Welcoming vibes for real

Treasure Beach, a mid-sized community consisting of locals and ex-pats, features several beautiful beaches with distinct vibes. I loved that I could choose between famous beaches with more of a party vibe and deserted stretches of the beach whenever I was seeking tranquility. Contrary to other beaches in Jamaica, you won’t find many water activities, such as jet skies but will encounter a unique vibe.

The beach stretches for around six miles and is perfect for sun lovers! However, the beaches offer very little shade, so come prepared!

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Treasure Beach has always felt different to me. It is the side of Jamaica that does not try too hard to impress you — no big resort strip, no polished beach scene, no rush to turn every view into a product. Just fishing boats pulled onto the sand, small guesthouses, sea air, roadside food, and a South Coast rhythm that asks you to slow down a little.

That is also why it is impossible to update this guide without mentioning Hurricane Melissa, which hit Jamaica in October 2025 and deeply affected communities along the south coast, including Treasure Beach. For a place built so much on small businesses, family-run stays, local restaurants, and community tourism, the damage was not just physical. It touched people’s homes, work, and sense of security.

But Treasure Beach is not a place I would write about in the past tense. It is reopening, rebuilding, and welcoming travelers again — carefully, step by step. And if there is ever a place where tourism should mean more than just taking a holiday, it is here.

So this guide is written with that in mind: come for the beaches, the food, the quiet roads, the sunsets, and the feeling of being far from Jamaica’s more obvious tourist trail. But come thoughtfully. Stay locally, eat locally, book with local guides, tip well, and understand that your visit can support the same community that makes Treasure Beach so special.

jakes by the sea
  • After Hurricane Melissa, I would be especially intentional about where to stay. If a property is open and welcoming guests again, booking locally is one of the most direct ways to support Treasure Beach’s recovery. I would still check the latest status before booking, as some places may be reopening step by step.
Our recommendations

Best places to stay in Treassure Beach

Compared to Negril or Montego Bay, Treasure Beach feels much smaller, quieter, and more community-led. This is not where I would come for big resorts, nightlife, or an all-inclusive beach strip. The charm here is more understated: small hotels, guesthouses, sea views, fishing boats, roadside food, and places that still feel closely connected to the people who live here.

Jakes is the classic Treasure Beach stay. It has shaped much of the area’s reputation for creative, soulful, community-minded tourism, with colorful cottages, seaside rooms, villas, restaurants, and a strong connection to the South Coast.

I would choose Jakes if you want the full Treasure Beach feeling: design, history, sea air, and a stay that feels deeply tied to the place rather than dropped onto it. It is probably the most iconic option here, but it still feels very different from Jamaica’s larger resort hotels.

Best for: first-time visitors, couples, creatives, and travelers who want the classic Treasure Beach experience.

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Katamah is a beautiful choice if you want something smaller and directly by the sea. It feels more intimate than a hotel, with a peaceful, guesthouse-style atmosphere that suits Treasure Beach well.

This is the kind of place I would look at if I wanted quiet mornings, beach access, gardens, and a stay that feels simple but special. It is less about facilities and more about the feeling of being close to the water and the slower rhythm of the South Coast.

Best for: slow travelers, solo travelers, couples, and anyone looking for a peaceful beachfront base.

For something smaller and more grounded, Kudehya Guesthouse feels like a better fit than a generic hotel recommendation. It is simple, intimate, and built around a slower “old Jamaican” style of hospitality. The guesthouse describes itself around a “Simple, Natural, Ital” way of life, which fits the kind of Treasure Beach experience I would personally look for.

I would choose Kudehya if I wanted quiet, sea views, and a stay that feels close to the everyday rhythm of the area rather than overly designed.

Best for: slow travelers, couples, solo travelers, and anyone who prefers small guesthouses over polished hotels.

Walk among the bays and soak up some sun

Frenchman’s Beach

The half-mile-long beach in front of Frenchman’s restaurant and bar is a superb spot to hang out. From the bar, you have a nice view of the beach. The beach is pretty cool, with some smaller Airbnbs and restaurants nearby. It’s not necessarily the best beach for swimming, though, as the current is pretty strong. Like Jake’s Sprat Beach, I loved how locals would come and enjoy the beach on the weekends, waking the otherwise pretty quiet town. Welcoming Vibes hostel offers the most amazing sunsets over Frenchman’s Beach.

Calabash Bay

You can reach Calabash Bay from Frenchman’s in about 10-15 minutes. When the water is good, it’s an excellent spot for swimming. Several restaurants and Airbnbs are close by.

The bays of Treasure Beach

 Jake’s Sprat Beach

The slight stretch of beach right in front of Jake’s Spart restaurant is an excellent place to hang out and feel the vibe. During the weekend, the beach filled up with many Jamaican families as the waters were very calm and a good place for swimming. By the way: Jakes Sprat supports sustainable and organic farming in the region!

