
Curtain Bluff Resort - All Inclusive
Antigua Antigua & Barbuda Caribbean & Central America
When you book Curtain Bluff Resort - All Inclusive in Antigua, Antigua & Barbuda through our Virtuoso partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a $100 hotel credit.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Upgrade on arrival, subject to availability
- Daily breakfast for up to two guests per bedroom, served in the restaurant and via in-room dining (already included in property rates)
- $100 USD equivalent Resort or Hotel credit to be utilized during stay (not combinable, not valid on room rate, no cash value if not redeemed in full)
- Early Check-In / Late Check-Out, subject to availability
Location
Curtain Bluff Resort sits on a narrow peninsula on Antigua's southwestern coast, where two beaches meet at different angles to catch the morning and afternoon light. Old Road, the settlement nearest the property, marks one of the island's earliest European footholds, though today the area feels blissfully removed from the cruise port bustle of St. John's. The coastline here is all limestone bluffs and coves carved by Atlantic swells, the water shifting from turquoise shallows to cobalt where the seabed drops away.
Antigua's 365 beaches, one for every day of the year as the local saying goes, feel less like marketing hyperbole and more like understatement once you've traced the island's scalloped shoreline. Grace Bay Beach lies steps from the property, while Morris Bay curves just beyond, both free of the vendors and jet skis that crowd busier stretches.
V. C. Bird International Airport sits 15 kilometres northeast, a quick transfer through rolling hills dotted with sugar mill ruins and roadside stalls selling tamarind balls and seasoned conch.
The property's twin beaches define the rhythm here: one calm bay for morning swims, one surf-kissed shore for bodyboarding when the afternoon trades blow in. Snorkelling gear takes you over brain coral gardens teeming with sergeant majors and parrotfish just offshore. Nine kilometres north, the Antigua Naval Dockyard (UNESCO-listed since 2016) preserves Georgian naval architecture within a walled compound, its stone warehouses and officers' quarters a window into Britain's 18th-century Caribbean command. The dockyard's natural deep-water harbours made it strategically indispensable; today, restored sail lofts and pitch-and-tar stores evoke the Age of Nelson.
Jolly Harbour Golf Club, 7.6 kilometres west, offers 18 holes threading between mangrove wetlands. For local colour, Heritage Market (11.5 kilometres) gathers Antiguan vendors selling hot pepper sauce, black pineapple, and hand-rolled tamarind sweets. Book a sunset catamaran sail along the south coast to see the bluffs from the water, rum punch in hand.
Antigua's climate reads like a traveller's wish list: warm year-round, cooled by constant northeast trades, and drier than most Caribbean islands. January through April brings the island's driest months, with highs around 27°C and skies so reliably clear that resorts rarely bother with indoor contingency plans. The light turns crystalline, the humidity drops, and sailboats crowd the harbours for racing season.
May introduces brief afternoon showers that green the hillsides without disrupting beach days. September and October see the most rain, warm and heavy but usually in short bursts, with seas occasionally choppy during the tail end of hurricane season.
December balances sunshine with just enough breeze to keep temperatures comfortable, the island busy but not overrun.
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