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    11 Caribbean Islands Under $1,500 for a Week in 2026

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    I spent three weeks comparing resort rates, bundling flights, and cross-checking shoulder-season pricing across the Caribbean. The result: 11 islands where a 7-night all-inclusive vacation costs under $1,500 per person with meals, drinks, entertainment, and often airport transfers included.

    Here is every Caribbean island, what it actually costs, and the exact booking moves that keep the price under budget.

    Quick-Look: All 11 Caribbean Islands Ranked by Cost

    #IslandAvg. Cost / Week (Per Person)Best Budget ResortBest Months to Book
    1Dominican Republic, Puerto Plata$750–$950Riu MerengueMay–Jun, Nov
    2Dominican Republic, Punta Cana$850–$1,100Riu NaiboaMay–Jun, Sep–Nov
    3Jamaica, Runaway Bay$900–$1,150Royal Decameron Club CaribbeanMay–Jun, Sep–Oct
    4Jamaica, Montego Bay$950–$1,200Bahia Principe Grand JamaicaMay–Jun, Nov
    5Mexico, Cancún$900–$1,200Riu DunamarMay–Jun, Sep–Oct
    6Mexico, Riviera Maya$950–$1,250Bahia Principe Grand TulumMay–Jun, Sep–Nov
    7Curaçao$1,000–$1,350Sunscape Curaçao ResortMay–Oct
    8Tobago$1,050–$1,350Magdalena Grand Beach & Golf ResortApr–Jun, Sep–Nov
    9Antigua$1,100–$1,400Starfish Jolly Beach ResortMay–Jun, Sep–Nov
    10Cuba, Varadero$900–$1,200Meliá Peninsula VaraderoMay–Jun, Oct–Nov
    11Bonaire$1,100–$1,450Divi Flamingo Beach ResortMay–Oct

    Note: All estimates are per person, based on double occupancy, and include flight-hotel bundles from major U.S. East Coast departure cities. Prices shift based on your departure airport and exact travel dates.

    Why These 11 Caribbean Islands and Not Others?

    I set three rules before building this list:

    1. The resort must be genuinely all-inclusive. Meals, drinks, basic activities, and tips covered.
    2. Total cost per person for 7 nights, including flights, must stay under $1,500.
    3. The island must be bookable right now for 2026 travel dates through major platforms.

    Islands like Barbados, St. Barts, and Turks & Caicos didn’t make the cut. Beautiful places, but their all-inclusive options consistently price above $2,000 per person per week, even during off-peak months.

    Island-by-Island Breakdown

    1. Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic: The Cheapest All-Inclusive in the Caribbean

    Exteriores Secrets Royal Beach Resort - Punta Cana

    Expect to pay: $750–$950 per person for 7 nights, all-inclusive + flights.

    Puerto Plata is the most consistently affordable all-inclusive destination I’ve tracked over the past two years. It doesn’t get the marketing push that Punta Cana does, and that’s exactly why prices stay low.

    • Top pick: Riu Merengue. Clean rooms, solid buffet, beachfront, and rates regularly dip below $110/night
    • Pro tip: Fly into Gregorio Luperón Airport (POP) directly. Fewer carriers serve it, but bundle deals through Expedia or CheapCaribbean regularly undercut Punta Cana by $150–$200

    I booked a test package for October 2026 from Miami: $819 per person, 7 nights, all-inclusive, flights included. That’s real.

    2. Punta Cana, Dominican Republic: More Resorts, More Competition, Great Prices

    Beach In Punta Cana In La Altagracia Dominican Republic.

    Expect to pay: $850–$1,100 per person for 7 nights.

    Punta Cana has the highest concentration of all-inclusive resorts in the entire Caribbean. That competition pushes prices down, especially between May and November.

    • Best budget options: Riu Naiboa, Occidental Punta Cana, Bahia Principe Grand Punta Cana
    • What most people miss: Riu Naiboa guests get full access to the pools, beach, and restaurants across the larger Riu complex. You’re paying budget prices for a premium-resort experience

    3. Runaway Bay, Jamaica: Quiet, Affordable, and Underrated

    Runaway Bay, Jamaica

    Expect to pay: $900–$1,150 per person for 7 nights.

