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Lance-aux-Épines, Grenada

Calabash Hotel

Size30 rooms
GroupCalabash Hotel
NoiseQuiet
CapacitySmall
Relais Chateaux
World Travel Awards
Michelin
Virtuoso
La Liste

A Relais & Châteaux property on Lance-aux-Épines beach, Calabash has operated as a privately owned, family-run hotel since 1987 and now holds Two MICHELIN Keys alongside a 4.8 Google rating. Thirty suites, three restaurants, and a design that reads Caribbean without the kitsch place it in a distinct tier among Grenada's luxury options. Rates from $825 per night.

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Address
L'anse Aux Epines Main Rd, St George's
Phone
+1 473-444-4334
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Calabash Hotel hotel in Lance-aux-Épines, Grenada
About

What the Approach to Lance-aux-Épines Tells You About the Hotel

The southern tip of Grenada operates at a different register from the island's busier resort corridors. Buildings here sit low to the ground, so the skyline is defined by palm fronds rather than rooflines. Arriving at Calabash Hotel on L'anse Aux Epines Main Rd, the scale is immediately apparent: this is a low-rise property where the beach arrives before the lobby does. That physical sequence, grounds first, then reception, sets the terms for how the property reads architecturally and operationally. The Atlantic-facing suites open toward Lance-aux-Épines Bay; the garden-side ones sit among tropical planting dense enough to create genuine privacy between units. It is the kind of site plan that takes time to mature.

Thirty-Six Suites and the Design Logic Behind Them

Caribbean luxury hotels have historically split between two poles: the grand-scale resort with hundreds of rooms and the intimate boutique property where the room count stays low enough for attentive service. Calabash sits firmly in the second category, with 30 suites across the property, each spanning at least 565 square feet. That floor-area baseline matters because it determines how a suite actually lives: there is room for a proper sitting area, a usable terrace, and comfortable bathroom space.

The aesthetic sits in a specific and somewhat unusual position. Colonial Caribbean architecture is the evident lineage, with pitched roofs, louvred shutters, and a palette drawn from the landscape rather than imposed on it. What Calabash avoids is the twin failure modes of that tradition: the pastiche that leans too hard into plantation nostalgia, and the counter-move of stripping everything back to resort-generic minimalism. The result is what might fairly be called tasteful, in the specific sense that taste has been exercised rather than suppressed. Furnishings are high-comfort without being cluttered, and the in-room technology runs to Amazon Echo smart speakers alongside Elemis bath products, a combination that positions the property in the premium-practical tier rather than the tech-showcase bracket.

The suite configuration varies across the property. Some units include plunge pools, others hot tubs; sea views are available across a significant portion of the inventory. Rates from $825 per night. Maca Bana in Grenada and Laluna Boutique Hotel & Villas in St George's.

Three Restaurants, Three Registers

Dining architecture at Calabash is worth examining because it reflects the same design logic as the rooms: different formats for different moments rather than one catch-all restaurant. The Beach Club operates as the casual anchor, positioned directly on Lance-aux-Épines beach and oriented toward daytime and early-evening dining. The catch-of-the-day programme here is one of the property's listed highlights, connecting the menu to the fishing activity that defines this part of Grenada's southern coast. Nori provides a third option with a different culinary register. Rhodes Restaurant is the formal evening proposition, a piano-lounge format that retains a dress code, a deliberate throwback to the era when dinner was an event with its own protocol. In an industry that has largely abandoned dress codes as anachronistic, Calabash's retention of one at Rhodes signals something about the property's relationship with its own history. The property's breakfast service extends the design logic further: guests can take the meal on a private balcony or directly on the beach, which operationally requires coordination but creates the kind of morning experience that justifies the room rate.

Credentials and Competitive Position

Among Caribbean boutique properties, Calabash occupies a specific credentialed tier. It holds Two MICHELIN Keys, the guide's accommodation recognition launched to apply the same institutional rigour to hotels that Michelin already applies to restaurants. The property is also a Relais & Châteaux member, a network whose admission standards have historically functioned as a quality signal for independently owned properties without brand-group infrastructure behind them. The property's awards add institutional depth to that positioning.

Within Grenada specifically, the boutique luxury tier includes properties like Silversands Beach House in St. George's, Le Phare Bleu in Egmont, and Six Senses La Sagesse. Calabash's differentiation within that set rests on the combination of family ownership continuity, the Relais & Châteaux affiliation, and the MICHELIN Keys recognition, which currently applies to a very limited number of Caribbean properties.

The family-run structure has operational implications that matter to guests. Decision-making sits closer to the property than at brand-managed hotels, which typically means faster resolution of service issues and a staff culture shaped over years rather than rotated through corporate training cycles. The structural conditions for that are present at Calabash.

Planning a Stay

Calabash is bookable directly at calabash@relaischateaux.com or by telephone at +1 473 444 4334. The Lance-aux-Épines peninsula sits in the south of Grenada, accessible from Maurice Bishop International Airport in roughly 15 minutes by road. Grenada's peak season runs from mid-December through April, aligning with the dry season, and that period drives the highest room rates and the most compressed availability at properties in this tier. Guests targeting specific suite configurations, particularly the sea-view and plunge-pool units, should book several months in advance for that window. The shoulder season from May through November offers different conditions: lower rates, lighter occupancy, and the green-season vegetation that makes the gardens particularly dense. Hurricane season runs through November, and while Grenada sits south of the primary hurricane belt and has historically been less exposed than northern Caribbean islands, travel insurance remains advisable. Comparable Grenada options worth cross-referencing include 473 Grenada Boutique Resort in Calivigny, Laluna in St. George's Grenada, and Six Senses La Sagesse Grenada in St David. For those building a broader trip itinerary, EP Club profiles for Hotel Esencia in Tulum and Amangiri in Canyon Point sit in a comparable design-led, low-key-luxury tier that may be of interest for multi-destination planning.

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At a Glance
Vibe
  • Romantic
  • Elegant
  • Quiet
  • Intimate
  • Scenic
  • Sophisticated
Best For
  • Honeymoon
  • Romantic Getaway
  • Anniversary
  • Wellness Retreat
Experience
  • Beachfront
  • Infinity Pool
  • Waterfront
  • Panoramic View
Amenities
  • Wifi
  • Pool
  • Spa
  • Fitness Center
  • Room Service
  • Concierge
  • Tennis
  • Beach Access
  • Water Sports
  • Restaurant
  • Bar
Views
  • Waterfront
  • Garden
Dress CodeSmart Casual
Noise LevelQuiet
CapacitySmall
Rooms30
Check-In15:00
Check-Out11:00
PetsNot allowed

Relaxed and elegant with lush gardens, panoramic sea views, and a calm, sophisticated atmosphere praised for privacy and tranquility.