The safest vacation? Your own private island
While nearly all leisure
travel remains paused because of the coronavirus pandemic, the demand for private islands is on the rise.
The privileged few who can afford such extravagant isolation are exploring their options with new fervor.
Brokers and travel industry experts say that since March, prospective buyers and renters around the world are showing an increased interest in escaping to an island exclusively for them.
Chris Krolow is the CEO of the Ontario real-estate company
Private Islands, which rents and sells more than 800 islands. He says that the business now sees 150 inquiries a day compared with around a 100 before the crisis.
These potential clients are mainly from the United States and Canada and interested in isles in the Caribbean and Central America.
“They want places with easy accessibility, and that rules out Asia and the South Pacific,” says Krolow.
Rent or buy?
The spike in bookings for the island he personally owns and rents out,
Gladden, in Belize’s Barrier Reef, illustrates the growing inclination toward privacy. Krolow says that while it was always popular, it quickly got almost fully booked for the rest of this year after Covid-19 gained traction.
“We also had requests for March and April, but the borders are closed, and no international travelers can get in,” he says.
A one-acre speck of land surrounded by the shimmery turquoise blue ocean, Gladden accommodates just four people and comes with a boat and staff of four who live on a neighboring isle; all-inclusive nightly stays start at $3,695 for two people.
Buying an island, on the other hand, isn’t as straightforward or frequent as a rental, says Krolow, and his company hasn’t closed any sales since the virus upended travel and left international buyers unable to see in-person the islands they’re considering.
It’s better in the Bahamas
With prices ranging from $50,000 for a small, undeveloped isle in Canada to more than $150 million for a several thousand acre one complete with a megasized villa in the Caribbean, buying can be a pricey proposition.
And it can come with added headache, warns Krolow.
“If you’re looking to build on the island, you can expect to deal with bureaucracy from the local government to get permits,” he says. “Otherwise, the process is no different than buying a home. You sign a contract, and it’s yours.”
More specifically in the Caribbean region, international buyers seem to have an inclination toward buying in the Bahamas.
Nick Damianos, a broker with
Damianos Sotheby’s International Realty, says that the company has more than double the inquiries, from about 12 to 15 a month to more than 30, for private island sales since Covid-19. Web viewings of private islands for sale are also seeing a traffic boost.
Inquiries on the rise
As with private Islands in Ontario, this interest has yet to manifest in sales.
“Given the financial investment, people want to experience the islands live. Right now, we’re only doing virtual showings,” says Damianos.
The Bahamas is an attractive destination to buy a private island in for several reasons. There’s no income or capital gains tax, for one, and the country enjoys close proximity to the United States. Plus, it’s economically and politically stable.
Damianos says that there around 20 private islands for sale in the Bahamas, half of which have come onto the market in the past year.
One example is a
$29 million isle in the Exuma Cays. Spanning 46 acres, it has four homes with a total of eight bedrooms, three staff cottages, a 700 foot-long marina, long stretches of beach and paved walking paths lined with tropical foliage.
“It’s like a hotel in that it has everything you need,” says Damianos. “You can move in with a suitcase.”
Real-estate companies aside, upscale travel advisories are also seeing an increase in private island rental requests in the wake of Covid-19, along with confirmed bookings.
Privacy is the ultimate luxury
Misty Belles, the head of global public relations for the luxury travel network
Virtuoso, which had $30 billion in sales in 2019, says that its advisers are getting “significantly more inquiries” as well as bookings.
“We forecast that social distancing will go on far longer than borders being closed,” she says. “Generally, people want to stay away from others except for their family and closest friends, and a private island is the perfect setting to do that.”
“In our new coronavirus world, private is the buzzword in travel,” he says. “Our clients are telling us that they want to feel safe and comfortable and go somewhere where they can reconnect with family and friends. A private island is what comes to mind first.”
https://edition.cnn.com/travel/article/private-islands-coronavirus/index.html