Four Seasons I: The Voyages You Need To Start Exploring

Quick Take

Four Seasons I is the world's most exclusive new yacht joining the era of the superyachts with 95 suites, nearly 190 guests, and a crew that almost matches them one-to-one. It launched in March 2026 and sails the Mediterranean in summer, the Caribbean and Bahamas in winter.

Who is it for? Travelers who already know what a great hotel feels like and want that same feeling on the water, without compromising on space, service, or where the ship can actually go.

What makes it different? This luxury yacht is small enough to dock where cruise ships cannot, big enough to carry 11 restaurants and a nearly 10,000-square-foot penthouse. Most ports are visited as overnight, not rushed half-day stops.

What Traveling on Four Seasons I Actually Feels Like

More often than not, travel  stops being about the destination and starts being about the entire experience, in this case: the ship, the service, the sense of arrival, and the way time moves differently when you're in the middle of the sea.

The voyages available in 2026 and 2027, spanning the Mediterranean, the Adriatic, the Caribbean, the Bahamas, and upcoming Egypt and Costa Rica, make a genuinely compelling case for rethinking what seeing the world onboard a luxury cruise ship can look like.

The Yacht Up Close

Before getting into the voyages, it's worth knowing a few numbers. Four Seasons I carries 95 suites, with the entry-level Seaview Suite at 473 square feet (58% larger than the entry suite on the Ritz-Carlton's smallest yacht) and the Funnel Suite at nearly 10,000 square feet across four levels, making it one of the largest accommodations afloat anywhere in the world. Approximately 190 crew look after approximately 190 guests, a nearly 1:1 ratio that produces service which anticipates rather than reacts. Eleven dining and bar venues are available simultaneously and not on a schedule, from 24-hour in-suite dining to a champagne and caviar bar. A transverse marina opens on both sides of the yacht, putting kayaks, paddleboards, and the open sea directly within reach.

The Voyages That Will Have You Booking Now

With 32 voyages across the inaugural year and 33 more announced for 2027, these are the itineraries we think are worth paying close attention to (and booking ASAP).

1. The Rivieras: Porto Cervo and Saint-Tropez

Route: Monte Carlo to Portovenere to Porto Cervo to Fréjus to Saint-Tropez to Port-Vendres to Palma de Mallorca
Length: 7 nights | Dates: August 9-16 and August 23-30, 2026 

Summer on the French and Italian Rivieras, need we say more? The beach clubs are at full swing. The harbor at Saint-Tropez is entirely given over to the global yachting set. Porto Cervo, on Sardinia's Costa Smeralda, is doing exactly what it was built to do: host the world's finest yachts in one of the Mediterranean's most beautiful bays. This is the Riviera at its most alive, and this voyage puts travelers at the center of it.

The route opens in Monaco, sweeps south along the Ligurian coast to Portovenere, crosses to Porto Cervo at the height of the Costa Smeralda season, runs along the Côte d'Azur through Fréjus and Saint-Tropez, and finishes in Palma de Mallorca. The Mediterranean's greatest hits, in the right order, at the right time of year.

2. The Istrian Riviera: Hvar to Venice

Route: Dubrovnik to Hvar to Trogir to Mali Lošinj to Porec to Rovinj to Piran to Venice
Length: 7 nights | Dates: June 14-21 and June 28 to July 5, 2026 

Most travelers know Dubrovnik. Fewer know what lies north of it.

The Istrian Riviera, running up through Croatia's Dalmatian islands, past the limestone-terraced coast of Istria, and into the Venetian-influenced towns of Slovenia, is one of Europe's most beautiful and undervisited stretches of coastline. This voyage traces it end to end, then finishes in Venice.

Mali Lošinj is a car-free Croatian island with Roman-era pine forests, clear Adriatic water, and a harbor town so well-preserved. Rovinj is a hilltop Venetian town that climbs a rocky peninsula above its harbor, cobblestoned, bell-towered, and beautiful. Piran is Slovenia's only coastal town: a miniature Venice on the Adriatic, almost entirely overlooked by international travelers. Venice is the grand finale.

3. The Ionian and Dalmatian Coast

Route: Athens to Monemvasia to Pýlos to Cephalonia to Corfu to Tivat to Primošten to Brac to Dubrovnik
Length: 9 nights | Dates: June 5-14, 2026 

This is the voyage for the traveler who has already done Santorini. It opens in Athens and immediately navigates into places that almost never appear on standard Mediterranean itineraries. 