Old Wharf

If you continue for about 20 minutes, you’ll find Old Wharf Bay before Great Bay. It’s probably the most private and quiet of all beaches surrounding Treasure Beach. It’s pretty enclosed, so the waters are almost always pretty calm, making it an excellent place to swim.

Great Bay

This vast and long stretch of beaches is perfect for open-water swimming. It was empty during my visit, and I had the entire beach to myself. At the end of Great Bay, you’ll find Lobster Pot restaurant serving the most delicious Lobster! Lobster pot is a legend and super popular with locals and tourists alike.

Enjoy the most amazing sunsets at Pelican Bar

Pelican Bar was completely destroyed by Hurricane Melissa in October 2025. I will keep this section updated as more information becomes available about what may come next.

Before the hurricane, I’ll admit, visiting Pelican Bar was not especially high on my bucket list. But after being pleasantly surprised by Rick’s Café in Negril, I was more open to trying one of Jamaica’s better-known visitor experiences. My host Paul strongly encouraged me to go — and I am glad he did. The sunsets from out on the water were genuinely beautiful.

Pelican Bar sat just offshore from Parottee, a small fishing village about 15 minutes from Treasure Beach. Built on stilts in the turquoise Caribbean Sea, it could only be reached by boat. The crossing took around five minutes, with prices depending on the number of people going.

Take in the view of Lover’s Leap

Lover’s Leap offers the most sweeping views over the sea from 1700 ft above sea level. It almost seems like the view lasts forever. By the way: the lighthouse at Lovers’ Leap is the highest in the western hemisphere. It has become a local hotspot on Sunday evenings, where you’ll find lively vibes, music, and typical Jamaican food.

However, the story behind Lover’s Leap is quite tragic. The story behind it is a sad love story of two enslaved people who decided to run away together as the plantation owner meant to separate them. Their tragic run ended upon the Leap, where they jumped and were supposedly caught by the golden net of the moon.

Feel the vibes at my favorite spot in town

Paul’s Welcoming Vibes hostel is, without a doubt, my favorite place from which to enjoy Treasure Beach. It’s a perfect spot to spend some days, tour, and discover the surroundings with Paul or have a rooftop yoga session.

Practical Travel Tips for Treasure Beach

Public transport exists but takes patience. Route taxis and minibuses are cheap and widely used, but they run on local logic rather than fixed schedules. In larger cities — especially Kingstonride-hailing apps like Uber and inDrive are commonly used and often the easiest option for short trips.
For more flexibility, particularly outside cities, hiring a trusted driver or renting a car makes a big difference. When using taxis, it’s best to rely on known drivers, accommodation recommendations, or app-based rides rather than flagging cars randomly.

Jamaican Dollars. Cash is still important. While cards are accepted in larger shops and hotels, many everyday places — food stalls, taxis, markets — operate cash-only. Jamaican dollars are useful, even though US dollars are widely accepted. Expect prices to vary depending on context; asking first is normal.

Jamaica rewards awareness rather than fear. Knowing where you are, asking locally before moving around unfamiliar areas, and avoiding unnecessary nighttime wandering in places you don’t know goes a long way. Relationships matter — being introduced, recognized, or recommended often opens doors and smooths situations.

English is the official language, but Patois carries much of the meaning in daily life. You don’t need to speak it, but listening closely helps. Tone matters. Directness isn’t rudeness here — it’s clarity.

Tap water is generally safe in Kingston and many urban areas, but quality varies. Using a reusable water filter bottle is a reliable option and avoids plastic waste. Sun protection matters more than people expect — shade and hydration are essential.

Greet people. Ask before taking photos. Be curious without being intrusive. Jamaica isn’t a backdrop — it’s a place where people live, work, and negotiate daily realities. Moving with respect changes how the island responds to you.

Being a fair visitor in Jamaica starts with understanding that tourism here is uneven. Much of the industry is built around all-inclusive resorts, while everyday life operates alongside it, often without benefiting directly. How you move, spend, and engage can make a real difference.

Choose where your money goes
Whenever possible, stay in locally run guesthouses or apartments, eat at small restaurants, and book tours directly with community-based operators. These choices keep money circulating locally rather than leaving the island.

Respect access and boundaries
Beach access is a sensitive issue in Jamaica. Ask before entering spaces, respect areas used by local communities, and avoid assuming that every stretch of coast is open or public.

Move with curiosity, not entitlement
Greet people, ask questions, and listen. Jamaica isn’t a backdrop for consumption — it’s a place where people live, work, and negotiate daily realities. Being observant and respectful changes how you’re received.

Support without performing
Avoid voluntourism or staged “helping” experiences. If you want to contribute, support local businesses, artists, and initiatives quietly and consistently rather than publicly or performatively.

Be patient with pace and systems
Things don’t always move quickly or predictably. Accepting this without frustration is part of fair travel. Flexibility and humility go a long way.

Being a fair visitor in Jamaica isn’t about getting everything right. It’s about moving with awareness, choosing connection over convenience, and leaving places no worse — and ideally slightly better — than you found them.

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No many how many times you return to Jamaica: it will always capture your heart!

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