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LocationSea Island, United States
Forbes
AAA
La Liste

Operating since 1928 on a private Georgia barrier island, The Cloister holds Forbes Travel Guide Five-Star status alongside sister properties including the state's only Five-Star restaurant and its sole Five-Star spa. The property scales across five miles of private beach, six pools, three championship golf courses, and a 71-foot yacht, positioning it among the most comprehensively programmed resort destinations on the American East Coast.

The Cloister hotel in Sea Island, United States
About

A Private Island Resort with Nearly a Century of Precedent

The American resort tradition has long divided between two poles: the grand inland estate and the coastal enclave built around exclusivity of access. Sea Island belongs firmly to the latter category, and The Cloister, which has occupied this private Georgia barrier island since 1928, represents one of the longest-running experiments in that format on the Eastern Seaboard. Where properties like Amangiri in Canyon Point or Post Ranch Inn in Big Sur draw their identity from geological drama, The Cloister draws from something more architectural: a sustained built environment on a private island that has been refined across nearly a hundred years of continuous operation.

The property earns Forbes Travel Guide Five-Star status, a designation it shares on the same island with The Spa at Sea Island and the Georgian Room restaurant, making Sea Island one of the rare American addresses where multiple Five-Star ratings coexist within the same destination. La Liste, the Paris-based hotel ranking, awarded The Cloister 95.5 points in its 2026 edition, placing it inside a peer set that includes urban grand hotels and remote destination resorts alike. For context, that score positions it alongside properties such as Aman New York in New York City and Badrutt's Palace Hotel in St. Moritz at the upper tier of the global hotel ranking.

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The Architecture of Place: What the Building Does

Cloister's design language is grounded in the Spanish Mediterranean tradition that influenced much of the American resort architecture built in the 1920s along the Southeast coast. The main building operates around a garden atrium, which the spa has extended into a relaxation area featuring live trees, natural stone, and a man-made creek. This interior landscaping approach, where the boundary between indoor space and garden is deliberately blurred, is characteristic of the era in which the property was first conceived, and it remains the architectural gesture that gives The Cloister its most distinct spatial identity.

Standard Garden View rooms in the main building use traditional mahogany furniture set against handmade Turkish rugs, with floral fabrics in bold colors that read less as contemporary minimalism and more as a deliberate continuation of the property's original aesthetic register. Most units include a private terrace with chairs and chaise lounges; bathrooms run to a private dressing room, a deep-soaking tub, and a glass-enclosed shower. Many rooms in the main building look out over the Black Banks River. The alternative is the Sea Island Beach Club, where equivalent room standards are oriented toward the Atlantic Ocean or the pool area. Properties in this category, including Four Seasons at The Surf Club in Surfside or Little Palm Island Resort and Spa in Little Torch Key, tend to distinguish themselves partly through which water view anchors the guest experience, and at Sea Island that choice is meaningful given the contrast between the river-facing main building and the ocean-facing beach accommodations.

Programming at Scale: Five Miles of Beach, Three Golf Courses, One Yacht

Cloister's activity programming occupies a different tier from boutique resort properties like Troutbeck in Amenia or SingleThread Farm Inn in Healdsburg, which operate at intimate scale with curated programming. The Sea Island model is comprehensive in range: five miles of private beach, six swimming pools (two reserved for adults), three championship golf courses, squash courts, Har-Tru tennis courts, an oceanfront basketball court, and a shooting school. The resort operates its own 71-foot yacht, the Sea Island Explorer, for sunset cruises. Kayaking and horseback riding on the beach extend the outdoor programming further.

This breadth positions The Cloister closer to the full-spectrum destination resort model, comparable to what Canyon Ranch Tucson in Tucson delivers through a wellness lens, or what Blackberry Farm in Walland does through a land-focused Southern agrarian identity. At Sea Island, the organizing principle is coastal access, amplified by the scale that a private island permits. The family infrastructure is also deliberate: Camp Cloister provides structured programming for children, and the property's bowling alley adds a rainy-day option that smaller resorts rarely have the footprint to accommodate.

Sister property The Lodge at Sea Island is a short drive from The Cloister and provides access to the same golf courses and service standards in a more golf-focused setting. Guests considering the two properties should weigh beach access against the golf-centered experience at The Lodge.

Dining: The Georgian Room and the Five-Star Restaurant Question

Georgia has one Forbes Travel Guide Five-Star restaurant: the Georgian Room at Sea Island. That distinction matters as a reference point, placing the dining program here in a peer set with Five-Star restaurants attached to properties like Hotel Bel-Air in Los Angeles or Auberge du Soleil in Napa. The Georgian Room operates as a separate Five-Star-rated venue on the island, making a meal there integral rather than incidental to the full Sea Island experience. Our full Sea Island restaurants guide covers the dining options across the island in detail.

The Spa at Sea Island

The Spa at Sea Island carries Forbes Travel Guide Five-Star status and holds the distinction of being Georgia's only Five-Star spa. Its design extends the garden atrium approach of the main hotel building: the relaxation area features a waterfall circular whirlpool with views over an outdoor labyrinth, secluded outdoor hot tubs, a quiet indoor lap pool, and an on-staff nutritionist. The spa's architecture is organized around the same blurring of interior and exterior space that characterizes the hotel, with natural stone and water features doing the work that more conventional spa design assigns to mood lighting and neutral finishes. For guests whose primary interest is wellness programming at this level, a useful comparison point is Canyon Ranch Tucson, which operates at a larger wellness-specific scale, though without the coastal and golf dimensions that Sea Island provides.

Planning Your Stay

April through June represents the period when coastal Georgia's climate is most favorable for the full range of outdoor activity the island supports: beach access, water sports, golf, and horseback riding all benefit from the milder temperatures of late spring. July and August remain active but run warm. The winter months, December through February, see evening temperatures drop into the 40s Fahrenheit, which limits some outdoor programming, though the spa, golf, and indoor amenities remain fully operational. Guests traveling primarily for the spa or golf may find the cooler months a reasonable trade-off against lower-season pricing and reduced crowds.

The Cloister is accessible as a destination resort that draws from a wide geographic catchment, with guests arriving from Atlanta and the broader Southeast as well as from further afield. The private island address means that planning logistics around arrival, activity scheduling, and dining reservations at the Georgian Room are worth handling in advance, particularly during peak spring and summer periods. Comparable properties in terms of advance planning requirements include Amangani in Jackson Hole and Bernardus Lodge and Spa in Carmel Valley, where seasonal demand similarly compresses availability.

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