Treasure Beach Village Opens in Turks & Caicos

Beaches Resorts has opened Treasure Beach Village at Beaches Turks and Caicos on Grace Bay Beach, adding a $150.00 million (USD) oceanfront expansion aimed squarely at larger family and multigenerational stays. The new village opened on March 1, 2026, and brings 101 multi bedroom suites, new dining concepts, a large new pool complex, and a family theater to the west end of the resort. For travelers, the immediate value is simple: more high capacity room inventory at one of the Caribbean's best known family all inclusive resorts, plus a limited time booking credit that currently runs through May 31, 2026.
Treasure Beach Village Opening Adds More Family Space
The Treasure Beach Village opening expands the Beaches Turks and Caicos footprint with 11 new villa and suite categories built around bigger groups rather than standard hotel room layouts. Beaches says the most ambitious units include oceanfront CrystalSky four bedroom reserve villas, which span more than 2,600 square feet across three stories with private pools and rooftop decks, and a Chairman's Penthouse Suite of more than 2,800 square feet that sleeps up to 10 guests. Two story oceanview suites and concierge suites round out the mix for families that need separate sleeping zones, bunk configurations, or more indoor outdoor living space.
The resort is also using the opening to broaden its dining and activity mix. Beaches says Treasure Beach brings six new dining concepts, including the first Butch's Island Chop House at a Beaches property, The Pinta Food Hall, BRÜ Coffee Bar, and Calypso Cones. At the center of the village is a 15,000 square foot lagoon style pool with three whirlpools, a waterslide, a splash zone, and a swim up bar, plus the brand's first 32 seat Starfish Cinema for daytime sitcoms and evening family movie nights.
Who Benefits Most From the New Suites and Pricing
This expansion fits travelers who struggle most with the usual friction points of family resort trips, not enough bedrooms, awkward bedding splits, and the cost jump that comes when a family outgrows a standard suite. The new inventory should be most useful for multigenerational groups, families traveling with teens, and parties that want shared common space without giving up privacy. That matters at Beaches Turks and Caicos because the existing resort is already a large campus with extensive amenities, and the new village adds room types that can keep bigger parties together instead of forcing them into separate bookings.
Price is the tradeoff. Beaches says Treasure Beach rates start at $1,060.00 (USD) per person, per night, with children's rates starting at $47.00 (USD) per child, per night. That puts the new product firmly in the premium family all inclusive tier, so the best fit is not every Turks and Caicos traveler, but families who place real value on suite size, built in resort access, and reduced planning friction once on property. Guests in Treasure Beach also retain access to the rest of Beaches Turks and Caicos, including the broader dining lineup, the 45,000 square foot Pirates Island Water Park, land and water sports, and kids camps.
What Travelers Should Do Before Booking
Families considering Treasure Beach should start with room fit, not the headline rate. The main decision point is whether the new multi bedroom layouts meaningfully reduce the need for a second room, because that is where the value can become more competitive than the sticker price first suggests. Travelers booking for school break periods or reunion style trips should compare occupancy rules, bedroom count, and butler or concierge inclusions before assuming the entry level rate tells the full story.
The next threshold is timing. Beaches is advertising a Treasure Beach grand opening offer with up to $500.00 (USD) in instant credits on qualifying stays booked by May 31, 2026, for travel at any time. That does not automatically make every stay a deal, but it does create a clear book by window for travelers already leaning toward summer, holiday, or early 2027 family trips. Waiting may still make sense for travelers who are flexible on village location and want to compare future promotions, but groups that need larger unit types should expect the best layouts to tighten first.
What Happens Next for Beaches Turks and Caicos
Operationally, this is more than a single resort refresh. Beaches says Treasure Beach is the first step in a nearly $1.00 billion (USD) expansion plan across the Caribbean, with future growth tied to destinations including Exuma, Jamaica, Barbados, and Saint Vincent and the Grenadines. For travelers, that makes this opening a useful signal about where the brand sees demand, larger family groups, longer planning horizons, and premium all inclusive stays built around shared space rather than just added room count.
For Beaches Turks and Caicos specifically, the opening should improve availability at the high end of the room mix, but it does not change the underlying destination math. Grace Bay remains a premium Caribbean market, and the new village is unlikely to push the resort downmarket. In an earlier Adept Traveler article, Treasure Beach Village Turks Opening March 2026 outlined the March 1 launch timing before the debut was official. Travelers also weighing the wider destination can use Providenciales, Turks and Caicos to compare whether the value of a full scale family resort outweighs a more flexible hotel or villa stay elsewhere on the island.