Monemvasia is a Byzantine rock fortress rising from the Peloponnese coast. Its name literally means "single entrance" in Greek, and the medieval town is accessible only by a narrow causeway connecting it to the mainland. Inside: Byzantine churches, ancient ruins, and stone lanes unchanged in centuries. No cars. No large hotels. Essentially no tourists other than those who specifically seek it out. 

The Bay of Navarino at Pýlos is where one of history's most decisive naval battles was fought in 1827. The bay is now a protected wetland, deep and still, overlooked by a Venetian fortress.

Tivat, Montenegro sits at the entrance to the Bay of Kotor, one of the Mediterranean's most dramatic inland waterways, ringed by mountains and medieval towns.

For the culturally curious luxury traveler, this nine-night itinerary delivers a version of the Mediterranean that most people never reach.

4. The Rivieras: Bonifacio and Positano

Route: Monte Carlo to Bonifacio to Ponza to Amalfi to Positano to Gozo to Valletta
Length: 7 nights | Dates: September 6-13, 2026 

September in the Mediterranean. The crowds have thinned. The light has changed. The water is at its warmest.

This voyage earns its reputation on two ports alone.

Bonifacio sits at the southern tip of Corsica, its medieval old town perched on white limestone cliffs seventy meters above the sea. The view from the water, with fortress walls hanging over the cliff edge and the Strait of Bonifacio below, is one of the Mediterranean's great arrivals. There is genuinely no way to appreciate Bonifacio without approaching it by sea.

Ponza is Italy's best-kept secret: a small volcanic island off the Lazio coast, three hours by ferry from Rome and worlds away from the tourist circuit. The harbor fills each summer with Italian superyachts. There is no airport, minimal hotel infrastructure, and almost nothing to do except swim, eat remarkably well, and live the Dolce Vita at its fullest.

This is the voyage for the traveler who wants to say they have been to Italy and mean somewhere entirely new.

5. The Grand Mediterranean: Ischia, Stromboli, and the Aeolian Islands

Route: Valletta to Stromboli to Lipari to Ischia to Porto Ercole to Cavalaire-sur-Mer to Saint-Cyr to Monte Carlo
Length: 7 nights | Dates: August 2-9, 2026 

One detail sets this voyage apart from everything else in the 2026 program: Stromboli at night.

Stromboli is an active volcano in the Aeolian Islands, one of Europe's most consistently active, in near-continuous eruption for over 2,000 years. Small explosive bursts of glowing lava occur roughly every 10 to 20 minutes from the summit craters, giving rise to its ancient nickname: the "Lighthouse of the Mediterranean." From the sea, anchored offshore at dusk, the spectacle is unlike anything else in the Mediterranean.

The voyage builds around this: opening in Malta, sailing through the Aeolian Islands (Stromboli and Lipari), stopping at Ischia, the thermal island in the Amalfi Coast and finishing on the Côte d'Azur.

For travelers who have covered the Italian and French coasts before, the Aeolian Islands add a dimension of geological wonder.

The Non-Traditional Ports: Where the Yacht Goes That Others Cannot

One of the most consistent themes in Four Seasons Yachts' approach to itinerary planning is the deliberate inclusion of ports that simply do not appear on large-ship itineraries: either because the harbor is too small or the anchorage too shallow.

Portovenere, Italy (Ligurian Riviera) Standing at the gateway to the Cinque Terre on a rocky promontory above the Gulf of La Spezia (known as the Gulf of Poet), Portovenere is a UNESCO World Heritage site that receives a fraction of the tourist traffic of its famous neighbors.

Gozo, Malta Malta's quieter sister island is home to the Ggantija Temples, among the world's oldest freestanding structures, pre-dating both Stonehenge and the Egyptian pyramids by over 1,000 years and recognized by UNESCO.

Monemvasia, Greece - A medieval fortified rock rising from the Peloponnese coast. One causeway in, its very name meaning "single entrance" in Greek. Inside: Byzantine churches, ancient ruins, and stone lanes unchanged in centuries. Essentially no tourists other than those who specifically seek it out. 

Cassis, France - Thirty minutes east of Marseille, at the foot of France's highest coastal cliffs, sits a small Provençal fishing village surrounded by white wine vineyards and dramatic limestone gorges (the Calanques).

