9 Best Islands in the Bahamas for Beaches, Relaxation, and Views

Stunning aerial view of a pristine Bahamas island paradise.

There’s a version of a Bahamas trip where you spend half a day at an airport, squeeze into a packed terminal in Nassau, and finally reach your beach at 4pm. And then there’s the version where you take off from Miami over open water and touch down on a shimmering lagoon while everyone else is still waiting to board.

That second version is more possible than most people think. Miami Seaplane Tours flies directly to several of the islands on this list, making the Bahamas far more accessible from South Florida than most travelers realize. But more on that shortly.

The Bahamas is made up of over 700 islands, with crystal-clear waters, sugary white sands, and average year-round temperatures in the 80s, which makes it one of the most compelling tropical destinations anywhere on the planet. The actual challenge isn’t finding beauty here. It’s choosing which island to give your time to.

So here’s a genuine breakdown of the 9 best islands in the Bahamas right now, ranked not by hype but by what they actually deliver.

Quick Comparison: Which Island Is Right for You?

Island 

Vibe

Signature Beach

Crowd Level

Best For

Bimini

Laid-back, local

Radio Beach

Very Low

Weekend escapes

Nassau

Lively, diverse

Cable Beach

High

First-timers, families

Exumas

Wild, scenic

Tropic of Cancer Beach

Low to Moderate

Adventure, wildlife

Eleuthera

Natural, quiet

Gaulding Cay

Low

Photography, relaxation

Harbour Island

Boutique, slow

Pink Sands Beach

Low

Couples, luxury

Paradise Island

Resort, energetic

Cabbage Beach

High

Families, groups

Andros

Remote, wild

Somerset Beach

Very Low

Divers, anglers

Long Island

Dramatic, serene

Cape Santa Maria

Very Low

Honeymooners, divers

Grand Bahama

Balanced, relaxed

Gold Rock Beach

Moderate

Families, eco travelers

#1 Bimini

Bimini Bahamas coastal homes with palm trees and turquoise ocean.

Here’s the island that should be on far more people’s radar, especially anyone based in South Florida. Bimini sits around 51 miles west of Miami and can be reached by plane in about 45 minutes. By seaplane, it’s even more direct and dramatically more scenic on the way in.

Bimini was a frequent stop for Ernest Hemingway. The island is small, easy to get around, and has good food and beach access. Radio Beach and Blister Beach offer clean sand and clear water, while the SS Sapona shipwreck sits in about 20 feet of water, making it accessible for snorkeling.

Miami Seaplane Tours offers two ways to experience Bimini: the Bimini Beach Day Trip for a full 6-hour day on the island, or the Bimini Bahamas Island Charter for a private seaplane charter that can include overnight accommodation planning. Both are passport-required international flights that take off right from Miami.

Highlights at a glance:

  • Radio Beach and Bimini Sands Beach, uncrowded and genuinely beautiful

  • SS Sapona shipwreck snorkeling in shallow, clear water

  • World-class big-game fishing and the chance to dive with hammerhead sharks

  • Honeymoon Harbor, where stingrays gather in the shallows in calm, clear water

  • Ernest Hemingway’s former retreat and the Dolphin House Museum in Alice Town

Best for: Long weekend escapes from Miami, fishing enthusiasts, travelers who want real Bahamian character without a full vacation commitment.

#2 Nassau (New Providence)

Tranquil Nassau beach with turquoise water, white sand, and a tree.

Nassau is often seen as a developed, busy destination. At the same time, it offers clear water, well-kept beaches, and scenic spots that are easy to miss if you move through it too quickly.

Cable Beach is world-famous for its pristine white sands and turquoise waters, and the Baha Mar development nearby houses some of the most recognized luxury resort brands in the world. Add a casino, duty-free shopping, and some of the best nightlife in the Caribbean, and Nassau covers a remarkable amount of ground in one stop.

Because Nassau has the largest airport in the country, it’s also the easiest jumping-off point for reaching the Out Islands. For travelers from South Florida, it’s reachable by seaplane in a way that transforms the arrival entirely.

Highlights at a glance:

  • Cable Beach, a world-famous stretch of white sand and turquoise water

  • Baha Mar resort complex with casinos, luxury dining, and private beach access.

  • Pirates of Nassau Museum and the Queen’s Staircase for colonial history

  • Best nightlife and restaurant selection of any island in the Bahamas

  • Ideal base for island-hopping across the Out Islands

Best for: First-timers, families, travelers who want maximum variety from one base.

#3 Eleuthera

Eleuthera doesn’t get the same attention from tourists as Nassau or Paradise Island, which is precisely why it belongs this high on the list. Dramatic cliffs, miles of unspoiled coastline, and some of the sweetest pineapples in the world make this picturesque island ideal for long, leisurely days by the water.

