St. Barth is tiny, just 8 square miles. But every area has a completely different feel. After 6 years living on the island, working in hotels, bars, restaurants, and as a villa concierge, I still think the neighborhood you choose makes or breaks a trip. Pick the wrong side of the island and you’ll spend half your vacation in the car wondering why you’re not closer to the things you actually want to do. Here’s my honest take on every area.
Gustavia
The capital. The harbor. The one place on the island that actually feels like a town. This is where the superyachts line up, where you’ll find the best restaurants (Bonito, Orega, Bagatelle, L’Isola), and where the luxury shopping lives. Hermès, Chopard, Cartier, all within a five-minute walk. Gustavia is also where nightlife happens, such as it is on an island this small. If you want to walk to dinner, grab a drink after, and people-watch from a harbor-side table, this is your spot. Being this central does come at a price: villas in and around Gustavia run higher for the location as much as the house itself, and you catch a little of the daytime plane noise. If walking to everything is what matters most to you, it’s worth it. If not, I can show you better value a short drive away. Best for people who want to be in the middle of everything.
St. Jean
St. Jean is the most lively area on the island. The main beach is right here, Eden Rock sits on the rock that splits it in two, and there’s a strip of boutique shopping and casual restaurants within walking distance. It’s also close to the airport, which sounds bad, but the planes landing over the beach is actually one of the most iconic things about St. Barth. First-timers love St. Jean because everything is easy. Families love it because the beach is shallow and calm, genuinely one of the best on the island for young children. Here’s the honest part most sites skip: the small planes run roughly 8am to 6:30pm every day, and you hear them in St. Jean, Public, and Corossol. It’s daytime only and it stops by evening, but if you sleep light or want a silent afternoon nap, it’s worth knowing before you book. It’s not the quietest area, but it has the most energy.
Flamands
Flamands has one of the longest sandy beaches on the island and it’s noticeably quieter than St. Jean. Chéval Blanc is here, one of the best hotels in the Caribbean. The villas on and around Flamands beach are some of the most sought-after on St. Barth. You’re close enough to Gustavia and St. Jean that nothing feels far, but the pace is completely different. This is where you go when you want a stunning beach without the crowd. Beautiful sand, turquoise water, and a lot more peace and quiet than most areas on the island. One honest thing I always tell guests: the sea at Flamands can pick up, with a real shore break on some days. Strong swimmers are fine, but with young children it’s not always the flat, easy water you might picture. I’ll tell you how it’s looking for your dates.
Colombier
Colombier beach is the one everyone talks about. You can only get there by boat or by a 20-minute hike down a rocky trail. There’s no development, no beach bar, no music. Nothing. Just crystal-clear water, a handful of boats anchored offshore, and the kind of quiet that makes you forget the rest of the world exists. This is where locals go. It’s also the best sunset spot on the island, hands down. The hillside above Colombier has some incredible villas with views that never get old. If you want the real St. Barth, start here.
Grand Cul-de-Sac
Grand Cul-de-Sac is a turquoise lagoon on the northeast side of the island. The water is shallow, calm, and warm, perfect for kids and anyone who wants to wade out without getting knocked around by waves. It’s also the best spot for kite surfing when the trade winds pick up. Le Barthélemy and Le Sereno are both here, two of the island’s finest hotels. The vibe is relaxed and protected. You won’t get the big open-ocean feel, but you get this beautiful lagoon that looks like it belongs in a postcard. Great for families and anyone who likes their water flat.
Gouverneur
A lot of people say Gouverneur is the most beautiful beach on St. Barth, and I don’t argue. It’s tucked at the bottom of a steep hill, completely secluded, with no buildings visible from the sand. Just green hills and ocean. The hillside above Gouverneur has some of the island’s most spectacular villas. The views are unreal. It’s the beach for people who want privacy. No vendors, no music, no scene. Just you, the sand, and the Atlantic. A great spot for a photo shoot too. Getting there means a winding drive down and a short walk, which keeps the crowds away. Exactly how it should be.
Lorient
Lorient is where you feel the real St. Barth. It’s a local neighborhood. Not flashy, not trying to impress anyone. JoJo burger is here, the bakery everyone on the island goes to. The beach gets waves, so surfers like it. Anse des Cayes is right next door and that’s the main surf spot. You’ll see more locals than tourists in Lorient, which is exactly why some people love it. The villas tend to be more affordable here too. If you want to feel like you actually live on the island instead of just visiting it, Lorient is a solid pick.
Lurin
Lurin isn’t on a beach. It’s on a hill. And that hill has some of the most jaw-dropping panoramic views on the entire island. Sunset from a Lurin villa is something else entirely. You can see Gustavia, the ocean, neighboring islands. The whole thing lights up in gold and pink every single evening. Some of the island’s most spectacular and expensive villas are perched up here. The trade-off is you’ll need a car to get to the beach. But honestly, when your terrace looks like that, you might not care. Lurin is genuinely quiet, with one caveat I always give straight: the island is always building somewhere, so depending on the exact villa you can occasionally catch construction noise from a neighboring plot. I’ll tell you honestly which villas are clear of it. Best for people who prioritize views over sand.
Pointe Milou
Pointe Milou is a cliffside neighborhood on the north coast: dramatic rock, open ocean, and some of the best sunset views on St. Barth. There’s no real beach here, this is the place for villas with infinity pools that hang right over the water. It’s also home to Ti St-Barth, one of the island’s long-running evening institutions. One honest note from living here: Pointe Milou catches the wind. That’s wonderful when you want it, a constant fresh breeze through the villa, but if you’re after still, sheltered calm, I’d point you to Colombier or Gouverneur instead. For sunset lovers who like a little drama, Pointe Milou is hard to beat.
Saline
Saline is wild. No beach bar, no umbrellas, no facilities at all. You park, walk through a path between the salt ponds, and come out onto a wide stretch of sand with nothing but ocean in front of you. It’s natural and untouched in a way that most Caribbean beaches are not anymore. The waves can be strong, so it’s not always great for swimming, but as a place to lay on the sand and disconnect, it’s unbeatable. This is the beach for people who want zero scene. No posing, no playlist, no influencers. Just nature doing its thing.
Toiny
Toiny is the southeastern edge of the island. It’s remote, rocky, and dramatic. The coastline here is windswept and rugged, big waves crashing against dark rocks, wild vegetation everywhere. Le Toiny hotel sits up on the hillside with private plunge pools overlooking all of it. This is not a swimming beach. But it might be the most visually stunning stretch of coast on St. Barth. If you want to feel like you’re at the edge of the world, Toiny delivers. The villas out here are private, quiet, and about as far from the Gustavia scene as you can get. Here’s a value tip most sites won’t give you: Toiny and neighboring Vitet are only a 10 to 15 minute drive from the St. Jean and Gustavia side, but villas here are often noticeably better value than the central, pricier areas. If you don’t mind a short daily drive, this side of the island stretches your budget a long way.
Corossol
Corossol is a tiny fishing village just outside Gustavia. This is the most authentic part of the island, a place where older women still weave traditional straw hats by hand, fishermen bring in the catch of the day, and life moves slowly. It’s not a tourist destination. There’s no boutique shopping or trendy restaurant here. That’s exactly the point. If you want to see what St. Barth was like before the jets and the yachts, Corossol is it. Worth a visit even if you’re staying somewhere else on the island.
Not Sure Where to Stay?
Message me. I’ve been inside most of the villas on this island and I’ll match you with the right spot based on what you’re actually looking for. Beach or views. Quiet or lively. Walking distance to restaurants or total seclusion. Tell me what matters to you and I’ll point you in the right direction.