REAL ROUTES. REAL ISLANDS.

From Shore to Shore,
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Real itineraries for the islands you're dreaming about:

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WHY ISLAND HOPPER GUIDES

Guides Built to Actually Use

Real Geography, Not Guesswork

Every route is built from actual distances and tide charts, so the pacing you read is the pacing you'll live.

Eleven Islands, One Standard

From Aruba to the Seychelles, every guide gets the same field-tested rigor — no filler destinations.

Built for How You Actually Travel

Solo, family, honeymoon, or cruise layover — pacing notes exist for the trip you're really taking.

One Route, Every Detail Marked

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FIELD NOTES

Fresh Off the Boat: Latest Guides

New itineraries and island notes, published as we field-test them.

Questions Every Island Hopper Asks

It depends on the destination and trip style: a cruise layover in Nassau or George Town can work in as little as 6 hours, while a full sailing charter through the Exuma Cays or a proper Maldives atoll-hop runs about 7 days. Every itinerary states the exact day count in the first line so you can match it to your schedule.

U.S. citizens don’t need a passport for a same-day Nassau cruise call, which is part of why it’s such a low-friction stop. Every other destination we cover — including Aruba, Barbados, the Cayman Islands, Curaçao, the Dominican Republic, Hawaii (a U.S. state), the Maldives, and the Seychelles — has its own entry rules, so always check the specific itinerary before you book.

Yes. Most travel content assumes a partner, family, or cruise group, so across every island we cover we publish dedicated solo itineraries with realistic pacing for eating alone, walking without a schedule, and getting around independently.

Every guide, for every island from Aruba to the Seychelles, is built around real geography first — distances, transfer times, and tides — rather than a list of attractions. If a detail like sailing distance or airport transfer time changes the plan, it’s stated up front.

It varies by region. Caribbean destinations like the Bahamas, Barbados, the British Virgin Islands, the Cayman Islands, Curaçao, and the Dominican Republic see the calmest seas and driest weather from December through April, with hurricane risk peaking August through September. The Maldives and Seychelles run on the opposite clock, with their driest stretches roughly November through April. Hawaii and Bora Bora are dependably mild but each has a rainier season worth planning around — itineraries published during higher-risk months include a weather contingency note.

Many of our island itineraries — Nassau and Paradise Island, Bridgetown in Barbados, George Town in the Cayman Islands, Willemstad in Curaçao — are built around walking, jitneys, and ferries, since a rental car isn’t necessary or even always practical on smaller islands. Where a car genuinely helps, like the Out Islands or Hawaii’s bigger islands, the itinerary says so explicitly.

Your Next Shoreline Is One Guide Away