Point Grace
Providenciales Turks and Caicos Caribbean & Central America
When you book Point Grace in Providenciales, Turks and Caicos through our Fora Reserve partnership, your stay includes room upgrades, a $100 hotel credit and a complimentary spa treatment.
Special Offer
Offer includes: + Up to 20% off + Flexible booking
Exclusive Booking Perks
- Upgrade on arrival, subject to availability*
- Early check-in / Late check-out, subject to availability
- In-suite welcome amenity upon arrival
- Resort credit per booking (may not be used toward room rate, third-party excursions, spa or boutique products; no cash value if not redeemed in full)
- Starting at $100, resort credit increases based on room category booked:
- Studio / Junior Suite
- $100
- One Bedroom
- $150
- Two Bedroom
- $200
- Three Bedroom
- $250
- Four Bedroom
- $300
- Private Villas* (Four & Five Bedroom)
- $500
- Six Bedroom & Larger
Location
Point Grace anchors the quieter end of Grace Bay, where Providenciales sheds its resort-strip bustle for something more composed. The property sits directly on a sweep of powder-fine sand that runs unbroken for kilometres, the kind of beach that photographs in shades of cerulean and chalk white but feels different underfoot: cool, impossibly soft, untouched by the crowds that gather farther east. This is the Turks and Caicos at its most refined, where the British colonial past lingers in place names and the rhythm of island life, but the landscape belongs entirely to the Caribbean.
Grace Bay itself curves along the north shore of Providenciales, a low-slung island ringed by coral and mangrove. The reef offshore creates a natural barrier that keeps the water calm and impossibly clear, visibility stretching thirty metres on most days. Inland, the island feels sparse and sun-bleached, scattered with salt pans and scrubland, but the beachfront hums with a quiet luxury economy: boutique resorts, beachfront dining, and a handful of marinas where catamarans set out for day sails to uninhabited cays.
Providenciales International Airport sits nine kilometres south, a quick drive along Leeward Highway that skirts the island's interior before depositing arrivals at the coast. Most visitors rent a car to explore beyond Grace Bay, though the property's location makes it easy to stay put.
The property's beachfront is the main draw, a stretch of sand where the only decision is which direction to walk. Head west toward Turtle Cove and the coastline opens up, the beach giving way to rocky outcrops and tide pools where conch shells collect in the shallows. East, the sand continues uninterrupted, backed by low dunes and sea grape trees. Snorkelling happens directly offshore, where the reef drops away in steps and the current carries you past parrotfish and eagle rays.
Off-property, the island rewards those who venture inland or around the coast. Provo Golf Club, two and a half kilometres from the hotel, is the only course on the island, a links-style layout that plays firm in the trade winds. For provisions or local flavour, Neptune Court, just over a kilometre away, offers island groceries and a glimpse of residential Provo. Sapodilla Bay Beach, twelve kilometres south, sits on the calmer Caribbean side of the island, its shallow waters and mangrove backdrop a study in contrasts to Grace Bay's open vistas. Book a morning charter from one of the marinas (South Bank, Hawksbill, or Turtle Cove, all within five kilometres) to reach the uninhabited cays that dot the Caicos Bank, where sandbanks appear at low tide and iguanas outnumber people.
Winter and early spring deliver the island's finest weather, with daytime temperatures hovering in the mid-twenties and humidity kept in check by steady trade winds. The light turns sharp and clean, the kind that makes the water glow turquoise even under cloud cover. March and April are particularly dry, ideal for beach days that stretch from sunrise to sundowner without interruption.
Summer brings heat, the mercury climbing into the high twenties by July and August, but the winds persist and the ocean stays swimmable. September and October mark the wettest months, with afternoon showers arriving suddenly and dissipating just as fast, though the island rarely feels sodden. Hurricane season runs June through November, a consideration for planners but not a deterrent for most.
Winter remains the peak season, when North American travelers escape the cold and the beaches fill with families and couples. Spring offers a quieter rhythm, the crowds thinning out while the weather holds steady and warm.
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