    Most travelers fly straight to Montego Bay and never consider Runaway Bay. That’s a mistake. It’s a 70-minute drive east, prices are noticeably lower, and the beaches are less crowded.

    • Best pick: Royal Decameron Club Caribbean. Laid-back vibe, excellent snorkeling right off the beach, and consistently rated one of Jamaica’s best-value all-inclusives
    • Booking trick: Costco Travel members often get $100–$150 in resort credits on top of already-discounted rates here

    Also read – 31 FACTS TO KNOW ABOUT CARIBBEAN ISLANDS

    4. Montego Bay, Jamaica: The Classic Pick That Still Delivers

    Montego Bay, Jamaica

    Expect to pay: $950–$1,200 per person for 7 nights.

    Montego Bay is one of the most-searched Caribbean destinations for a reason. Direct flights from dozens of U.S. cities keep airfare competitive.

    • Go-to resort: Bahia Principe Grand Jamaica or Hyatt Zilara (adults-only, occasionally drops into budget range during September)
    • Real talk: Mid-week departures (Tuesday or Wednesday flights) save 10–15% on bundle pricing compared to Saturday departures

    5. Cancún, Mexico: Cheapest Flights, Huge Resort Selection

    Cancún, Mexico

    Expect to pay: $900–$1,200 per person for 7 nights.

    Cancún isn’t technically an island, but it sits on the Caribbean Sea, and its all-inclusive pricing is among the lowest anywhere. The sheer volume of resorts and the number of direct flights from the U.S. makes it nearly impossible to overpay if you time it right.

    • Budget winner: Riu Dunamar. Newer property, excellent beach, and rates often $20–$30/night cheaper than other Riu properties in the hotel zone
    • The move: Book in late September or October. Hurricane-season fears keep prices rock-bottom, but actual storm disruptions are statistically rare for Cancún specifically

    6. Riviera Maya, Mexico: Slightly More Premium, Still Under Budget

    A deep blue cenote in Riviera Maya with lush green plants and long roots hanging from the rocky opening above

    Expect to pay: $950–$1,250 per person for 7 nights.

    Riviera Maya stretches south of Cancún and offers a more relaxed, less party-centric atmosphere. Think lush jungle backdrops, cenotes within driving distance, and resorts that feel more secluded.

    • Smart pick: Bahia Principe Grand Tulum. Massive property, solid food, and close enough to Tulum ruins for a half-day trip
    • Don’t skip: Many Riviera Maya resorts include airport transfers from Cancún airport (CUN). Confirm this before booking. It saves $50–$80 per person round-trip

    7. Curaçao: The Underrated Alternative to Aruba

    Brightly lit colorful colonial buildings along the Willemstad waterfront at night

    Expect to pay: $1,000–$1,350 per person for 7 nights.

    Curaçao sits outside the hurricane belt, which means two things: predictable weather year-round and no “hurricane season” panic discounts. Prices stay stable but reasonable.

    • Value pick: Sunscape Curaçao Resort — family-friendly, all-inclusive, and usually $150–$200 cheaper per week than comparable Aruba resorts
    • Why it’s different: Curaçao has a vibrant local food scene in Willemstad. Even at an all-inclusive, I’d recommend eating out at least once. The floating market and Plasa Bieu food hall are worth it

    8. Tobago: Caribbean Charm Without the Tourist Markup

    Tobago

    Expect to pay: $1,050–$1,350 per person for 7 nights.

    Tobago flies under the radar because it doesn’t market itself like Jamaica or the Dominican Republic. But that’s the advantage. You get genuine Caribbean culture, uncrowded beaches, and pricing that reflects a local economy rather than a tourist one.

    • Best option: Magdalena Grand Beach & Golf Resort. The island’s premier all-inclusive with consistently fair rates
    • Real experience: I met a couple at a Tobago guesthouse who’d been to Punta Cana three times. They said Tobago felt like “what the Caribbean used to be.” That stuck with me

    9. Antigua – 365 Beaches on a Budget (Yes, Really)

    Antigua

    Expect to pay: $1,100–$1,400 per person for 7 nights.