Ponza, Italy - Already described above, but worth repeating: this is the Italian yachting elite's most closely guarded secret.

Looking Ahead: The 2027 Season

For travelers already thinking beyond 2026, the 2027 Mediterranean season is worth knowing about now, as it introduces 33 entirely new voyages with no repeated itineraries from the inaugural year. Four Seasons II is confirmed to debut in 2027 as the second vessel in the fleet.

The headline addition is Egypt.

Three voyages feature Egypt as the central destination: two 7-night Eastern Mediterranean sailings and a 14-night Grand Mediterranean journey that combines both. Every Egypt luxury itinerary includes overnight stays in port, specifically programmed to allow proper time ashore, including a full day at the Pyramids of Giza, the Valley of the Kings, Luxor Temple, and Alexandria's storied waterfront.

This Is Just the Beginning

If the 2027 Mediterranean season signals ambition, the 2027-2028 Caribbean season confirms that Four Seasons Yachts is only getting started.

Costa Rica makes its debut as part of an entirely new Caribbean lineup featuring 18 voyages and 18 new destinations. Four Seasons I will call Marina Papagayo and Bahía Golfito: two private marina gateways that open onto coastlines, wildlife refuges, and protected ecosystems that most travelers never reach.

Marina Papagayo sits within Culebra Bay on the Guanacaste Peninsula, framed by dry tropical forest and calm Pacific waters. It sits just minutes from Four Seasons Resort Peninsula Papagayo, which means guests can move seamlessly between the yacht and one of Central America's most celebrated resort properties. Snorkeling sheltered coves, kayaking the peninsula, and hiking trails alive with howler monkeys, iguanas, and tropical birds are all on offer. Select January and February sailings are timed to coincide with humpback whale migration along Costa Rica's Pacific coast.

The same season also introduces a 9-night Lesser Antilles voyage featuring Barbados and Dominica (April 16-25, 2028). Dominica is one of the most compelling islands in the Eastern Caribbean and one of the least visited: no mass-market resort strips, no large-ship crowds, just dense rainforest, boiling lakes, world-class diving on untouched reefs, and some of the best whale watching in the Atlantic. Barbados anchors the voyage with its polished, sun-drenched elegance. Together, they make a pairing that is as contrasting as it is well-matched.

For travelers who want something genuinely new, this is worth watching closely.

The Right Voyage Is Waiting

The voyages, the ports, the suite sizes, the crew ratio: the details add up to something that is genuinely difficult to find elsewhere at sea. Four Seasons I is built for travelers who have stopped settling.

KJ Travel is a Four Seasons Preferred Partner. For personalized voyage recommendations, suite selection, and exclusive partner benefits on Four Seasons Yachts sailings, contact a KJT Advisor.

FAQ: Four Seasons Yachts

How is Four Seasons Yachts different from a regular luxury cruise? The primary differences are scale, service, and access. With approximately 190 guests maximum and nearly a 1:1 crew ratio, the experience is closer to a private yacht than a cruise ship. The smaller vessel size allows access to ports that large cruise ships cannot enter: boutique harbors, yacht-only anchorages, and shallow-water destinations. Suite sizes start at 473 square feet of interior space, significantly larger than standard cruise ship cabins.

How much does a Four Seasons Yacht voyage cost? Pricing starts from approximately $3,000 per suite per night, with total voyage costs ranging from around $19,900 per suite for a 7-night Caribbean sailing to $52,000 or more per suite for the 9-night Ionian and Dalmatian Coast voyage.

When will the Four Seasons Yacht sail the Mediterranean? Mediterranean sailings run from spring through autumn, typically from March to November. The 2026 inaugural Mediterranean season includes Greek Isles, Adriatic Sea, Ionian Coast, French and Italian Riviera, and Balearic Islands voyages. The 2027 Mediterranean season adds Egypt, Morocco, Portugal, and more than 40 new destinations.

Can Four Seasons Yacht be chartered privately? Yes. Full yacht charters are available for large celebrations, family reunions, and private events. With 95 suites and 11 dining venues, Four Seasons I can accommodate significant groups while maintaining the full level of personalized service.

What ports do Four Seasons Yacht visit that other ships cannot? Several ports on the itinerary are only accessible to vessels of this size, including Palmetto Point (Barbuda), the Exuma Sound cays (Bahamas), Ponza (Italy), Monemvasia (Greece), and various small Adriatic harbors. In many of these destinations, Four Seasons I is confirmed to be the only vessel in port.

