge, offering insight into places, cultures, and moments that shape how a trip comes together.

If this destination has sparked ideas, the itinerary can be developed into a private journey tailored to your interests and travel style, with hand-picked stays, thoughtful routing, and experiences curated around what matters most to you.

The Arrival

The approach into Gustaf III Airport is unlike any other in the Caribbean. The plane climbs over St Martin, clears a hilltop by a margin that focuses the mind, and drops steeply onto a 650-meter runway with a beach at one end. It is simultaneously alarming and exhilarating, and it establishes immediately that this is an island that does things its own way.

From the airport to your villa takes ten minutes. The first afternoon should be treated as a decompression chamber. Swim. Unpack at a pace that suggests you have nowhere to be. Drive into Gustavia in the evening for dinner on the harbor.

St Barths

The Beaches

St Barths has over twenty beaches and they are not interchangeable, which means one of the quiet pleasures of the week is working out which ones suit you.

Gouverneur on the south coast is long, calm and consistently undervisited relative to its quality. The water is clear, the sand is white and on a weekday morning you may have a substantial stretch of it effectively to yourself.

Saline, reached by a ten-minute walk from the road, rewards the mild effort with seclusion and width and the absence of any beach bar infrastructure whatsoever. Shell Beach in Gustavia is five minutes walk from the harbor and chronically overlooked by visitors who drove straight to Gouverneur.

St Jean on the north coast is the island’s most developed beach and the one place that approaches something resembling a scene, with beach clubs, watersports and direct views of aircraft clearing the hilltop on approach.

By day three most visitors have identified their beach and return to it accordingly.

St Barths

The Day on the Water

A day charter is the one structured activity St Barths requires. The island looks completely different from the water, the bays and inlets invisible from the road revealing themselves as the boat moves around the coastline.

Most charters head to Fourchue, an uninhabited island twenty minutes northwest of Gustavia with a sheltered anchorage, excellent snorkeling and the specific pleasure of swimming somewhere with no development visible in any direction.

Lunch is prepared on board. The return to Gustavia in the late afternoon, the harbor filling up for the evening and the light going golden over the hills, is one of the better moments the Caribbean has to offer.

St Barths

The Food

St Barths has the strongest dining scene in the Caribbean. French influence is evident throughout the island, from the quality of the ingredients to the standards expected in the kitchen.

In Gustavia, restaurants spill out onto the harbourfront, serving everything from freshly caught seafood to refined French cuisine. Reservations at the island’s best tables are often secured well in advance, particularly during the winter season.

Private villas are a central part of the St Barths experience, and many guests choose to arrange a private chef for part or all of their stay. The result is restaurant-quality dining enjoyed in complete privacy, often with views over the island’s bays and coastline.

St Barths

Gustavia

Gustavia is the centre of life on St Barths. By morning, the harbour is filled with fishing boats unloading the day’s catch while locals stop for coffee and pastries before work. By afternoon, superyachts sit at anchor just offshore and the restaurants begin preparing for another busy evening.

The town itself is small enough to explore on foot. Red-roofed buildings climb the hills above the harbour, luxury boutiques sit alongside independent galleries and wine merchants, and almost every street seems to lead back to the water. Unlike many Caribbean resort destinations, Gustavia feels lived in rather than built for visitors.

The rhythm of the town changes throughout the day. Long lunches stretch into the afternoon, beach clubs begin to fill, and as the sun sets the harbourfront becomes one of the island’s most atmospheric places to dine. Even if you’re staying elsewhere on St Barths, you’ll almost certainly find yourself returning to Gustavia more than once.

St Barths

St Barths does not advertise its privacy. It simply structures everything around it. The villas sit behind walls and vegetation with pools that face the ocean and nobody else. The beaches are wide enough and numerous enough that finding space requires no effort. The island is not large enough to support the kind of crowds that would change any of this.

Get in touch with Do Not Disturb to start planning your St Barths vacation.

Plan your own version of this journey

Speak to Do Not Disturb’s luxury travel experts and turn this moment into something personal.