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Satellite images show how cruise line private islands and resorts have changed the Caribbean

April 5, 2025
in carnival-cruise, msc-cruise, norwegian-cruise-line, private-island, royal-caribbean, satellite-images, Transportation, Travel
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Satellite image shows cruise ships at Royal Caribbean's CocoCay in 2024
Satellite imagery shows how cruise line private islands and resorts have changed the Caribbean landscape.

Satellite image ©2025 Maxar Technologies

  • Cruise lines like MSC, Carnival, and Royal Caribbean own resorts and private islands throughout the Caribbean.
  • They're increasingly upgrading their properties and expanding their real estate portfolios.
  • Satellite imagery shows how cruise lines have changed the Caribbean landscape.

A decade ago, Ocean Cay, a Bahamian island 65 miles from Miami's coastline, stood abandoned, bearing the scars of its previous life as an industrial sand mining site.

These days, the 95-acre island looks less like an excavation facility and more like a slice of Caribbean paradise.

Gone are the debris and floating metal fragments. Now a vacation destination, Ocean Cay is home to seven pristine beaches, waterfront cabanas, and family-fun activities — all thanks to a $500 million investment from MSC Cruises.

composite of MSC Ocean Cay over time
Satellite imagery shows how MSC's Ocean Cay has evolved from 2016 to 2021 to 2025.

Planet Labs PBC'

In 2019, after three years of cleanup and development, MSC opened the island as Ocean Cay MSC Marine Reserve, a private retreat exclusively for its cruise passengers. It now sees thousands of travelers virtually every day of the year, many of whom are ready to spend big on a swim with stingrays and a beachside massage.

Cruise lines like MSC, Carnival, and Royal Caribbean collectively own 17 ports and resorts in the Caribbean. Some are still under development as these at-sea vacation companies increasingly build back onshore, transforming swaths of the warm-weathered landscape into unrecognizable but highly profitable exclusive vacation destinations.

The transformation of neighboring rivals

About 85 miles from Ocean Cay, Royal Caribbean Group and Norwegian Cruise Line Holdings have claimed two private islands separated only by a mile-long stretch of the Atlantic Ocean.

Norwegian was an early trendsetter, having been the first cruise line to acquire an island, now known as Great Stirrup Cay, for its guests in 1977.

The company has recently upgraded its 270-acre buildout, expanding the dining and walkways in 2017 and launching a luxurious hotel-like retreat in 2019.

composite of Perfect Day at CocoCay + Great Stirrup Cay in 2016 and 2024
Satellite imagery shows how neighboring cruise-owned islands, Royal Caribbean's Perfect Day at CocoCay and Norwegian's Great Stirrup Cay, have changed from 2016 to 2024.

Satellite image ©2025 Maxar Technologies

Later this year, Great Stirrup Cay is also expected to debut a new pier that can concurrently accommodate two of Norwegian's largest ships — a $150 million investment in an attempt to rival its successful neighbor, Royal Caribbean's Perfect Day at CocoCay.

Like Ocean Cay, their locations are strategic. Perfect Day at CocoCay and Great Stirrup Cay are less than a day's sail from Florida's busy ports, allowing the companies to save on increasingly costly fuel expenses.

A closer look at CocoCay

CocoCay is as much a "perfect day" as it is a perfect investment, having opened in 2019 as a resort-like extension of Royal Caribbean's splashy ships.

The more than 130-acre island has since become a massive hit, accommodating almost all of the company's Caribbean cruise guests with its waterpark, lounge-lined beaches, and, as of last year, an adult-only beach club.

satellite image of CocoCay in 2016
Royal Caribbean's Perfect Day at CocoCay in 2016.

Satellite image ©2025 Maxar Technologies

satellite image of cruise ships at perfect day at cococay
Royal Caribbean's Perfect Day at CocoCay in 2024.

Satellite image ©2025 Maxar Technologies

The cruise line has poured a cool $350 million into developing the property. Yet, amid strong guest demand, financial returns have been "exceptionally high and significantly above its target," Naftali Holtz, the CFO of Royal Caribbean Group, told analysts in 2023.

It's now hoping to replicate CocoCay's success with a private resort 63 miles away on Paradise Island, located just offshore from Nassau, Bahamas, and near Atlantis' sprawling resort.

Royal Caribbean began purchasing land on Paradise Island in early 2017. Seven years later, it started developing the 17-acre property into what would soon become its first Royal Beach Club, a sprawling exclusive resort.

composite of satellite imagery of Royal Beach Club
Satellite imagery shows the site of Royal Caribbean's Royal Beach Club in 2022 and 2025.

Planet Labs PBC'

Royal Beach Club Paradise Island is scheduled to open in December 2025.

Guests will have to pay to enter the all-inclusive property. Once inside, they can expect access to 10 bars, shopping, cabanas, and several pools and beaches, including some for families.

Another island, another resort

In addition to expanding its island — RelaxAway, Half Moon Cay — Carnival Corp is also following the private resort strategy with a mile-long getaway on Grand Bahama Island.

Celebration Key, as it's been dubbed, is scheduled to begin welcoming Carnival cruisers in July.

The land is expected to be transformed into a vacation hub with beach clubs, a family lagoon, and plenty of dining options — "clearly following Royal Caribbean's footsteps," Patrick Scholes, lodging and leisure research analyst at Truist Securities, told Business Insider in 2024.

composite of 3 satellite images of Carnival Corp's Celebration Key being developed over time
Satellite images show the site of Carnival's Celebration Key in 2016, 2023, and 2025.

Satellite image ©2025 Maxar Technologies

satellite image of Celebration KEy
Satellite imagery shows the site of Celebration Key in March 2025.

Satellite image ©2025 Maxar Technologies

The resort is expected to accommodate 4 million visitors annually when Carnival builds two additional berths in 2028.

The $600 million project is set to be the company's largest. Yet, Carnival Corp's CFO, David Bernstein, told analysts in 2024 that Celebration Key is already expected to be a "smash hit and provide an excellent return on investment. "

Read the original article on Business Insider
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