One&Only Moonlight Basin vs. Montage Big Sky: Montana's Two Greatest Luxury Mountain Resorts

QUICK TAKE

Both One&Only Moonlight Basin and Montage Big Sky deliver five-star luxury skiing at the foot of America's biggest ski mountain, but they could not feel more different.

One&Only is intimate and design-forward: a boutique hideaway for guests who want seclusion and natural beauty. Montage is bold, social, and built for groups: Montana's largest spa, five dining outlets, and enough on-site programming that a multi-generational family could stay a week without running out of things to do.

The right choice comes down to one question: do you want to disappear into the mountain, or do you want the mountain to come alive around you?

TWO ADDRESSES. ONE LEGENDARY MOUNTAIN.

Big Sky, Montana already had one of the most compelling arguments in luxury travel: the largest ski resort in America for now, big-sky views that actually live up to the name, and a proximity to Yellowstone that turns a ski trip into something far more memorable. Montage Big Sky opened in December 2021 and immediately set a new standard for the region. Then, in November 2025, One&Only Moonlight Basin arrived as the brand's first-ever resort in the United States and raised the stakes entirely.

Now, for the first time, luxury travelers arriving in Big Sky have a genuine choice to make. And it's a meaningful one.

Kate just returned from spending time at both properties and came back with a clear sense of who belongs where. Here's the full breakdown.

ONE&ONLY MOONLIGHT BASIN VS. MONTAGE BIG SKY: LOCATION AND MOUNTAIN ACCESS

Montage Big Sky's convenient Spanish Peaks enclave offers ski-in/ski-out access to the Lewis & Clark lift and a quick 12-minute drive to downtown, suiting seamless family adventures and town proximity, while One&Only Moonlight Basin's secluded Moonlight Basin setting on Lone Peak's north side provides gondola ski access and a 20-25 minute twisty-road drive from town, ideal for privacy and intimate mountain immersion. Both properties sit at stunning alpine elevations around 7,700 feet, with Yellowstone under an hour away and year-round access to Big Sky Resort's vast terrain, enabling trips tailored for all kinds of pace and activities. If a mountain getaway is what you’re looking for this summer, make sure to explore the summer trails at Big Ski.

ONE&ONLY MOONLIGHT BASIN

If this resort were a person, it would be that quiet, effortlessly cool friend who knows every hidden corner of Montana and somehow makes you feel like you've discovered something the rest of the world hasn't found yet. This is One&Only's first alpine resort and first U.S. property.

The Accommodations

Spread across three lodges, 73 guest rooms and suites, and 19 freestanding cabins, the property is deliberately intimate. The main lodge hosts just 7 rooms. The Lone Mountain View rooms are the most requested on property, and the views of the Madison Mountain Range are cinematic in every season.

Rooms connect from a king to a double queen for families. The Meadow Cabin works well for a couple plus young children. The Alpine Cabins are more secluded with beautiful plaster wall finishes at a slightly higher price point. A few practical notes: no rollaways or pull-out sofas, suites max at three occupants, and chaise lounges are available for kids up to age 5. For full residential privacy, the Signature 5-bedroom home has no nightly minimums and includes ski rentals.

The Dining

Six restaurants and bars anchor the property. Akira Back brings Michelin-starred Japanese-Korean cuisine. Wildwood handles ranch-to-table breakfasts. The Landing sits steps from the gondola for casual alpine comfort food. After dark, the Moonshack and Speakeasy, both set in an original 1800s trappers cabin, are adults-only, hotel guests only, and two of the most memorable evening experiences in Montana.

The Mountain and Activities 

Private ski guides meet guests at the Sky Lodge. Golf tee times (two guaranteed per day in summer) need to be requested at booking as they fill fast. Tuesday evenings bring rodeos at nearby Lone Mountain Ranch. The on-site observatory, housing one of fewer than 10 PlaneWave CDK700 telescopes in the country, offers guided stargazing sessions that are genuinely unlike anything else at this altitude. The Kids Club (ages 4 and up) is complimentary. Additionally, the property has tennis courts for warm-weather stays, a heated resort pool, and a well-equipped fitness center for those looking to add some extra movement during their stay. 

Choose One&Only Moonlight Basin if you...

