Paradise Beach Nevis
Nevis St. Kitts and Nevis Caribbean & Central America
When you book Paradise Beach Nevis in Nevis, St. Kitts and Nevis through our Virtuoso partnership, your stay includes daily breakfast, room upgrades and a hotel credit.
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Upgrade on arrival, subject to availability
- Daily Full breakfast for up to two guests per bedroom, served in the restaurant
- Complimentary roundtrip private airport transfers (must have minimum value of $100USD equivalent)
- Early Check-In / Late Check-Out, subject to availability
Location
Paradise Beach Nevis sits on the western coast of Nevis, the quieter sibling of the two-island nation of St. Kitts and Nevis. Cotton Ground, the property's home parish capital, carries the weight of colonial history in its name and streets. This is where Horatio Nelson once restocked the HMS Boreas at the lagoon, a footnote to the island's deeper story of sugar, seafaring, and British fortifications. The Caribbean here feels less polished than its glossier neighbours: trade winds sweep across golden beaches edged by palms and sea grape, while Nevis Peak rises green and volcanic behind the coastal plain.
The western shore unfolds as a series of sand crescents and calm bays. Pinney's Beach stretches just beyond the property, a ribbon of pale sand where fishing boats still pull in at dawn. North and South Beaches lie within easy reach, each quieter than the last. The island moves at its own pace, governed by sun and tide rather than cruise ship schedules.
Vance W. Amory International Airport sits six kilometres from the property. Most visitors arrive by propeller plane from St. Kitts or direct seasonal charters. The drive into Cotton Ground passes stone churches, roadside rum shops, and the occasional donkey grazing in tall grass. This is the Caribbean before mass tourism rewrote the script.
Start with the sand. Pinney's Beach lies steps from the property, its calm shallows ideal for morning swims before the sun climbs high. North Beach and South Beach bookend the coastline within two kilometres, each quieter and less developed than the next. For a glimpse of 18th-century Caribbean military might, make the thirty-kilometre crossing to St. Kitts and Brimstone Hill Fortress National Park, a UNESCO-listed British stronghold built by enslaved Africans. The stone ramparts command sweeping views over the channel, a stark reminder of the region's contested colonial past.
Golfers have the Robert Trent Jones II course just over a kilometre inland, its fairways carved from coastal scrub and lava rock. The Old Fish Market in Charlestown, four kilometres south, still functions as the island's main harbour-side gathering point. Book a table at Sunshine's Beach Bar on Pinney's Beach for lobster grilled over driftwood and the strongest rum punch on the island. Nevis moves slowly, but it rewards those who linger.
Nevis holds steady in the high twenties year-round, with December through April delivering the driest, most crystalline light. Mornings break cool and sharp, the air thin enough to see St. Kitts across the channel with startling clarity. Trade winds keep the heat tolerable even at midday.
May through November brings heavier rain and thicker humidity, though showers tend to pass quickly, leaving the air damp and fragrant with frangipani. September and October see the heaviest downpours, when the island turns its deepest green and beach chairs sit empty for hours at a stretch.
Winter remains the peak season, when North American cold sends visitors south in search of warmth. But shoulder months reward with fewer crowds and softer prices, the beaches empty save for locals and the occasional yacht crew provisioning in Charlestown.
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