The Beaches of Saona Island
The western tour beaches
Boats land where infrastructure lives: the west coast strips with palapa roofs, lounger rows, bars and buffet kitchens. Sand is white, water flat and shallow, palms genuine. At lunch hour they hum with the whole fleet's passengers, which is exactly when the walkers win, crowds pool within fifty meters of the kitchens.
Mano Juan village beach
Fronting the island's only settlement, this working beach mixes fishing boats, painted casitas and comedor tables in the sand. It is less groomed and more alive: the beach as Dominicans use it. The turtle sanctuary anchors its southern end and the fresh catch lunch here beats any buffet tray.
The empty middle
Between named stops stretch kilometers of construction free coastline, the reason film crews come. Ten minutes' walk from any lunch beach delivers private Caribbean: palm forest to the sand line, water in unbroken gradients, footprints optional. Pack out what you carry in and mind the return hour, the fleet leaves on schedule.
Canto de la Playa
The far southeast corner catches just enough energy to build deeper sand banks under the island's tallest palms, with water grading glass to turquoise in twenty meters. No facilities, no fleet schedule, no crowd: VIP small group routes, private charters and negotiated lancha hops from Mano Juan are the tickets in.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which is the best beach on Saona Island?
Canto de la Playa at the southeast end is the connoisseur's answer: deepest sand, tallest palms, fewest people. Among the accessible tour stops, the western beaches deliver the classic serviced experience.
Are Saona beaches crowded?
Only the lunch stops at midday. The island's 25 km of coastline swallow the fleet's passengers easily, a ten minute walk from any buffet finds empty sand year round.
Can you swim at all Saona beaches?
The visited west and south coasts are calm, shallow and ideal. The windward eastern shore takes open swell and currents, tours do not land there and neither should casual swimmers.