The island measures 180 km long and just 1.6 km wide in certain spots, straddling the Atlantic on one side and calmer Caribbean waters on the other. The contrast in water color alone is one of the most striking natural views in the Bahamas.

The Glass Window Bridge is where the Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea meet in a striking visual contrast that stops experienced travelers cold. It’s the kind of thing that gets described poorly in words and perfectly in a photograph. Miami Seaplane Tours offers a dedicated Eleuthera Day Trip that includes island hopping by boat once you land, so the full scope of the island can be visited in a single day trip.

Highlights at a glance:

  • Glass Window Bridge, where dark Atlantic meets flat turquoise Caribbean in one view

  • Over 100 named beaches across the island, ranging from calm Caribbean shores to dramatic Atlantic-facing pink sand stretches

  • Surfer’s Beach near Gregory Town is a genuine surf break with a small local community

  • Gaulding Cay Beach is excellent for snorkeling, with sea turtles regularly spotted

  • More shipwrecks than any other island in the Bahamas, including the renowned drift dive at Current Cut

Best for: Nature lovers, photographers, travelers who want beaches without the resort price tag of Harbour Island.

#4 The Exumas

The Exumas are what people picture when they close their eyes and imagine the Bahamas at its most surreal. This chain of 365 cays along the Atlantic is so coveted that many of its islands are privately owned by celebrities, including Johnny Depp and Tyler Perry.

But the real draw is the water. A specific shade of cobalt and turquoise that doesn’t look real in photos and somehow still doesn’t look real in person. Coco Plum Beach on Great Exuma is prime for sand dollar hunting, and the Tropic of Cancer Beach on Little Exuma is genuinely one of the more extraordinary stretches of sand in the entire region.

And then there’s Pig Beach. Both wildly photographed and wildly worth it. Miami Seaplane Tours runs a full Staniel Cay Day Trip directly into the heart of the Exumas, covering Pig Island, snorkeling, and a full day on the water with equipment and towels included.

Highlights at a glance:

  • Big Major Cay (Pig Beach), home to the famous swimming pigs

  • Thunderball Grotto, a snorkeling cave featured in the James Bond film

  • Exuma Cays Land and Sea Park, the world’s first protected land and sea reserve

  • Tropic of Cancer Beach on Little Exuma, one of the clearest water beaches anywhere

  • Luxury private island escapes and some of the best boating routes in the Atlantic

Best for: Adventure travelers, couples who want seclusion, and anyone chasing that one story nobody believes.

#5 Harbour Island

This tiny three-mile-long island off the coast of Eleuthera shows up on every credible ranking of the best islands in the Bahamas, and the reason is simple.

Pink Sands Beach here is recognized by many as one of the world’s most beautiful beaches, and the distinctive blush tone comes from red coral particles in the water. It’s not a gimmick. The color is real, and it shifts from pale rose in the morning to something almost copper at golden hour.

The island’s streets are lined with pastel-colored cottages and swaying palm trees, and the primary way to get around is a golf cart. No chain hotels. No high-rise timeshares. Just boutique stays, good food, and one of the most photographed beaches in the Caribbean.

Highlights at a glance:

  • Pink Sands Beach, widely considered one of the world’s most beautiful beaches

  • Dunmore Town, a charming colonial village best explored by golf cart

  • Scuba diving at Devil’s Backbone, a jagged reef lined with historic shipwrecks

  • Boutique resorts and high-end dining without the mega-resort energy

  • A famously laid-back atmosphere that attracts celebrities looking for peace over publicity

Best for: Couples, honeymooners, slow travelers who want beauty over buzz.

#6 Paradise Island

Just across the bridge from Nassau, Paradise Island operates at its own frequency. Cabbage Beach here stretches along a beautiful shoreline and is ideal for swimming, kayaking, paddleboarding, and sunbathing, with private cabanas available to rent.

The Ocean Club on Paradise Island served as a filming location for the James Bond movie Casino Royale, featuring Daniel Craig. Atlantis Paradise Island is one of the most recognizable landmarks in Nassau, but the beaches stand on their own and are worth visiting regardless of where you stay.  The views of Nassau Harbour at sunset from here are the kind that make people extend their trips by a day or two.

Highlights at a glance:

  • Cabbage Beach, a two-mile sweep of white sand with calm, swimmable water

  • Atlantis Paradise Island resort with a waterpark and marine habitat of over 50,000 sea creatures

  • An 18-hole championship golf course, multiple restaurants, and high-end boutiques

  • Nassau Harbour views at sunset, genuinely among the best in the Bahamas

  • Easy day trip access from Nassau via bridge, or a short seaplane hop from Miami

Best for: Families, groups, travelers who want a full resort experience with great beaches included.

#7 Andros

Andros is for the traveler who wants the Bahamas without the Instagram crowd. At more than 100 miles long and 40 miles wide, Andros is the largest island in the Bahamas, yet also one of the country’s least developed and least populated.