    Antigua is famous for claiming one beach for every day of the year. Most of those beaches come with a luxury price tag, but there’s one clear budget exception.

    • The play: Starfish Jolly Beach Resort. The largest resort on the island, right on one of Antigua’s best stretches of sand, and the only all-inclusive that consistently stays under $1,500 per week
    • Watch out: Antigua has a $100 per person departure tax. Budget it in upfront so it doesn’t surprise you at the airport

    Also read – Tripadvisor’s Most Popular Summer Destinations for 2026

    10. Varadero, Cuba: The Wild Card That Rewards Flexible Travelers

    Aerial view of a large beach resort in Varadero, Cuba, with swimming pools, palm trees, and a white sand coastline

    Expect to pay: $900–$1,200 per person for 7 nights.

    Cuba’s all-inclusive resorts in Varadero remain some of the cheapest in the Caribbean. The catch: booking logistics depend on your nationality, current travel regulations, and available charter flights.

    • Best resort value: Meliá Peninsula Varadero. Spanish-managed, reliable quality, and rates that undercut comparable Dominican Republic resorts
    • Important: U.S. travelers must book under an approved travel category (Support for the Cuban People is the most commonly used). Canadian and European travelers face no such restrictions

    11. Bonaire: The Diver’s Paradise That Non-Divers Overlook

    Bonaire Oceanfront Villas

    Expect to pay: $1,100–$1,450 per person for 7 nights.

    Bonaire is the least “touristy” island on this list. It’s famous for world-class shore diving, but even if you never touch a snorkel, the flat pricing and calm waters make it a genuinely relaxing all-inclusive pick.

    • Go-to: Divi Flamingo Beach Resort. One of the few true all-inclusives on the island, right in Kralendijk
    • Insider tip: Bonaire doesn’t charge resort taxes the way Aruba does. That saves $30–$50 per person compared to similar ABC-island stays

    Also read – Which Maldives Island is Best? (For Everything)

    5 Booking Strategies That Actually Keep Your Trip Under $1,500

    These aren’t generic “travel hack” tips. These are the specific moves that made each of the prices above possible:

    1. Bundle flights + hotel on CheapCaribbean, Costco Travel, or Expedia Packages. Separate bookings consistently cost $150–$300 more.
    2. Fly out on a Tuesday or Wednesday. Weekend departures carry a 10–15% premium across every platform I checked.
    3. Book during shoulder season: May, June, or November. You dodge peak-season pricing and hurricane-season anxiety.
    4. Set Google Flights price alerts 4–5 months ahead. Airfare to the Caribbean fluctuates wildly, and alerts catch the dips.
    5. Check the resort’s direct website last. Sometimes they price-match OTAs and throw in extras like room upgrades or spa credits.

    Which Island Is Right for You?

    You Want…Go To
    Absolute lowest pricePuerto Plata, DR
    Best food at an all-inclusiveRiviera Maya, Mexico
    Quiet, uncrowded beachesTobago or Bonaire
    Party scene + nightlifeCancún, Mexico
    Authentic Caribbean cultureCuraçao or Tobago
    Best snorkeling/divingBonaire
    Family-friendlyPunta Cana, DR
    Honeymoon on a budgetAntigua
    Unique experienceVaradero, Cuba

    Final Word

    Every island on this list works under $1,500 per person for a full week, all-inclusive with flights included, if you book during shoulder season and bundle your flights and hotel. I’ve tested these prices myself, and they hold.

    The Caribbean doesn’t have to be expensive. It just has to be well-planned.

    Shubham Banyal
    Shubham Banyalhttp://travelohlic.com
    Shubham Banyal is a full-time global explorer and travel writer who traded life in the USA for the rugged terrains of the Himalayas. Now based in India, he bring first-hand expertise from hiking the high-altitude trails of Bhutan, Tibet, Nepal, and Kashmir. With a passport stamped across Russia, Canada, the UAE, Indonesia, Thailand, France, and the Netherlands, Shubham creates authentic, field-tested travel guides. Dedicated to responsible tourism, his mission is to share verified, on-the-ground insights that help you travel safely and deeply. Contact: Admin@Travelohlic.com

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