  • Want true seclusion and a boutique, design-forward experience

  • Prioritize exceptional dining and one-of-a-kind evening experiences

  • Are traveling as a couple, small group, or with your family

  • Want a private guide, private gondola access, and a resort that feels like it belongs to you

  • Are planning a summer trip with Yellowstone as a natural extension (roughly an hour away)

MONTAGE BIG SKY

If One&Only is where you go to disappear, Montage is where you go to gather. Opened in December 2021 and currently the largest building in Montana, it's a grand resort with interiors that blend mountain warmth with real luxury polish. At 7,000 feet with the Spanish Peaks as a backdrop, it's a setting that delivers on every promise Montana makes.

The Accommodations

With 139 guest rooms, suites, and residences, this property is built for groups and multi-generational travel. Guest rooms run from 1 to 3 bedrooms; residences scale from 4 to 6. One important note before booking: resort view rooms face the driveway. Request peak views on higher floors. The Deluxe Peak one-bedroom suite is the one to ask for: it adds a balcony, pullout couch, and second full bath. Only 8 exist on property, so book early. The 6th floor has vaulted ceilings available on request, and some two-bedroom configurations include bunk beds for higher occupancy.

For larger groups, 14 Mountain Homes (7 in the rental program) offer 5 and 6-bedroom layouts, all ski-in/ski-out with private garages, ski lockers, hot tubs, balcony grills, bunk rooms, dry saunas, in-room dining, and daily housekeeping. Signature homes offer the most secluded positioning and best ski access. Lodge residences have guaranteed bedding configurations; Inn residences are slightly more affordable.

The Dining and Après

Alpenglow anchors all-day dining with live music most evenings and a DJ on weekends. S'mores run nightly from 6 to 8pm. The Rivalry Room, a sports pub with bowling, shuffleboard, arcade games, and golf simulators, is the kind of place families return to every evening. In winter or summer, the Ramcharger 8 gondola up to Everett's 8800 is worth building into any itinerary.

The Mountain and Activities

Ski-in/ski-out access via the Lewis & Clark Chairlift leads directly to beginner and intermediate terrain, with a ski beach at the base for easy post-run gatherings. Compass Sports offers private lessons at a Deer Valley-caliber level. Paintbrush, the kids program for ages 5 to 12, runs morning, afternoon, full-day, and Kids Night Out sessions.

Beyond skiing: tubing, magic carpets, the Founders Loop trail, Ousel Falls hikes, and mountain bikes and e-bikes round out the activity calendar. The 10,000 sq ft Spa Montage is Montana's largest, with an indoor pool open to all guests and three outdoor pools year-round. A Tom Weiskopf 18-hole course plus a new par-3 opening soon makes summer equally compelling. Guided Yellowstone safaris depart directly from the hotel.

Choose Montage Big Sky if you...

  • Are traveling with a multi-generational group or large family

  • Want ski-in/ski-out access with beginner and intermediate terrain steps from the door

  • Value a full on-property entertainment ecosystem: après-ski, bowling, live music, spa

  • Are planning a stay that mixes skiing with spa days, Yellowstone excursions, and lively evenings

  • Need residences sleeping 4 to 6 with the full comforts of a private home plus hotel services

  • Want exceptional kids programming with a structured, resort-style schedule

FAMILY TRAVEL: WHICH RESORT WORKS BETTER?

Montage Big Sky is the stronger family choice, and genuinely one of the best ski family destinations. Paintbrush (ages 5 to 12) covers morning, afternoon, full-day, and Kids Night Out sessions. The Rivalry Room keeps older kids and teens occupied. Beginner terrain is out the front door, and residences with bunk rooms make large-group logistics easy.

One&Only works well for families with older children. The Kids Club (ages 4 and up) is complimentary, and the cabins and private homes offer real privacy. That said, the adults-only evening venues and boutique scale mean the property leans more romantic than family-social.

THE VERDICT

Choose One&Only Moonlight Basin for seclusion, world-class design, and a resort that feels like it belongs entirely to you. Choose Montage Big Sky for the full mountain resort experience: great skiing, great après, a world-class spa, and enough variety that nobody runs out of things to do.

Both are less than 90 minutes from Bozeman Yellowstone International Airport (BZN), and for the right traveler, doing both on a single Montana trip is a very reasonable idea.