Andros is home to the third-largest barrier reef in the world, Blue Holes National Park with some of the deepest underwater sinkholes on the planet, and rare pink-and-silver-sand beaches.

It holds a title that draws a very specific, passionate kind of traveler: Andros is the bonefishing capital of the world. The diving along the Andros Barrier Reef and the Tongue of the Ocean is some of the finest in the entire Atlantic. Not the most famous. Just actually the best.

For travelers who want Andros without the logistics headache, Miami Seaplane Tours flies directly to the Tiamo Resort on South Andros, a private beach resort accessible only by boat or seaplane, with just 10 villas and a genuinely untouched stretch of coast. There’s also a charter to Kamalame Cay, a private island on Andros with 96 acres of tropical grounds and no real dress code to speak of.

Highlights at a glance:

  • Andros Barrier Reef, the third-largest barrier reef in the world

  • Blue Holes National Park has some of the deepest underwater sinkholes anywhere

  • Rare pink-and-silver-sand beaches, genuinely unlike anything else in the Bahamas

  • World-class bonefishing is widely considered the best in the world.

  • Somerset Beach for completely uncrowded, pristine shoreline relaxation

Best for: Divers, eco-travelers, anglers, and anyone who finds a crowd-free beach more relaxing than a crowded one.

8. Long Island

Long Island is the kind of place that ruins other destinations for a while afterward. Along the western shore, pristine white sand beaches frame the calm, sapphire waters of the Great Bahama Bank, where visitors can go bonefishing, swim, or spot exotic birds along the coast of Cape Santa Maria Beach.

Dean’s Blue Hole here is the world’s second deepest blue hole, and Hamilton’s Cave is one of the largest cave systems in the Bahamas. The Atlantic-facing eastern side has dramatic limestone cliffs unlike anything else in the archipelago. The contrast between those cliffs and the flat white western beaches is what makes Long Island feel genuinely singular.

Highlights at a glance:

  • Cape Santa Maria Beach is consistently ranked among the most beautiful beaches in the Bahamas.

  • Dean’s Blue Hole, the world’s second deepest blue hole, is a freediving landmark

  • Hamilton’s Cave is one of the largest cave systems in the Bahamas

  • Dramatic Atlantic-facing limestone cliffs on the eastern coast

  • Near-zero crowds and a pace of life that feels genuinely removed from everything

Best for: Honeymooners, divers, photographers, travelers who’ve done Nassau and want something more memorable.

9. Grand Bahama (Freeport)

Grand Bahama is the practical choice that also happens to be beautiful, which is an underrated combination and one that families tend to discover and love.

Gold Rock Beach in Lucayan National Park has attracted photographers and filmmakers alike, and it appears in several of the Pirates of the Caribbean films. The beach is genuinely that photogenic, with rippled sand patterns that shift with every tide.

Grand Bahama sits about 64 miles west of Palm Beach, Florida, and offers a genuine taste of simple island living. Less flashy than Paradise Island, less remote than Andros, but with beaches that are legitimately excellent and crowds that stay genuinely manageable.

Highlights at a glance:

  • Gold Rock Beach in Lucayan National Park is a filming location for Pirates of the Caribbean.

  • Lucayan National Park with caves, mangroves, and miles of walking trails

  • Taino Beach and Lucaya Beach, both calm and great for families with young kids

  • Port Lucaya Marketplace for local dining and traditional goombay music in the evenings

  • Tiger Beach for shark diving is one of the most thrilling dives in the Atlantic.

Best for: Families, nature lovers, travelers who want solid infrastructure and genuinely uncrowded beaches.

The Part Most People Don’t Think About: How to Actually Get There

Most people fly commercial into Nassau and figure out the rest from there. But anyone based in South Florida is sitting on a shortcut that changes the entire character of the trip.

A seaplane departure from Miami puts guests over open water within minutes. Bimini sits around 51 miles from Miami and is reachable in under an hour by air, and Nassau, Andros, and several Out Islands are all accessible without layovers or connection flights. The aerial view at low altitude over the Bahamas Bank, where water shifts from deep navy to barely-there aqua above sandbars and uninhabited cays, is not something a commercial window seat delivers. It’s part of the experience itself.

For a destination built entirely on visual beauty, starting the trip from the sky is not a small thing.

FAQs

What is the best island in the Bahamas for first-time visitors?

Nassau is often the easiest choice due to accessibility and available activities.

Which island in the Bahamas has the clearest water?

Exuma is known for its exceptionally clear turquoise water.

Is Bimini a good option for a short trip?

Yes, Bimini is close to Miami and perfect for quick getaways.

Which Bahamas island is best for quiet relaxation?

Cat Island and Eleuthera are great for peaceful and less crowded experiences.

Duration
1 hour
Group Size
At least 2

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