Pro Tip: As a Virtuoso member agency and Four Seasons Preferred Partner, KJ Travel unlocks exclusive perks at both properties including room upgrades, resort credits, complimentary breakfast, and early check-in/late checkout where available.

Connect with a KJ Travel advisor today and let us build the Montana experience that's right for you.

And if the mountains are calling beyond Montana, discover thebest luxury ski resorts in the French Alps

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

What is the closest airport to One&Only Moonlight Basin and Montage Big Sky? Both resorts are approximately 50–60 miles from Bozeman Yellowstone International Airport (BZN), making it roughly a 90-minute transfer. Private ground transfers are available and strongly recommended for a seamless arrival.

Which resort has better ski-in/ski-out access? Montage Big Sky has the more direct ski-in/ski-out experience, with the Lewis & Clark Chairlift just 500 yards from the property and easy green-to-blue terrain right from the door. One&Only Moonlight Basin connects to Big Sky Resort via its private One&Only Gondola from the Sky Lodge, with the Madison 8 heated gondola departing from the Madison base. Both deliver excellent mountain access; they simply feel different.

Can you visit Yellowstone National Park from either resort? Yes. Yellowstone's West Entrance is approximately 60 minutes from both properties. Montage Big Sky offers guided Yellowstone safari experiences that depart directly from the hotel. One&Only Moonlight Basin also makes an excellent Yellowstone base, particularly for summer or shoulder-season visits.

Which resort is better for groups or multi-generational travel? Montage Big Sky, without question. The Mountain Homes sleeping 5 to 6 guests, the multi-level residences, the breadth of dining and entertainment options, and the structured kids programming make it significantly better suited to larger parties.

How far in advance should Big Sky luxury trips be booked? For peak winter (Christmas through New Year's, Presidents' Week, and February school holidays), 9 to 12 months in advance is strongly recommended, especially for suites, residences, and mountain homes. Spring and summer trips have somewhat a bit more flexibility, but both properties fill quickly.

What is the best time of year to visit? For skiing: January through March offers the most reliable snow and the full resort experience. For shoulder seasons: late June through September offers hiking, cycling, fly-fishing, Yellowstone excursions, and golf in spectacular alpine conditions with fewer crowds.

Can a travel advisor help with choosing between the two? Absolutely, and it matters more here than at most destinations. The two properties serve genuinely different travel styles. A KJ Travel advisor who knows both properties firsthand can match the right resort to any group's priorities, handle booking logistics, and unlock exclusive partner benefits at both.

Luxury Family Spring Break: Trips from Our Travel Advisors

Whether you're chasing powder-dusted peaks or postcard-perfect beaches, our team is here to help bring your dream spring break vacation to life. Our travel advisors explore the world with their own families, discovering new destinations and experiences firsthand so we can offer our clients genuinely informed recommendations. Here's a look at where some of our luxury travel advisors  spent their spring breaks this year.

Whistler + Four Seasons

This spring break KJT Advisors Kate & Lenni joined forces, packed their bags and headed to one of North America's top luxury ski destinations. With two mountains and over 200 runs, the scale alone is breathtaking. But what makes Whistler one of the best family ski destinations in North America is everything beyond the slopes: a charming, fully walkable village with exceptional dining, boutique shopping, and plenty of non-ski activities to keep the whole family happy between runs.

Their home base: the Four Seasons Whistler, Canada's only AAA Five Diamond mountain resort. The ski concierge sits right at the base of Blackcomb Mountain:  rentals, storage, tuning, fittings, lessons, all taken care of before you even hit the chairlift. After the slopes? Complimentary s'mores by the fire, hot chocolate, and an afternoon wine tasting. The heated outdoor pool, sauna, and hot tubs round it all out perfectly. Non-negotiable.

Need more space? The Four Seasons Residences are a separate building with two- to four-bedroom layouts, a private pool, hot tub, and their own dedicated concierge. Ideal for families or groups. And the resort's family programming goes above and beyond kids' bathrobes and slippers, a playroom, childcare, and the signature "Kids for All Seasons" program. They genuinely think of everything.

The Bahamas: Two Stays in Paradise

Unlike Lenni and Kate, Melissa swapped grey skies for the ultimate warm-weather winter getaway across two of the Bahamas' most celebrated luxury resorts, each offering a completely different take on Caribbean paradise.

Her first stop: the Four Seasons Ocean Club. Peaceful, idyllic, and refined in the way only a true classic can be. This resort feels equally perfect for a romantic escape or a family with a taste for the elevated. Days happen between the pools, the beach, and long, unhurried strolls through the resort's stunning gardens. Evenings began at the Martini Bar, where the legendary Keith shakes what guests regularly call the world's best martini, before moving on to a fabulous dinner by the ocean,  highlights included a memorable lionfish ceviche and an array of thoughtfully prepared local favorites.

From there, the trip shifted gears with a stay at the Rosewood Baha Mar: vibrant, stylish, and full of energy. For Melissa, mornings started with breakfast in the garden, followed by some downtime by the beautiful pools or settling into the resort's sleek beach cabanas (highly recommended, but book in advance). The spa offers a welcome retreat for parents who need a moment to themselves, and the Manor Bar, with its polished atmosphere and inventive cocktail list, is the ideal spot to regroup as the afternoon winds down.

Evenings at Rosewood Baha Mar come with a natural draw toward the on-site Baha Mar Casino. And for families, the Baha Mar Waterpark was, by universal consensus, the biggest hit of the trip,  kids and adults alike.

Turks & Caicos: Private Villa, Grace Bay

If there's a destination that is great for large families, Turks and Caicos in spring is hard to beat. Warm, calm turquoise water, reliably perfect weather, and some of the most beautiful beaches in the Caribbean. Brynne took the whole crew (parents, in-laws, and kids in tow)  and did it the right way: a private villa just minutes from Grace Bay.

Their stay: Villa Milestone, an eight-bedroom estate (including a two-bedroom guest house). This one is purpose-built for big groups: multiple king bedrooms, a heated pool and spa, outdoor pavilions, and direct beach access. Kayaks and paddleboards are right there for when anyone gets the itch to explore. The turquoise water just off the property is clear enough to snorkel straight from the shoreline, and some of Brynne's crew made the most of it with a full-day bonefishing charter, one of the best fishing experiences the island offers. Four others in the crew headed out deep sea fishing and came back with a fresh tuna that the villa's chef turned into dinner that night. Hard to top that.

Speaking of the chef,  full staff is included, which is a must  if you just want to sit back and relax. Housekeeping in the morning, turn-down at night, and a chef who makes the whole process feel effortless. Brynne pre-stocked the villa ahead of arrival (very handy to have all the basics ready for your arrival) and from there, the chef took over, checking in each morning to talk through lunch and dinner ideas. The last day he asked if the family wanted fresh lobster, the last of the season. That's the kind of detail you only get with a private villa chef. For guests with dietary needs: the team accommodated one of the guests dietary needs. They are well-practiced in handling complex dietary requirements.

For excursions, Half Moon Bay is worth the short boat ride,  only accessible by water, with pristine deserted beaches and calm reef snorkeling that's well-suited for families and kids. 

One practical note for your arrival: Brynne strongly recommends adding VIP airport arrival and departure services when booking your Turks and Caicos trip, especially during spring break. Your advisor will help you handle this in advance.

Arizona: Grand Canyon + Enchantment Resort Sedona

Arizona in spring is something else entirely. The crowds are manageable, the weather is as close to perfect as it gets, and the scenery (from the rim of the Grand Canyon to the red rock formations of Sedona)  genuinely stops you in your tracks. Ann took her family out west this spring break, splitting the trip between two of Arizona's most iconic destinations, and returned already wanting to go back.

The Grand Canyon needs no introduction and Spring is a great to visit, mild temperatures make hiking the rim trails comfortable, and the softer light in the morning hours makes for unforgettable views (and photos).

On her next stop, Ann and her family stayed at Enchantment Resort in Sedona. Tucked into Boynton Canyon, the resort feels like it was carved directly into the landscape. The dramatic red rock views are everywhere: from your room, from the pool, from the spa. Mii Amo, the resort's world-renowned destination spa, is reason alone to book a genuine wellness reset for parents while kids are well taken care of. Sedona's vortex hikes, and jeep tour adventures make for easy half-day excursions that the whole family can enjoy, and the town itself has great dining and galleries worth exploring.

Spring Break may be over, but your next unforgettable trip is just around the corner!  Whether you're thinking about a summer family getaway, a romantic fall escape, or a festive holiday trip, now’s the time to start planning and we can't wait to help you.

Get in touch with a KJ Travel advisor and start planning your next unforgettable getaway together.